How to Make a Decision You Won’t Regret Later

How to Make a Decision You Won’t Regret Later

Mel Robbins (host), Narrator

Reframing guilt and personal responsibility in family relationshipsThe invisible time limit on relationships and aging parentsProactively creating visits, celebrations, and invitations instead of waitingSeeing your parents’ world and the grief of living far from familyAccepting family members as they are, not as you wish they’d beHow your own behavior and boundaries transform relationshipsUsing small acts (like fun celebrations) to deepen connection

In this episode of The Mel Robbins Podcast, featuring Mel Robbins and Narrator, How to Make a Decision You Won’t Regret Later explores end Guilt, Embrace Time: Mel Robbins On Regret-Free Family Decisions Mel Robbins uses the story of her dad’s 80th birthday, a surprise pickleball party, and his sudden back surgery to explore how to make relationship decisions you won’t regret. She reframes guilt by shifting from doing things out of obligation to acting in ways that make you proud of yourself. Mel also unpacks the hidden sadness and grief beneath family friction, and the importance of proactively creating time together instead of waiting for invitations or perfect occasions. Ultimately, she concludes that accepting people as they truly are—and choosing how you want to show up—is the key to better relationships and fewer regrets.

End Guilt, Embrace Time: Mel Robbins On Regret-Free Family Decisions

Mel Robbins uses the story of her dad’s 80th birthday, a surprise pickleball party, and his sudden back surgery to explore how to make relationship decisions you won’t regret. She reframes guilt by shifting from doing things out of obligation to acting in ways that make you proud of yourself. Mel also unpacks the hidden sadness and grief beneath family friction, and the importance of proactively creating time together instead of waiting for invitations or perfect occasions. Ultimately, she concludes that accepting people as they truly are—and choosing how you want to show up—is the key to better relationships and fewer regrets.

Key Takeaways

Replace guilt with self-respect: act in ways that make you proud.

Instead of visiting or helping family because you “should” or feel pressured, consciously choose actions that align with your values and the kind of daughter/son/person you want to be; when you own your choice, guilt loses its power.

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Stop waiting for perfect timing or big events—just go.

Don’t rely solely on holidays, milestones, or long visits; even short, midweek or “imperfect” trips matter, because the invisible clock on your time together is always ticking.

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Don’t wait for an invitation; clearly state your plans or extend one.

Tell your parents, “I’m coming this weekend,” instead of asking vaguely, and explicitly invite them with dates and details rather than assuming they know they’re always welcome.

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Look beneath irritation and logistical drama to the deeper emotions.

Family squabbles over dates, visits, or expectations often mask unspoken sadness, grief, loneliness, and missing each other; recognizing this makes you more patient and compassionate instead of reactive.

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Step into your parents’ world to really understand their reality.

Spending extended time in their home reveals their routines, support systems, and friendships, and can shift how you interpret their priorities and decisions—especially when you don’t live nearby.

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Accept that people rarely change; adjust how you show up instead.

Most parents won’t suddenly become emotionally fluent or go to therapy; releasing the hope that they’ll change allows you to decide, deliberately, how you want to behave and what kind of relationship you’re willing to have.

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Small, playful gestures can create big emotional moments.

Simple things like a balloon arch, silly inflatable costumes, or a birthday crown can turn an ordinary gathering into a joyful, unforgettable memory, especially for older parents.

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Notable Quotes

There is a clock ticking that you cannot see. So love whoever loves you and enjoy your life.

Mel Robbins (quoting and reflecting)

There’s a big difference between someone else thinking you’re a good daughter or son and you knowing that you are one.

Mel Robbins

When you do something out of guilt, you make the other person the villain.

Mel Robbins

People can only meet you as deeply as they’ve met themselves.

Mel Robbins

People are who they are, and you’ve got to learn how to love them for who they are, not for who you wish they would be.

Mel Robbins

Questions Answered in This Episode

In what areas of my life am I still acting out of guilt rather than out of my values and self-respect?

Mel Robbins uses the story of her dad’s 80th birthday, a surprise pickleball party, and his sudden back surgery to explore how to make relationship decisions you won’t regret. ...

