
7 Lessons To Learn Once That Will Improve Your Life Forever
Mel Robbins (host)
In this episode of The Mel Robbins Podcast, featuring Mel Robbins, 7 Lessons To Learn Once That Will Improve Your Life Forever explores seven Trail-Tested Life Lessons From A Forgotten Pair Of Boots Mel Robbins recounts a family trip to hike Mount Katahdin that nearly derails when she realizes, after eight hours of driving, she has forgotten her hiking boots. The crisis forces her into problem‑solving mode, mindset shifts, and vulnerable conversations with her family about mistakes and emotions. Along the trail, she meets Appalachian Trail thru‑hikers whose hard‑earned wisdom about baggage, patience, persistence, nature, timing, and human goodness becomes a framework of seven life lessons. She weaves these lessons into practical guidance on mindset, relationships, facing fear, and continuing to move forward despite obstacles.
Seven Trail-Tested Life Lessons From A Forgotten Pair Of Boots
Mel Robbins recounts a family trip to hike Mount Katahdin that nearly derails when she realizes, after eight hours of driving, she has forgotten her hiking boots. The crisis forces her into problem‑solving mode, mindset shifts, and vulnerable conversations with her family about mistakes and emotions. Along the trail, she meets Appalachian Trail thru‑hikers whose hard‑earned wisdom about baggage, patience, persistence, nature, timing, and human goodness becomes a framework of seven life lessons. She weaves these lessons into practical guidance on mindset, relationships, facing fear, and continuing to move forward despite obstacles.
Key Takeaways
Flip from panic to problem‑solving quickly.
When Mel realizes she left her boots at home, she chooses not to collapse into victimhood and instead declares, “I will solve this problem,” leading to creative action (driving back, finding new boots) rather than missed opportunity.
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Deliberately choose a positive ‘what if it works out’ mindset.
Despite everyone warning her about blisters from new boots, she consciously visualizes a successful hike with no blisters, uses role models like David Goggins for mental toughness, and ends up with exactly that outcome.
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Talk through tension; don’t go to bed stewing in resentment.
The family’s ‘high/low of the day’ conversation around the campfire lets each person express blame, hurt, and frustration, which deflates the emotional tension and resets the group so they can move forward together.
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You carry your emotional baggage until you consciously put it down.
A thru‑hiker’s comment that “you carry your baggage with you” prompts Mel to underline that unprocessed past issues travel with you like a backpack until you choose to address them through self‑awareness, therapy, and intentional work.
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Keep moving forward; good things eventually come.
Another hiker’s advice—keep moving and good people, weather, views, and luck will show up—reinforces that stagnation keeps you stuck, while small, continued steps create momentum and open up opportunities you can’t see yet.
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It’s never too late to pursue long‑held dreams in smaller ways.
The story of hikers finishing the Appalachian Trail over 45 years and Mel’s 80‑year‑old father considering doing a section illustrates that you can adapt big dreams to your current season of life instead of abandoning them.
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Ask for help and focus only on the next step when afraid.
To get down the terrifying boulder field with vertigo, Mel openly asks her husband and son for specific help and concentrates on one step at a time, showing how vulnerability and narrowed focus can carry you through fear‑inducing situations.
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Notable Quotes
“Life is the single greatest school you’ll ever attend.”
— Mel Robbins
“You carry your baggage with you.”
— Unnamed Appalachian Trail thru‑hiker
“If you just keep moving forward, eventually good things come. Good people, good weather, good views, good luck.”
— Appalachian Trail hiker “River Run”
“You cannot outrun or out‑hike your baggage.”
— Mel Robbins
“I will not miss out on this. I am going to solve this problem.”
— Mel Robbins
Questions Answered in This Episode
How can I train myself, in real time, to flip from catastrophizing to a ‘what if it works out’ mindset when something goes wrong?
Mel Robbins recounts a family trip to hike Mount Katahdin that nearly derails when she realizes, after eight hours of driving, she has forgotten her hiking boots. ...
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What ‘baggage’ from my past might I still be carrying like a backpack, and what concrete steps could I take to finally set it down?
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In which area of my life have I been standing still instead of ‘just keeping moving,’ and what would a realistic next step look like?
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Where am I letting pride or fear stop me from asking for help the way Mel did on the boulder field?
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What dream or long‑term goal have I quietly decided it’s ‘too late’ to pursue, and how could I reframe it into a smaller, doable version now?