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If I fully accepted that there is an invisible clock on my time with loved ones, what visit or conversation would I prioritize this month?

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Where am I passively waiting for an invitation or the “right moment” instead of initiating the plans and connections I actually want?

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How might my relationship with my parents (or family) change if I stopped hoping they would change and focused only on how I choose to show up?

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What unspoken sadness or grief might be hiding under recurring points of tension in my family, and how could I respond differently with that in mind?

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Transcript Preview

Mel Robbins

There is a clock ticking- (clock ticking)

Narrator

(instrumental music)

Mel Robbins

... that you cannot see. So love whoever loves you and enjoy your life. That insight has helped me create this huge breakthrough around guilt. My dad just turned 80, and if I do the math, I'm gonna be lucky if I get to spend 10 more birthdays with him. And I'll be damned, I'm not gonna miss a single one of them. This story goes way beyond your relationship with your parents. It's four insights that will help you show up and take responsibility for how you are in any relationship in your life. (clock ticking) Hey, it's your friend Mel. I am so excited to be back home. I'm so excited to be spending some time together with you, and I have been waiting (laughs) to tell you this story about pickleball, back surgery, and my dad's 80th birthday. If you're new, I just wanna take a quick minute before I get into all the details and welcome you to the Mel Robbins Podcast family. Thank you, thank you, thank you for choosing to be here with me, and this is the perfect episode to start with. So, I mentioned pickleball, back surgery, and my dad's 80th birthday. Do I have a story to tell you. But all joking aside, there is this quote that I saw the other day. I loved it so much that I posted it online. I want- I wanna share it with you. "There is a clock ticking that you cannot see. So love whoever loves you and enjoy your life." When I read that, "There's a clock ticking that you cannot see. So love whoever loves you and enjoy your life," it really hit me, and I have taken this to heart. I'm in this season or chapter of my life where it's just very important to me to prioritize time with my family, both my immediate family, my extended family, and in particular, my parents. I do have this sense that there is a clock ticking that I cannot see. My dad just turned 80, and if I do the math, I'm gonna be lucky if I get to spend 10 more birthdays with him. And I'll be damned, I'm not gonna miss a single one of them. And that's kinda what this whole story is about, is the experience of going back to the hometown where I grew up in, all for the purpose of celebrating my dad's 80th birthday, and some surprising things that happened related to pickleball, that I'll get into in a minute. But also surprising things, wake up calls really, about my relationship with my parents and the things that I can do to make it better. And I'm just gonna set the table by saying I feel very lucky because I do have a really good relationship with my family, all things considered. We really love each other. But there is tension. We get caught up in this stupid stuff. There's always stuff that people are holding onto. But at some point you're gonna realize that there is this clock that you can't see, and time is gonna run out. I don't know what your relationship is like with your parents. I don't know if they're still here. I don't know if it's filled with tension, if there are grudges. But I do know this: there is an invisible clock that is ticking in the background, and at some point, that time that you have with them is gonna run out. And this has been on my mind a lot, especially as my parents are getting older. And even though my relationship with my parents is solid, I would love to make it better. I think one of the things that impacts my relationship with my family and that creates this tension is that we don't live near each other. If you don't live near your parents or your family, there's so much pressure that's built up around the times that you do get together that it adds this layer of expectation that I think heightens everything. You know, I live in southern Vermont. My parents still live in the house that I grew up in in western Michigan. My dad just turned 80. He was adamant he did not want a party for his 80th birthday, and on top of it, he happens to share his birthday with my twin nephews. Ever since the twins were born, my dad just loves spending his birthday with them and making it all about them, and so like I'm telling you all of these details because this is sort of the backdrop of what was going on. And even though there was no kinda set plans and we weren't sure, okay, the twins live outside of Chicago, are they gonna be in Chicago but my parents are up in Michigan, where's everyone gonna be, I knew one thing for sure: I wanted to be with my dad on his 80th whether there was a party or not. And so I got it into my head, how awesome would it be if all five of us, Chris, myself, and all three of our adult kids, all descended down on North Muskegon, Michigan to the house where I grew up for my dad's 80th birthday?And this was difficult to coordinate. I'm sure your family and your life is just as crazy as ours. We've got a kid on the West Coast. We've got three adult kids. They've got jobs. They've got school. I felt like I needed to call a logistics coordinator at UPS to help me figure this whole thing out. And on top of it, my dad's birthday in August just so happened to fall on this date where there was this teeny little window, right, where my daughter has time off from work in LA, our son isn't ready to go to college yet, he's got another week, so there's this teeny little, like, three-day window where all five of us could get on a plane and get there. And one more thing, it's not an easy place to get to. If I were to hop in the car with my family of five, it would take us between 16 and 18 hours to drive to my parents' house. So we're talking all fricking day in a car, or if we wanted to spend the money on plane tickets for five people, we have to take two planes, and the airport from our house here in Vermont is an hour and a half away. Two flights to get to Grand Rapids, Michigan, and then it's another hour to get to my parents' house. So not exactly an easy, "Oop, we'll just be there in three hours." So I say, "It doesn't matter. We're going. He's turning 80, we're going." So I pick up the phone and I call my mom and dad and I say, "Hey, guys, guess what? We're gonna come for the weekend and we're gonna be there for Dad's birthday."And my mom (laughs) said, "Well, if you can only come for the weekend, I don't think you should come." And my dad chimes in, "Yeah, you know, don't bother. We just saw you. We're gonna see you in a little bit. It's not a big deal. We're gonna be together over the holidays. I'll see you in a couple of months." I was like, "Dad, you only turn 80 once. We will come." And he goes, "Well, if you're gonna come, I would prefer that you come, like, in September, when you could spend more time with us." I'm like, "But, Dad, (laughs) I can't spend more time with you in September. It's even busier in September at work, and Kendall lives in Los Angeles, and Oakley will be in college, and we can't all get there." And finally, after all of this dancing back and forth, he said, "Well, if you can only come for three nights, I don't think it's worth it." And then my mom chimed in and said, "I actually don't think it's gonna work for us. We don't know where the twins are gonna be, and we wanna make sure that we prioritize their 16th birthday. And besides, the day after Dad's birthday, we've got friends showing up that we have been wanting to see for six months. They've been planning to come with us, and if you guys are there..." Uh, and I'm telling (laughs) you the details because I guarantee you, you have had this experience before too, where you're trying to make plans, and there's this back and forth, and back and forth, and back and forth, and back and forth. And so finally, I'm like, "Okay, fine. No problem." And my daughter was like, "I just have to get back to LA and go back to work anyway." Oakley was like, "Well, if it's not gonna work, then I'm gonna stay home, 'cause this is the last weekend before I'm gonna go to college." And my parents were like, "Well, I don't blame him." And then Chris offered to come with me, and I was like, "Well, don't bother. Stay here with Oakley and Sawyer," and that was that. And I said, "I don't care what you think, Mom and Dad. I'm still coming." And so I booked a three-day trip. I flew to Michigan, and let me tell you why. I went because I wanted to, and it had nothing to do with guilt. The old me would've booked the trip out of guilt. I would've been a martyr. I would've felt obligated. I would've, like, had this heavy heart, like I had to be there. I would've been a terrible daughter if I didn't show up. But I didn't do that at all. And that brings me to this insight, this first insight that I wanna share with you. There is a big difference between someone else thinking you're a good person or a good daughter or a good son and you knowing that you are one. I'm gonna say that again. There's a big difference between someone else thinking you're a good daughter or a good son and you knowing that you're one. And that insight has helped me create this huge breakthrough around guilt, because I realized that if you don't want to be controlled by guilt, just act in a way that makes you proud of yourself. So many people struggle with guilt, and you know you're struggling with guilt from the moment that you say, "Well, I should," or, "I have to," or, "They're gonna be mad," or, "My parents are gonna kill me," or, "I'm never gonna hear the end of this." And the thing about guilt is that when you do something out of guilt, particularly with your family, it's the same thing as saying you're doing it because you're obligated and you have no choice, which means when you do something out of guilt, you make the other person the villain. When you do something for your mother because you, quote, "feel guilty," you're making your mother the bad guy. When you do something with your family because, "Oh, I would feel so guilty," or, "My mother's making," or, "My dad's making me feel so