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Transcript Preview
(instrumental music plays) ... Chris, all of a sudden, errr. Are you kidding me? My face is now in my hands. My family loves to camp. My husband has been wanting to climb Mount Katahdin forever. It's in Maine. It is about 5,200 feet. It is the northern end of the Appalachian Trail. I'm like, "I'm in. As long as you take care of everything, Chris, I'm in." We wake up the morning the trip begins, and we blaze, and we pull into Baxter State Park. This wave of panic hits me. My heart seized, and I say, "Chris, Chris, Chris, Chris. Oh my god, oh my god, oh my god." He's like, "What?" And I said, "I- I left my..." (clock ticks) Hey, it's Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast. I am so excited to be able to spend this time together with you. Thank you, thank you, thank you for taking the time to listen to this. Thank you for spending time with me. It's always an honor to get to be here together with you. If you're brand new, I wanna take a moment and welcome you to the Mel Robbins Podcast family, and just say, I think it's really cool that you're listening to something that can help you improve your life, or just feel a little bit better. And let me tell you something, today's episode is going to make you feel better, because I have one heck of a story to tell you. This is something that happened to me last week, and so I'm just gonna jump right into it, because I also learned seven important life lessons. And so let me just set the table a little bit. My family loves to camp. Chris and I have been taking our kids camping forever. If you're familiar with NOLS, the National Outdoor Leadership School, my husband is a huge NOLS guy, and so we're just way into being outside. And my husband has been wanting to climb Mount Katahdin forever, and Mount Katahdin is this mountain that is super cool. It's in Maine. It is about 5,200 feet. It is the tallest mountain in Maine, and the coolest thing about Mount Katahdin is that it is the northern end of the Appalachian Trail, and the Appalachian Trail is this continuous trail that begins in Georgia and runs through 14 different states and ends 2,190 miles later at the top of Mount Katahdin. And so for years, our family has talked about climbing Mount Katahdin together. We've done Mount Washington. We've done a lot of camping trips out in the Western United States, and so Mount Katahdin had been on the bucket list, and we've been planning this trip forever. Not only because, with adult kids, it takes a year in advance to get everybody's schedules aligned, but with Mount Katahdin and Baxter State Park, you gotta be organized enough if you plan to do it six months ahead to be able to log on to a website to, at a certain moment, reserve a camping site that is at the base of the trail, 'cause there's only a certain number of them. So six months ago, we've got the dates cleared when we wanna climb Mount Katahdin, it is the first week of August, Chris logs on at some ungodly hour first thing in the morning, and he secures this campsite. We've got our plan, it's go time, everybody's got the dates locked, and I gotta give props to my husband. If it were not for Chris, there is no way we would have pulled this off. The man spent three days getting us organized, and when you really stop and think about a camping trip with five people, there's a lot of logistics, right? Like, you gotta pack in all your food, you gotta pack in all your water. Yes, you're gonna have your car next to the camping site, but you've gotta have your tents and you've gotta have your sleeping bags, you've gotta have bug spr- yeah, but you gotta have everything that's gonna take care of five people for two nights at a campsite without cell reception, without drinkable water. You gotta be able to make a fire. We love doing this kind of stuff, but it is a lot of work, and I haven't even mentioned yet the fact that Mount Katahdin is this extraordinarily challenging mountain to climb. It is, as I mentioned, 5,200 feet high. I don't even know what that is in miles, but it is fricking tall, and on average, it takes you anywhere from 10 to 12 hours to climb up it and climb back down. So we're talking a big day, and Mount Katahdin is also a very, very steep mountain. And I am somebody who is terrified of heights, and so I really wanted to do this with our family, but I cannot be near a drop-off. I get vertigo. I start to feel like I was falling, and so I was nervous about this climb, because there's this section of Mount Katahdin that is this big boulder field where you have to scale up these massive boulders, some of which are so steep that they have metal rods and handles, and like, almost like ladders in the stone to help you go up and down them. That's how steep this thing is. And so I was like, "I'm doing it. I'm in. As long as you take care of everything, Chris, I'm in." So Chris spends three days getting ready, preparing the food, making sure we have everything. He has laid out all of our gear. He realizes, "Oh, okay, you know, our tents are pretty shoddy. Maybe I will go and I'll upgrade our tents." He goes down to the local, uh, mountaineering store in our town, and he buys two new tents, and he buys us two new ... Uh, like he is just going all in, and so we're getting all excited. Everybody is packed their stuff. You gotta pack for two days and nights in a camp, and you gotta pack for one full day of scaling this massive mountain. So I'm like thinking about all the things that I really want at this campsite so that I'm gonna be comfortable. I got my Birkenstocks, 'cause I wanna be super, super comfy after a long day hiking. I got my pajamas. In fact, I bring two pairs of pajamas, because after an eight-hour drive, we are gonna arrive at camp.We're gonna be cooking dinner and then climbing right into our sleeping bags, because we wanna be on the trail by 5:00 AM. 'Cause this is a 12-hour round trip ordeal, and in case there's weather, we want extra time. So I think, "Okay, we wanna get off the hike. I'm gonna wanna get out of my hiking stuff, and then I'm gonna put on clean pajamas, and my Birkenstocks, and my super cozy, uh, socks. It's gonna be fantastic." So we wake up the morning the trip begins, 'cause it's five o'clock in the morning in southern Vermont, and everybody's packed their stuff into the truck. And we hop in, and Chris and I are in the front of the pickup truck, and our three adult kids are sitting in the back of the pickup truck. And we blaze. We leave on time. Chris is thrilled. We are on the road. It's absolutely amazing, and we drive four hours, and we stop in Portland, Maine. And we get out in Portland, Maine, and the kids have now been sleeping for four hours. Chris and I have been awake in the front just talking. It's been a beautiful morning. We have breakfast at one of the best restaurants ever. You want a great breakfast? Go to Bread & Friends in Portland, Maine. Absolutely fantastic. We also see a family friend in Portland, Maine. Like, we're, we're doing this road trip thing right. So after a pit stop in Portland, we hop back in, we drive another two hours, and we stop a second time, this time to get a cup of coffee, buy water, buy ice, buy all the things that we're gonna need, because it's another 90 minutes before we are going to get to the entrance of Baxter State Park in Maine. So we wanna just pull in, because by the time we get there, it's now going to be five o'clock. And when we hit that campsite at five o'clock, we wanna unload the pickup truck. We wanna start cooking dinner. We wanna kinda get into our comfy clothes. We wanna set out our backpacks so we can get ready, so that when we get up at 5:00 AM the next morning, and boom, (fingers snapping) we can get right on that trail with our headlamps and giddy up and go. So we got a lot to do. So, as we are approaching Baxter State Park, it's about five o'clock at night. We have been on the road since five o'clock in the morning. At this point, we're hangry. We're ready to get out of the car. We're ready to set up the camp. We're ready to, frankly, climb into our sleeping bags and go to bed so we can wake up and just bag that mountain, Mount Katahdin. And I'm not gonna lie, I'm starting to get a little nervous, right? 'Cause I'm thinking, "Wow, it's 12 hours. You know, it's gonna be really steep." Like, I, it's one thing to be thinking about this. It's another thing to know that there's the mountain, and you can, like, see it right there. And it's fricking huge. I'm like, "We're gonna go up there in one day? Like, that's unbelievable." So I'm in the backseat now, at this point, and I'm working on my next book, The Let Them Theory, which is gonna come out at the very end of the year. I cannot wait for you to read it. Oakley is grouchy and complaining. Sawyer is listening to her fantasy novel. And we pull into Baxter State Park, and you gotta check in with a ranger. She says, "Yep, well, you know, the campsite is another eight miles down the road. There's no cell reception, so just follow the road all the way in, 'cause your GPS is not gonna work." And she kind of explains there's no running water, there's no this, there's no that. "You gotta pack everything in and pack everything out." And then she says, "Have a great hike." And as we pull away from the ranger station, this wave of panic hits me. And I think, "Oh my God, did I pack my hiking boots?" My heart seized. And I don't know if this has ever happened to you, where all of a sudden time freezes. And as Chris is driving down this dirt road, 'cause we got another eight fricking miles, and it's now 5:15 at night. I am feeling my heart seize and my mind start to spin backwards as I'm retracing my steps back to this morning at five o'clock in the morning, trying to frantically remember, "Did I put my hiking boots in the truck?" And it hits me, "Oh my God, they're on the back porch at the house in Vermont." The only shoes that I have with me are the Birkenstocks that are on my feet. And I want to burst into tears. And I say, "Chris, Chris, Chris, Chris. Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God." He's like, "What?" And I said, "I, I left my hiking boots in Vermont." And he go ... And he slams on the brakes, and he's like, "What? Are you sure?" And I said, "Oh my God, honey, they're on the back porch." I, uh, I, I, I can't even talk. And there's no cell phone reception. We have not been anywhere near any type of town in 45 minutes. It is now 5:20, and we have been in the car for eight hours. And Kendall is in the front seat, and she turns around and gives me one of those looks. I swear to God, like, we had this little hatchet with us to be able to, like, kinda break up the firewood. If she had had that hatchet, she probably would've thrown it at me. And you could just feel the searing anger. "Are you kidding me?" She says. And Oakley looks at me and he's like, "Mom."And Sawyer goes, "You didn't." And I'm not even saying anything, because my face is now in my hands, and I am thinking about tomorrow morning, and watching my family leave camp at 5:00 in the morning while I'm sitting in a tent alone wearing my Birkenstocks, and I'm just like, "I can't let this happen. I'm not gonna let this happen." And Chris, all of a sudden, errr, just... You know when somebody turns a car, like a U-turn, and they turn it so fast you feel like you're in an F1 race car? It's like vroom. And everybody's now just like, "What?" And I'm like, "No, no, no, no, no. I'll go alone. I'll go alone." He's like, "We're all in this together." And then he slams on the