guilty," they're suddenly the villain. Screw that. Take responsibility for your own actions and your relationships and the kind of person that you wanna be, because the fastest way to make guilt disappear and just, like, vish, evaporate from your life is choose what you do and what you don't do intentionally. And I'm gonna explain how. Here's how you do it. Do not spend time with your parents or anyone else because you feel guilty. Do not spend time with them because they will think you're a good daughter. Choose to spend time with people because it makes you feel like a good daughter. Choose to do things because it makes you proud of yourself. That's why you do it. See, when you feel obligated, now there's tension in the relationship. When you make a choice because it makes you feel good about yourself, you're now acting in a way that is aligned with your values, and there's a very big difference. It took me almost 55 years to figure this out. Don't spend time with your parents because it makes your parents happy. Do it because it makes you happy to know that you're prioritizing something that matters to you. Do you see the power switch in that? It matters to me to be physically there for my dad's 80th birthday, and doing things that matter to me makes me happy about me. It matters to me to be the kind of daughter who showed up for important life moments. I mean, if anything happened to my father and I hadn't been there, I would never forgive myself for missing his 80th birthday. So, I'm not waiting around until, you know, some moment in the future when it's convenient, or I'm not doing this because of guilt. I am doing this because I choose to act in a way that makes me proud of myself. Do you hear how empowered that is? There's no room for guilt when you own your own decisions. And I wanna add one deeper point, and it relates to this, like, ah, that can be really frustrating about trying to nail down plans, especially with your parents as they're getting older and they're getting kind of more set in their ways. That dance and that kind of like, "Don't come, do come, I don't know if it's gonna work. What do you mean you can only come for the weekend? Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah," it can drive you crazy.But if you take a breath and you drop in a little deeper, and you tap into what's actually going on beneath the surface that's driving that kind of ah at the top, there's something really important happening that we don't talk about in relationships. Because when you go underneath, whether it's irritation, or frustration, or anger, or, you know, kind of this tension that you're not gonna stay as long as somebody has hoped you would, or that, you know, somebody expected something different, what you find when you get underneath the dance, so to speak, is sadness, and grief, and hurt, and loneliness. You know, I think the truth is, is that the older I get and the older my parents get, the more I realize that underneath the tension, and the dance, and the like, ah, of trying to schedule time to see each other, all that's there is that we're all just sad. We're sad that we don't live near each other, and that we don't know how to express that sadness. And you can hear me getting really choked up because I- I mean, I haven't lived in my hometown since I was, God, 18 years old. That was, like, 38 years ago. So when your parents say things that feel like anger, "Uh, don't come. I'm fine. I'll figure it out. Yeah, do what works for you," give them the space to express emotion in a not so supportive way. It would be way more evolved for somebody to say, "I'm sorry if I sound upset. I just deeply miss you, and I wish I saw you more often." You know, I realized it's often the only way that my parents or most people know how to express themselves is just kind of the, "Ah," because they haven't done the work to understand the deeper feelings. Or frankly, they just don't wanna talk about them, because they don't wanna feel them, because it's really uncomfortable. And so when you don't wanna talk about the deeper thing, what happens on the surface is you lash out, or you're irritated, or you're frustrated, or you just kind of vent, or you express guilt, and it feels like it's over some sort of petty issue. Trust me when I tell you, the thing on the surface is petty, but it is tapped into something way deeper that's actually really profound, and it's probably been building for years. And knowing that will give you the capacity to allow that dance that happens that normally would bother you. Just remind yourself, these things that are petty on the surface always tap into deeper feelings, not just for your parents, by the way, but they're also tapping into deeper feelings that you probably haven't looked at either about the relationship, or the situation, or the things that have built up. And so don't let that dance stop you from making the effort to create that deeper connection, both with yourself and with them. It really, really matters because that clock is ticking. So, I book the ticket. I, planes, trains, and automobiles make my way from Southern Vermont to Western Michigan. I get home. I love being home. I love how happy my parents are when I'm home. I love sitting out on the back porch, and looking at the lake, and feeling the breeze. It's just amazing. And I was