gas. We drive back to the station, which is like a mile down the dirt road, so we're going away from our, our campsite. I pull up, I jump out, I go and I plead and I ask the lady, "Oh my God, I forgot my hiking boots." She's like, "It's gonna be really hard to go up Mount Katahdin if you don't have hiking boots." And I'm like, "I know." And then I'm like, "Can I, where can I go? Where can I go?" And she said, "Well, you know, there's a store," and when she tells me where it is, back by the highway, it's like 40 minutes from here, and I don't have any cell phone reception so I can't even call to see. So they might have something, they tend to have so- And so we hop in the car and I'm like, "Are you sure, Chris?" And he guns it. And so we go in the opposite direction, with a fully packed pickup truck, after being in the car for eight hours, 45 minutes in the opposite direction. And I gotta say, my family did their best (laughs) to not say anything. At one point, I felt my daughter Sawyer's hand reach up behind her brother, who was sitting in the middle, and I was sitting on the side in the back of the pickup truck, and she put her hand on my shoulders. And I kept thinking, "What am I gonna do? What am I gonna do? What am I gonna do?" And when we finally get to the store, the store turns out to be, like, more like a hardware or a, uh, local farm supply store, you know what I mean? So I go into this thing panic-stricken. This is my shot. Like, this is it. I'm either gonna find something in here... And I start to say to myself, "I'm gonna manifest a pair of boots being in here. I am gonna make this work. I am not gonna miss out on this thing." And so I walk into this store, and I walk over to the shoe area, and there on display are muck boots and Timberlands and rain boots and, you know, things that you would wear at a construction site. And out of the corner of my eye, I spot one style of boots that look like a hiking boot, and I'm like, "Oh my God, thank you, thank you." And there was one pair in my size, and I put 'em on, and they were a little snug, and I said to myself, "I don't care what it takes. I am going to make these damn things work." But then I had a second problem. The world's worst thing that you can do is to go on a hiking trip or try to climb a mountain in a brand new pair of boots. Everybody will tell you, "Don't ever do it." And so I hopped back in the car, and I was not gonna allow myself to go south. Now, at this point, I now texted a couple friends, "You're not gonna believe what I did. I cannot believe I did this." And they're writing back, "Oh, no, I hope you have moleskin. You're gonna have the worst, worst, worst blisters," and I'm like, "I know, I know, I know." But I'll tell you what I did. I made a decision in the back of that truck, as we were barreling back toward Baxter State Park and back down the eight-mile dirt road to our campsite so we could set up. I made a decision that I was not gonna buy into the fear. I was not going to think about blisters. I was not going to m- get myself all worked up, because here's the thing. I didn't know how it was gonna go, and if I were to sit in that back seat and say to myself, "I'm screwed," you know, "You thought you were scared of the fact that this is gonna be a really hard 12-hour climb, Mel? Uh, that's nothing compared to doing it in a brand new pair of boots. You are scared about the sheer drop-offs and the boulders you gotta scale on this thing? That's nothing compared to trying to navigate all that in a brand new pair of stiff boots while you've got blisters the size of apples on your feet." No, no, no, no, no. I could not allow myself to do that. And so you know what I did? I literally thought of one of the people that I love so much that inspires me, David Goggins, the Navy SEAL, the just unbelievable force that he is, and I kept thinking about his story and all the ultra marathons he was running, and his, basically his feet falling off, and him running through it, and thinking, "I'm just gonna Goggins this thing. I am not going to let this stop me. I am going to believe that these boots are gonna surprise me, that as I'm hiking tomorrow, I'm not gonna get any blisters. I'm actually going to be so excited that I left my old hiking boots wet on the back porch of southern Vermont, and I am going to envision a positive future." You know, you've been around me for a while. You've heard me say, "What if it all works out?" And so I started texting my friends back, "You know what? I'm just gonna say these are the little boots that could. I'm just gonna say this is gonna work out. I'm just gonna say and believe that when I get off that mountain tomorrow, I'm gonna text you and go, 'These are the best damn boots, uh, you could have ever bought. I don't have a single blister. They were amazing.'" I am gonna get myself into that mindset, because what's the alternative? To live in the horror that this is gonna be terrible, which is only going to make it become terrible? And so that's what I did. I wore them the entire drive back to the camp. I wore them all night in camp. I took them off to sleep, but I wore them as we made dinner. And, you know, as we get back to the camp, everyone was in such a terrible mood. We had thought we'd get there, we'd be around the fire and, you know-... talking about what we're grateful for, and roasting s'mores. We're like screaming at each other and, "Uh, get out these bugs, uh," and poor Chris. And then of course Chris pulls out the new tents that he has bought for the trip, and the place sold him one of the wrong tents. Instead of giving him two tents for two people, he had one tent for two people and a single tent, which means our daughters Sawyer and Kendall had to basically sleep like butt-to-butt or like hugging each other all