really excited, because even though my dad was not having a party, I convinced my mother, because I'm kind of a pain in the ass, for her to have a little surprise for my dad, because it is his 80th. And so she invited a bunch of his golf buddies over for a little bit of a surprise. And I went onto Amazon, this is a great hack to steal, and I ordered a bunch of stuff and shipped it to my parents' house. What did I order? Well, I ordered a huge balloon arch, because what is an 80th birthday party without a make your own $7 balloon arch with 120 balloons? That was number one. Number two, I ordered all of these happy 80th birthday themed plates, and napkins, and cups, and all this stuff. Number three, I ordered my dad an 80th birthday crown, which, of course, I made him wear for his entire birthday, and I took photos. But best of all, my mom and dad love to play pickleball. They play pickleball literally every day. So I saw this thing online that I'm like, "I've got to get that for my parents." And what I saw was this. It was this video of these four people playing pickleball, only they were wearing these inflatable costumes. And so I want you to picture this. Picture four people on a court, you know, playing this paddle game, this pickleball game, but they are wearing these costumes that blow up from the waist down so it looks like they are riding horses. And as they're playing pickleball, every one of them is in this big kind of costume, and they're trying to run around. I was like, "This is gonna be amazing. I'm gonna get four of them." So I got a flamingo. I got a cow. I got a rooster. And what was the other one? Oh, I got a flamingo, a cow, a rooster, and an elephant. They were amazing, and I had them all shipped to my house. And of course, when the boxes arrive, my mom's like, "What is this? What are you up to?" And I'm thinking, "I'm gonna just let her have that, because I know she doesn't want me to make a fuss, but the second this stuff comes out, bada bing, bada boom, it's party time." And sure enough, his friends come over. We have a surprise party. It's absolutely fantastic. We break out the inflatable costumes. My dad is wearing his crown. He's smiling all night long. My mom makes everybody get into the inflatable costumes and take pictures with my father while he's wearing the crown. I mean, it was absolutely amazing, and I am so happy I did it. I am so happy I did not ask my mom if it would be okay if I order, uh, decorations or if I get these costumes. I just did it, and I'm so glad I did. And that brings me to the second lesson that I learned. You have to stop waiting...... for an invitation or a celebration, and you have to create it. See, there are two things that you and I sit around and wait for when it comes to making plans, particularly with family. One is an invitation, and the other is big events that you're celebrating. And I wanna talk about these things separately, because there's a little nuance here. It doesn't need to be a holiday or an anniversary or a big event for you to spend time with your parents. And if you're like me and you don't live near your parents, that's what ends up happening. When you have kids and everybody's schedule is busy, that's what ends up happening. You wait for a holiday, an anniversary, a big event, some three-day weekend when you con- consolidate all this time. Don't do that, because years go by as you're waiting for the right time to happen or you're waiting for the celebration, and the truth is, for most of us, work is hybrid. You could actually go for two days during the week. So in addition to not waiting for some s- reason to celebrate, just go. I don't want you to wait for an invitation, and I've come to realize, especially if I- as I've gotten older, everyone waits around for an invitation. Stop doing that. Pick up the phone and don't say, "I wanna come see you. When would work?" Say, "I'm coming, and here's the weekend." When you pick up the phone and you call your parents and you go, "Hey, I'm gonna come home, uh, in two weeks," you're either gonna hear, "Amazing," or you're gonna hear, "Uh, uh, two weeks? What? What? Uh, uh?" And if you get the, "Uh, uh, what, what? Uh, uh?" then say, "What about this weekend? Oh, that doesn't work because you have friends in town that weekend? No problem. We're still gonna come. We're gonna get a hotel." Tell them you're coming. This is so important because I do think that life has gotten so busy that we're kinda sitting around waiting for someone else to invite us. Don't wait for the invitation. Just say you're coming. Now, I have one caveat, okay? Because there was this other thing that happened with my parents earlier this year, and again, a lot's happening with my parents because I'm making (laughs) it a priority to spend more time with them. So every single year during the first week of July for the past five years, my husband and I have rented this awesome beach house in Rhode Island and then we invite my parents to come from Michigan, we invite my brother and his wife and their two kids, the two nephews that just turned 16, to come as well, and we spend this awesome week together at this beach house. We've done it for five years. It's always the first week of July, and when my parents were in Vermont in June for my son's high school graduation, I said to my mom and