night, and so he was all mad about that. I mean, everybody... I was just like on the verge of tears. And I don't blame everybody for being upset. It was a unnecessary, frustrating beginning to this trip that we had been looking forward to for six months. I don't blame them. I- I- I- I- I don't blame 'em. And so, you know, how did the night end? We're all sitting around the campfire and Chris says, "So guys, why don't you share the high and the low of the day?" And I'm thinking, "Oh my God, like, the low? I think we all have the same low." And when... Something interesting happened. I shared my low, of course. I said, "You know, my low was, of course, forgetting the boots. But the real low was sitting in the back of the pickup truck as you were driving like 70 miles an hour, and I just felt like this little kid who was in a lot of trouble." And, you know, I don't know if you've ever had an experience like that when you were little and you, like, made a mistake, you broke something, and then the adults around you were just like, "Aah!" And then you're like, "Huh! Oh my God." I just felt so small as we were barreling down the road trying to find a store where I could possibly find boots, and no one's talking, and I just wanted to disappear. And as I was sharing this, you know, I got kind of upset, and I said, "I just wish we would have stopped before everybody just exploded and made a plan, and I wish that we could've all been a little bit more patient or kind in that moment. And I realize that we all have a right to feel what we need to feel, but I just, in the silence for 45 minutes as we're barreling down the road, I just made me feel horrible." What was interesting is that, you know, Chris said, "Well, Mel, I blame myself. Like I- I- I actually blame myself because I didn't ask everybody if they had everything. I didn't ask everybody, 'Do you have your backpacks? Do you have your boots? Do you have this? Do you have that?' And I should have done that." And then... A- and so we all just kind of had our own version of it. And I think the important takeaway there is, you know, they always say, "Don't ever go to bed mad," and I think Chris asking all of us the high/low, even though we all were pretty darn frustrated by the way the entire trip to Baxter State Park ended because of me, um, talking about it just was like putting a pin in a balloon and helping the tension deflate, and we could unpack it all, and everybody was like, "Well, if- if it had happened after a four-hour road trip we probably wouldn't have been upset. If we weren't so angry, if we had had cellphone reception." Like, we all know it was an honest mistake, but we all were just processing our emotions, and the most important thing is that we were all in this together. And so talking about it allowed us to just get it all out, have a big group hug, wipe the slate clean, say goodnight. And so Sawyer and Kendall climbed into their one-person tent (laughs) and snuggled up, and Oakley climbed into this really cool hammock tent that my mom gave him for high school graduation that's made by Haven. I love this tent. Uh, it's like a hammock hanging tent. And then Chris and I climbed into our tent, lights out. (snaps fingers) I'll tell you what, we were all fast asleep because there's nothing like a giant eight-hour road trip that ends in a nightmare and a ball of tension to wear you out, and 5:00 AM came faster than a blink of the eye. So we wake up at 5:00 AM and my kids are now like, "Okay, we're all getting ready, we're trying to be quiet 'cause there's other people camping and we're one of the first people up." We're getting our headlamps on, our kids are like, "How are the boots, Mom? Do you think you're gonna make it?" And I'm like, "Yeah, uh, these are gonna be great boots. You watch, they're gonna be great boots." And so off we go, we're walking on the trail, and as we're walking in the dark and I got my little hiking poles, I start to get nervous, 'cause now I'm actually really on the trail and I'm testing these boots for real, and they're a little stiff, and I'm feeling my toes not being able to wiggle that much, and I'm on the flat part, and so if I'm feeling like they're really stiff right now and we're only 10 minutes into this thing and it's pitch dark and we haven't even started on the incline yet and I got 12 hours of this. "Oh my God, Mel, am I gonna make it?" And so about 15 minutes later I realize I need to reset, so I say to Chris, "Could you just, like, pull the kids together and could we just do, like, a little family huddle?" And so he yells off to the kids, 'cause I knew if I yelled they'd be annoyed, so he yells and they pause and they wait for us, and he goes, "Come here, guys." And we all kind of stand shoulder to shoulder, and Chris just tells us to (inhales) take in a deep breath (exhales) and exhale. And here we are, standing shoulder to shoulder in a circle (inhales) (exhales) and just taking a minute to all breathe in together and slow the pace of this down-... is exactly what I needed, and I'm proud of myself for asking for it, 'cause normally I'd just be back there and I'd be suffering in silence. So as soon as we were done with our little huddle, Oak turns, "Can we go now?" "Yep, we can go." And the kids start heading off, and we start following 'em. And as we're hiking, this guy starts passing by us. He comes up behind us and he's, and he's kinda cookin' along, and he's got a small backpack on and a long beard, and he has this yellow tag on his backpack. And my husband, Chris, recognizes what the yellow tag is, and it is a tag that you have if you are what's called a through hiker. Now, a through hiker is somebody who is hiking the entire length of the Appalachian Trail. This is somebody who is hiking 2,190 some miles, going from Georgia to