dad, "So, you know, are you guys gonna come to Rhode Island?" And they were kinda cagey and non-committal about it, and a couple of days later, I was on the phone with my brother, and my brother said, "You didn't hear this from me, but I just want you to know, the reason why Mom and Dad are not coming to Rhode Island is because you haven't invited them." (laughs) My first reaction was, "You're kidding me," and I'm telling you this not to make my parents wrong. I'm telling you this because I fell into this trap of taking for granted the fact that they just knew that there was an open invitation. I just operated as if they assumed that they were invited, and you do that a lot with your family when you're like, "Everybody's invited for Christmas. There's always an invitation at our house on this holiday. You just need to come." And what I've found is, just like you need to pick up the phone when you wanna see someone and say, "I'm coming. Here's the date," and then wait for their reaction, when you want people to come see you, you have to extend an actual invitation. And this may sound obvious, but I think we miss this point with our family because it's easy to sit back and say, "If they wanted to see me, they would come. If they cared about me, they would fly to Los Angeles and see me. If they wanted to see me, they would come visit me at my college. If they wanted to spend time with me, they would make the effort," and it's true. They should. But what happens for most people, I've now realized, is that when they see that you're busy, they assume that means too busy to take time off to see you. And so when I stepped back and I thought about it from my parents' point of view, even though this has been going on for five years and it's the same week every year, when I step into their shoes and I imagine what it must look like to look at Mel and Chris's life and three adult kids and the amount of plans that we have and the coming and the going and the changes and how busy the kids are, isn't it perfectly reasonable for someone to assume that maybe this year wasn't gonna work out, that maybe the fact that you haven't gotten a call and said, "Hey, we got the house again and these are the dates and we hope you can come," that maybe that call didn't come because it's not happening? I mean, the old me would have reacted like, "Oh, are you kidding? They're mah, mah, mah, mah, mah, mah, mah, mah, mah, mah," and you probably do this too. "Oh, they never come to Christmas. They never come to this, or haven't-" Have you actually invited them? Like, for real. These dates. This is what I would like you to bring. This is who's coming. You can stay with us. Please bring the dog. I'd really love to see you. I don't think we do that enough.I think we operate in our lives assuming other people know they're always invited, and then we hold it against them when they don't come. And when I look at my parents and I step into their shoes, and I think, "Well, of course they need an invitation. They would have to book an airplane ticket. They gotta plan this. They've gotta have somebody take care of, like, things in Michigan for them while they're gone." So, when it's you, your approach is, "I'm coming, here are the dates." When it's someone else that you'd like to see, you have to pick up the phone and actually invite them. So, my dad's birthday party, fantastic. We got the costumes up, everything's amazing. My dad has a great time. It's really fun. I'm thrilled that I'm there. My nephews are up there, my brother's there. It's just awesome. And it's around this time that my mom discloses that tomorrow when we're gonna actually play pickleball, my dad cannot play because despite the fact that he's been smiling this entire time, he has hurt his back horribly playing pickleball, and he needs an MRI, and that he is pretty convinced that he has dislocated or done something to one of the discs in his back. And now that she's saying it, I'm realizing that he has been not himself. He isn't as smiley. He's kind of, like, pretending everything's okay, but you can tell it's not okay. And he's also a doctor, and so the thing about doctors is that they do think they know everything, and they are the world's worst patients. And so, he goes into the MRI, he gets his MRI. They don't have a radiologist on, so when he gets home, he's all grumpy 'cause he couldn't see the film, and that's not how things work today. The next morning, you know what my dad did? My dad got into the car and drove to the hospital that he used to work at to see if he could find a radiologist to read his MRI thing because his back was hurting so much. My mom, she was just like, "Your father. I'm not stopping him." I'm like, "Dad, do you want me to go with you?" He's like, "No, no, no. I got it, I got it." I'm like, "You sure? You got a back injury and you're driving, and you're 80 years old, and you're about to go to a hospital. Let me-" "No, I got it. Thank you, but I got it." So, he goes and then he comes back, and he's even more frustrated because, as he tells me, "It's not how hospitals work anymore. There's not even a radiologist on site at the hospital, for crying out loud. They sit at home and they look at their films, and I can't get somebody to look at this until Monday morning, but I got an appointment on Monday morning. Holy cow." So, he gets an MRI. We wait for the results. My dad goes into a doctor's appointment with a back surgeon on Monday, walks out of it, and tells me that they have scheduled surgery for the end of the week. Now, I gotta tell you something. When you hear 80 years old, back surgery, end of the week, that's terrifying. I don't care how easy of a surgery it is. I don't care that my dad's a former doctor and that he's in decent shape. Back surgery? 