Maine. And so Chris says, "Are you a through hiker?" And he says yes, and he tells us his hiking name. He said, "I've been on the trail for 172 days, and Katahdin is the end of the trail." And so we all say, "Congratulations. We hope you have an amazing hike up Katahdin and finishing the trail." And he kinda cooks on past us, and it was this incredible moment where you realize somebody was going to be climbing this mountain the same day as us, and accomplishing and realizing this incredible dream. I mean, what an amazing accomplishment to hike the entire Appalachian Trail, to be out on the trail for 172 days, and for us to be getting up to the top of the mountain on the same day when somebody who's been doing this and achieving this goal, I mean, that is so cool. And so I felt this, like, renewed energy, and I looked down at my boots, and I'm, like, giving myself this pep talk, and it was just this, like, amazing, cool thing that we experienced. And so, you know, we hiked for a little bit longer, and then we get to the point where you get to the boulder field. And the boulder field is where you get up above treeline, and all of a sudden you're up, and you're up in the open sky, and it's these massive, like, stones that are as big as, like, a VW Bug car. And stones that you have to, like, climb up and climb over, and put your hands on, and pull yourso- like, it is a super physical hike. You have to, like, reach on your tippy-toes to grab to the very top, and then find, like, a little crook somewhere with your foot, and then, like, haul the other one up on another ledge. Like, you are scaling and hauling yourself up these things. I was so proud of myself and proud of my little boots for doing it, and going up. I'm thinking, "Okay, I got this thing, I got this thing." So the long and the short of it is, we get through the boulder field. I'm so proud of myself, and once you get past this, like, super technical area, the last mile of the hike i- is all open. You're on the top of the mountain. It kind of feels like Sound of Music. It's not even like this big climactic thing where it's super steep. You're just kinda winding up on the open face of this mountain. It's extraordinary. And as we are approaching the top, guess who's coming down? That's right, the through hiker with the long white beard that we had seen with the small pack. Like, I didn't think he was a through hiker, because he basically had a day pack on his back. He was coming down. He had just completed the trail. He had some friends that had clearly met him at the top. It was so exciting to see him coming, and as he was coming down, I put my hand on my hips, and I said, "Oh my gosh, congratulations." And he looked at me and said, "Thank you," and you could tell he didn't wanna talk (laughs) you know? And I don't blame him. I mean, if I'd been on a trail for 172 days, the last thing I'd wanna do is stop and have a long chat with some stranger lady who wants to, like, you know, chat up a storm and, like, bother you. But I said to him, I said, "Can I ask you a question fast? Like, just, I'm just curious." And he said, "Yes, but I'll p- answer it as I walk by." And I'm like, "No problem. What did you learn about life from being on the trail for 172 days?" And his friends kinda looked at him, and he kept, you know, walking toward, and he was about to pass me, and he said, "Well, when I started this, I didn't think I had anything to learn, but I was wrong." And he said, "The first thing that I learned is that you carry your baggage with you." And he didn't unpack that, but I'm gonna unpack it. I'm gonna tell you everything that he said, and then I am going to come back and kind of share with you what I think it means. And then, as he passed me and kept walking, he said, "Patience. Never underestimate the value of patience." And I said, "Thank you. Congratulations." And he kept on going down, and I looked up, and the top of Katahdin was there, and my kids were about to reach it, and Chris and I were a couple hundred yards behind. As we walked up to the top of the summit, Chris and I talked a little bit about that idea of thinking that you don't have anything to learn, and isn't it true that we all think we know it all? But there's always something to learn if you're willing to look at life that way. I mean, life is the single greatest school you'll ever attend. There's always new things that you're gonna learn, if you have that kind of mindset. And the second thing, and I loved what he said about the fact that you take your baggage with you, and this is what I made it mean. You cannot outrun or out-hike your baggage. Whether you're aware of it or not, all of the things that you've never dealt with, all of the issues from your past, all of the stuff that's buried in your subconscious, you're dragging it around through life just like a backpack that you carry on your back. And it's not until you make a conscious decision that you are no longer going to carry it with you...... that you have a choice to stop, and to take that backpack off, and to set it down and leave it at this moment in your life, and walk forward without carrying that burden. How do you do that? Well, you do that by going to therapy, you do that by gaining self-awareness, you do that by listening to podcasts like this one and learning more about yourself, and learning from experts that can help you understand the baggage that you're carrying and how it's still impacting you, and simple ways that you can start to identify what it is and put it down. But I think the most important thing is that, yes, you will continue to carry that stuff with you. You can't out-drink it, you can't outrun it, you can't, like, be silent and think it's going away. You gotta decide that it is no longer a burden that you wanna carry. Pretty