80-year-old? Oh, my God. I immediately knew what I needed to do. I picked up the phone. I called Chris. "I'm not going anywhere. I'm staying here." I called my business partner. "I don't care what's going on this week at work. Cancel it. I'm staying here." There was no way in hell I was getting back on a plane to fly to Vermont while my dad was go- undergoing routine back surgery. No freaking way. And so, I stayed. I stayed all week in my childhood bedroom. That house has barely changed in 38 years. Like, I have not spent 10 days at home since I think I got married, almost 28 years ago. And I know you're thinking, "Well, how did the surgery go?" It was your classic hometown thing. We drive my dad into Trinity Health Hospital, where he used to practice by the way. The back surgeon, I went to high school with. He also happened to be one of my dad's former partners in orthopedics. Talk about small town Michigan. Uh, he greeted us, made us super comfortable. Also turns out there were a lot of fans of the Mel Robbins podcast that work at Trinity Health Hospital. It was so cute. A bunch of the nurses and PAs came down. One of them whispers, "I hope this isn't a HIPAA violation, but I heard you were in the hospital and I had (laughs) to come down and say hi to you." And dad's surgery went dynamite. The issue is going to be that my dad follow the instructions because he's a very active guy, and the man is not allowed to golf or play pickleball for six months. He's gotta give it time to heal. And then I stayed with my mom and my brother for the rest of the week to, it's not even like help take care of my dad, to make sure that he actually followed the doctor's instructions. And that brings me to the third takeaway. It is pretty remarkable what happens when you step back into your parents' world. Even if you live near them, you probably aren't even aware of what their day-to-day life looks like. Like, it's easy to forget that this is your parents' first time at this thing called Life 2, and they have their own little world and their whole group of friends. And what was amazing about being there is that I not only kinda stepped back into my parents' world, but I also got to see my best friend from elementary school because like me, she was home seeing her parents. And like me, she has lived away from her parents for the last 38 years. And over the years, we have both talked about how much sadness there is, that whether you have a great relationship or a relationship filled with tension or a complicated relationship, if you don't... live near your family, or if you don't have a supportive family, there is this sense of grief that you're missing out on something. And my best friend, Jodi, just upended her life and moved from Santa Barbara back to White Lake, Michigan to move in with her parents because her parents are getting older and because she is so far away, and being there at the same time that she had moved back to be with her parents while I was there helping my mom and my dad as my dad went through surgery, oh my God. Like, it is so eye-opening to not only realize that that clock that you cannot see is ticking and the time that you have is slipping through your fingers, but it's also extremely eye-opening to see your parents' life through their eyes and how they experience it. And it was a real wake-up call to truly understand that my parents don't have either of their kids living in the same town, and they're surrounded by people who have at least one kid living in the town that I grew up in. And the fact is, they have had to create a support system amongst their friends, and so it made a lot of sense to me why my mom would go, "Well, don't come if the only weekend that you can come is also right on top of some of our close friends coming to see us, something that we have planned on for six months." I can now step into her world and see that relationship is just as important as their relationship with us, because we're not near them, so they've had to prioritize their friendships to create that family and that support system that they need. Wow, and it also scared the hell out of me about the coming years and what we're gonna do, and so one of the things that I've promised myself is I'm going back to Michigan before the end of the year to look with my parents at options around, like I just feel like we gotta start having these conversations rather than hoping for the best. And that brings me to the final thing: people are who they are. People are who they are, and you've got to learn how to love them for who they are, not for who you wish they would be. If you want them in your life, if you want the relationship to get better, you've got to learn how to love people for who they are and not who you wish they would be. The fact is, most people, the older they get, the more rigid and more entrenched they become in who they are. Most people don't change. In