cool, huh? I thought so. So we get to the top, we take a few photos, and then we head down. Now, we are six hours into this puppy at this point, and as we're coming down, we see two more through hikers. Yep. And you know how I knew it? Because they have yellow tags. Now, I remember the trail names of these two. One of the guys' names was, I believe, River Run, and the other guy's name, I believe, was Wood. And you could tell they were friends, and the thing that was so amazing about these guys, 'cause I said, "Hey, oh my god, you know, through hi- congratulations, so cool, you're finishing it, oh my god." And the one guy said, "Yeah, I'm realizing a dream after 45 years." And I was like, "What do you mean?" And he, get this, he finished the Appalachian Trail after doing sections of it over the course of 45 years. He has chipped away. Isn't this so cool? And same with his friend, that they would meet up and do sections at a time and they were finishing it that day. And you could tell that they were just so overcome with emotion about what was about to happen. And so I asked them, I said, "You know, I, we just met another through hiker," and I asked them, you know, "What did you learn on the trail that has helped you in your life?" You know, "And if you don't mind talking." He's like, "Oh, no, no, I'd love to talk about it." And I love what these two shared. I absolutely loved it. He said, "Number one, keep moving. If you just keep moving forward, eventually good things come. Good people, good weather, good views, good luck. Just keep moving, and eventually good things come." I freaking love that. I love that. It's true, isn't it? It's easy to think that you're gonna be stuck where you are forever, but you just aren't. If you just keep moving, good things come. The next thing that he shared was that nature is the original healer. That just being out in nature and seeing our beautiful country, I mean, the Appalachian Trail goes through 14 states. And the research about being out in nature, we have covered it so often in this podcast, I'm not gonna cover it right now. So true. And this one I love, here's another one, it's never too late. It's never too late to do something you've always wanted to do. I was, uh, sharing about the experience with my dad, and I remember a couple years ago my dad just casually mentioning that he had always wanted to hike the Appalachian Trail. And so right before I jumped on the microphone to talk to you and tell you this story, I said, "Hey, Dad. Tell me about the Appalachian Trail. Like, why is it that you've wanted to hike the Appalachian Trail?" And he told me this awesome story. One of his best friends was named Buzz, and Buzz died very suddenly this year after a, uh, health diagnosis that came out of nowhere, it was just devastating. And so my dad told me this story about Buzz that I didn't know. So Buzz retired at the age of 65, and when he retired, he went down to Georgia and started hiking the Appalachian Trail. And I guess he got to Pennsylvania, and then there was a wedding, I think one of his kids was getting married, and so he flied from the trail to the wedding. And when the wedding was over, he flew up to Maine to Mount Katahdin, where I was with my family right then, you know, telling you the story about climbing Mount Katahdin, and he started there and then hiked back to that spot in Pennsylvania. And he basically said, "I went up to Maine after the wedding because if I didn't go to Maine first, I would've ended the hike at the end of November, and that would've been really awful to climb Mount Katahdin at the end of November." And probably really, really dangerous given the bouldering and the ice that you would experience. And, you know, I was talking to my dad, I was like, "Well, do you wanna do it?" And he said, "Well, at the age of 80 I don't think I could do all the sections, and I don't wanna be gone from Mom for 172 days in a row, or 180, or what six- the six months it would take me." And I'm like, "That's fair." And then I said, "But, you know, Chris and our son, Oakley, are so inspired by the through hikers that I think they're gonna start doing sections together. What if you do a section with them?" And his face lit up, and he's like, "I'd love that." There you go. It's never too late. And the final thing that River Run and Wood shared...... is the inherent goodness in other people. That at their core, people are good. And they told me that there were just endless situations where they were moved by the goodness of other people, whether they were giving them the shirt off their back or handing them the last bite of a meal, like just willing to help. And I think in a moment in modern life where it feels very isolated and polarizing, isn't that a wonderful thing to be reminded? That at their core people are good. Whoo! I just love it. So we passed those guys, they got a little choked up, we got a little choked up, we wished them well. I mean, it's just so cool to think of somebody checking off a bucket list and witnessing them as they're about to do that. And then (laughs) we got to the boulder field only this time we were in reverse, and so now I gotta go down, which means I'm looking down at drop-offs and the vertigo is kicking in. And I gotta say, I'm really proud of myself because just like I was in the back seat of the pick-up truck going, "I will not miss out on this. I am going to solve this problem." And that is such an important mindset. This mindset where you don't succumb to the problem, you flip into problem-solving mode. I could have just as easily gone, "Woe is me," when I realized I forgot the boots and started crying and sulking and being a martyr and a victim and going, "No, I'll just stay here in the tent." That's what the old me would have done, but not anymore. I'm