fact, they just become more themselves, and you have to learn to let them be who they are. A lot of that friction, I realized, isn't due to my parents, it's due to me trying to manage my parents. They don't need to be managed. They need to be accepted as they are, and, you know, let's face it: your parents, they've likely not gone to therapy, nor do they want to. I- I remember once saying to my mom, "You know, have you ever thought about therapy?" And she literally turned to me and was like, "Why? So I can find out I hate my life and I don't wanna be married to your father? No, I'm not doing therapy. I like my life." (laughs) I was like, "Okay." My mom is a riot, and she also tells the truth no matter what anybody thinks, and, you know, speaking of, "What? I don't like your father?", the issues that you see in their marriage that you wish you could change or make better, they've been there forever. They're not changing. They are who they are. They have the relationship they have. It's not your responsibility to do anything about it. And something that's helped me develop a level of acceptance and love with my folks is just saying to myself, "They gave me everything they could based on their life experience, and they gave me the support that they had to give, and it was an amazing amount of support," because people can only meet you as deeply as they've met themselves. They can only give you what they had to give, and neither one of them got any kind of emotional support from their parents. I mean, most of our parents, yours included, were never provided the emotional, physical, psychological support that they needed. They haven't gone to therapy. They haven't looked at their issues, and they're not going to. You know, and- and- and the sooner you kind of accept that, the sooner you can get to a level of peace about where you are and why you're where you are. You know, I'll never forget Dr. Ramani saying that one of the biggest things that stands in the way not only of your healing, but of any relationship changing, is the hope that someone else will change. See, holding onto the hope that someone else will change creates resistance and friction in the relationship, when really what you need to do is stop hoping that someone changes and accept who they actually are and who they're not, because once you accept who they are and who they're not, then you get to decide, "How do I show up? How am I going to choose to be in this relationship knowing that this person is never going to change? What kind of daughter or son do I wanna be? What kind of parent do I wanna be? Regardless of the way that my efforts are met, what kind of effort do I wanna give? Because when I act this way, it makes me proud of myself." And when you operate knowing that even though the person isn't going to change, "I never said you couldn't.And what I found over and over is the second that I change how I show up in a relationship, the relationship changes for the better. That's how much power you have. The power is in how you choose to show up. The power is in you living your life in a way that makes you proud of yourself. Has nothing to do with what anybody else thinks about it. The power is in what you say, what you do, and how you choose to be in these relationships. And remember, there is a clock ticking that you cannot see. So love whoever loves you and enjoy your life. And the more that you live your life in a way that makes you proud of who you are, tell you what? The more you're gonna enjoy it and the better your relationships are gonna be. Alrighty. Thank you for all your amazing well wishes for my father's recovery. I can already feel them coming in. Thank you to Trinity Health for taking a great, great, great job of my dad. Huge shout out to all the nurses that are big fans of the Mel Robbins podcast, and please steal that tip. You wanna bring fun? Order a balloon arch and order some inflatable costumes and get a crown, and you'll be shocked at what even 80-year adults do. They turn into little kids. And one more thing. Mom and Dad, I love you. Thank you again for allowing me to share this experience that we had and the insights that I gained with absolutely everybody that was listening, already. And in case no one else tells you, 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 a blow up costume and a pickleball racket will certainly help do that. Alrighty, I'll be waiting for you in the next episode. And for you on YouTube, I wanna make sure that in case no one else tells you that I tell you, I love you, I believe in you, I believe in your ability to create a better life. And one thing that creates a better life, inflatable costumes. Make sure you bring them to the next party. Another thing that creates a better life is to continue to watch these videos and to share them with the people that you love. Do me a quick favor since I know you really appreciate what we're doing here. Will you hit subscribe? I have a goal to make sure that 50% of the people that are watching here on YouTube have subscribed to this channel. It tells me that you love this content. It's a way that you can support me and give a little love back. And speaking of a little love back, I know you wanna watch another video, so this is what I would love for you to watch next.

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