like, "I will solve this problem. This is not gonna happen to me. I am gonna figure this out." And it is such a powerful declaration to make to yourself. And so I'm standing there on the top of this boulder field, and it's like sheer drops and ledges and I'm feeling the sensation of falling and I'm like, "I am going to fix this. I am not going to let this be a problem." I hate the fact that I'm afraid of heights. I want to be doing adventurous things, I don't wanna miss out with my family. And five years ago, I would not have been able to do this, but I am determined to not let this stop me. And so I'm like, "I have to fix this." And here's what I know, I can't do this on my own. And so I am so proud of what I did in that moment, 'cause I said to Chris and I said to our son, Oakley, "I need your help." And that's a really important thing to be able to do in life, is to s- recognize when you need help and then to ask for it. And I said, "Oak, I need you to go in front of me, because I need to know that you could catch me if I come tumbling down. And Chris, I need you behind me." And so we started that way, and so Oakley would go down and then what started happening is then Sawyer would go down after Oak, so I would see it twice and then I would try it and then Chris was behind me. And then I realized, actually, you know what I need? I need you, Chris, to show me step by step and to let me just go step by step with you. You do one step and then move and then I do one step. And I got down that mountain because Chris, step by step, helped me get down that mountain and I kept looking at the next step instead of looking all the way down which looked like a fricking drop-off. And I step by step continuing to say, "I can do this. I can solve this. I can take the next step. I am not going to let the anxiety or the vertigo or the fear or any of this stuff take me down." And by God, I got down. And I know what you're thinking, "Mel, how were the boots?" (laughs) Those little boots were the best darn boots I have ever had in my entire life. Do you wanna know how many blisters I had? Zero. You heard that right. A 12-hour hike in brand new boots, zero blisters. Were my feet sore? You better believe they were sore. Were my legs wobbly? You better believe they were wobbly. Wer- was I ex- absolutely I was so insanely exhausted, but those were the little boots that could, and I am certain that if I hadn't flipped my mindset the second I got those boots from "I'm screwed and this is gonna be terrible and I'm gonna have blisters the size of Kentucky and oh my gosh, am I..." If I had not flipped my mindset and said, "Nope, what if this works out? What if these are the best darn boots I've ever had in my life? What if these little puppies surprise me? What if this was divine intervention and I am shocked when I am done with this hike because I not only found a pair of shoes to get me up that mountain but they turned out to be the best possible things I could have worn?" And that's exactly what happened. So we stumble down and we get down to the campground and the girls say, "Oh my God, I'd love a cold beer." And Chris says, "Oh my God. I guess I forgot something too." (laughs) So the girls and I hop in the truck and we drive 35 minutes down the dirt road to the one tiny store outside of Baxter State Park where we bought two six-packs of ice cold beer (sniffs) and a bag of ice and we drove back toward Baxter State Park.And as we were pulling closer to the park, there was this beautiful glistening lake right to our left, and our daughter says, "Let's jump in." And it looked like on Golden Pond. I mean, it was just crystal clear, and the water was like starlight, it was like gold glistening with the sun, because the hike had taken us 12 hours, and it had taken us 45 minutes to go get those beers. And so, it was now close to 6:30 at night, and Chris and Oak were back at the camp getting dinner ready, and my daughters and I, we jumped in that water, and it will be one of the core memories of my life, being in that gorgeous mountain lake as the sun was dropping behind the mountains, and the light was just glistening like diamonds on this golden pond. It was just extraordinary. And that brings me to the two final things that I learned during this trip. Number one, checklist (laughs) . If you're going on an eight-hour road trip with your family, and you're hiking one of the largest mountains in the Eastern part of the United States, make a checklist. And had I used one, we would have remembered the beer and my hiking boots. And finally, just keep moving forward, because when you do, good things come. Good people, good weather, good views, good luck, and you'll have one heck of a good story to tell the people you love. And in case no one else tells you today, I wanted to tell you that I love you, and I believe in you, and I believe in your ability to create a better life. And I am certain that these simple life lessons that I learned on the trail are gonna help you do that. Alrighty, I will see you in the next episode where I'll be waiting for you, and I can't wait to spend more time together. And thank you for being here with me on YouTube. And in case no one else has told you, I wanna tell you that I love you, I believe in you, I believe in your ability to create a better life, and I hope that the things that I shared with you today are gonna help you do that. And I know you're thinking, "Okay, what's the next video?" Well, first I'm gonna say, please hit subscribe, because it really supports this channel, it supports me in bringing you new videos every single day, and, uh, it tells me that you love what we're putting out. So hit subscribe. Thank you, thank you, thank you, and check out this next video.
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