3 Steps to Eliminate Self Doubt & Get Everything You Want In Life

3 Steps to Eliminate Self Doubt & Get Everything You Want In Life

Mel Robbins (host)

Using emotional triggers as teachers rather than excusesJealousy and irritation at others’ success as a mirror of avoided workThe power of being called out and admitting “I don’t know”Impostor syndrome versus truly being unqualifiedPlaying small, undercharging, and ignoring your real valueHarnessing anger as motivation instead of suppressing itThe 100-day rule for building skills and dismantling self-doubt

In this episode of The Mel Robbins Podcast, featuring Mel Robbins, 3 Steps to Eliminate Self Doubt & Get Everything You Want In Life explores turn Anger Into Fuel: Three Triggers That Destroy Self-Doubt Fast Mel Robbins explains how emotional triggers—especially irritation, embarrassment, and feeling like an impostor—can become powerful teachers instead of excuses to stay stuck. Through three main stories (her friend Molly, her own firing, and undercharging as a speaker), she shows how jealousy, being called out, and playing small all point directly to actions we are avoiding. She argues that anger is often misdirected at others when we’re actually mad at ourselves for not doing the daily work. Her solution: recognize the trigger, thank it for the lesson, and commit to 100 days of consistent reps toward what you want.

Turn Anger Into Fuel: Three Triggers That Destroy Self-Doubt Fast

Mel Robbins explains how emotional triggers—especially irritation, embarrassment, and feeling like an impostor—can become powerful teachers instead of excuses to stay stuck. Through three main stories (her friend Molly, her own firing, and undercharging as a speaker), she shows how jealousy, being called out, and playing small all point directly to actions we are avoiding. She argues that anger is often misdirected at others when we’re actually mad at ourselves for not doing the daily work. Her solution: recognize the trigger, thank it for the lesson, and commit to 100 days of consistent reps toward what you want.

Key Takeaways

When someone you dislike has what you want, examine your own inaction.

Robbins argues that irritation at another person’s success usually means they’re consistently doing the basic reps you’ve been avoiding, and your anger is really at yourself for not starting or sticking with the work.

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Triggers are often your most precise and personalized teachers.

Big, distant role models rarely move us to act, but a nearby, irritating example can cut through excuses and prove that what you want is possible for someone just like you.

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Being called out on your BS is painful—but it’s a shortcut to growth.

Robbins’ story of being fired from a job she couldn’t actually do taught her the lifelong superpower of saying “I don’t know,” asking for help, and acquiring missing skills instead of faking competence.

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Impostor syndrome often means you’re capable but scared, not unqualified.

In contrast to her earlier job story, she shows that in many situations (like undercharging for speeches), others see your value clearly while you keep yourself small out of fear and low self-worth.

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Let anger motivate you instead of paralyzing you.

Rather than suppressing frustration, Robbins suggests using it as fuel—channeling annoyance and embarrassment into concrete action on the “boring, tedious” tasks that actually move you forward.

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Adopt the 100-day rule to break self-doubt and build momentum.

Commit to 100 days of consistent, simple reps toward one goal—posting content, writing, practicing a skill—because steady daily execution, not inspiration, is what dismantles self-doubt and creates results.

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Listen when people who respect you say you’re playing small.

Robbins emphasizes that feedback about undercharging, under-reaching, or staying in a box is a gift; it reveals what you’re leaving on the table and where you need to start betting bigger on yourself.

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Notable Quotes

Your triggers are your greatest teachers.

Mel Robbins

You’re not actually mad at them. The truth is you’re mad at yourself because you know you should be doing the little things every day.

Mel Robbins

Talk is cheap. Thinking about something is not the same thing as doing it, and inspiration is not enough to get you motivated.

Mel Robbins

I would have never learned what a superpower it is to say, ‘I don’t know what I’m doing.’

Mel Robbins

Wherever you are playing small, you need to listen to the people that see something bigger for you, because you see it too—you’re just scared.

Mel Robbins

Questions Answered in This Episode

Which specific person or situation is currently triggering me, and what consistent actions are they taking that I’m avoiding?

Mel Robbins explains how emotional triggers—especially irritation, embarrassment, and feeling like an impostor—can become powerful teachers instead of excuses to stay stuck. ...

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Where in my life am I pretending to know what I’m doing instead of admitting I need help or new skills?

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In what area am I clearly playing small—undercharging, under-reaching, or hiding—despite others telling me I’m capable of more?

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If I applied Mel’s 100-day rule, what one goal or habit would make the biggest difference if I stuck with it daily?

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How could I start using anger as productive fuel rather than a reason to complain, compare, or stay stuck?

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Transcript Preview

Mel Robbins

My mission today is to trigger you, to make you annoyed, whether it's at me or somebody else so that you start to go, "Yeah, I'm kinda mad. I'm mad that I'm not doing the thing that I need to be doing. I'm mad at myself for sitting around. I'm mad at myself for being scared about what everybody's gonna think instead of doing the thing I need to do." Or, "I'm mad that I am holding myself back, that I know I am meant to play a bigger game but I refuse to get out of this box and actually take the damn risk to do it." Anytime you feel angry, good, because your anger is trying to tell you something. And we're gonna talk today about triggers, those people in those situations that just really, ugh, they just trigger you. And I am going to walk you step-by-step through how you can turn those triggers into the biggest and most important teachers in your life. (clock ticking) Hey, it's Mel. I am so happy you are here with me today. Thank you, thank you, thank you for tuning in and choosing to spend some time with me. I also think it's super cool that you are listening to something that could change your life. And by the way, today's conversation, there is no doubt this will change your life. I am showing up with some kinda attitude and energy, and I am in the Boston studios and there is some sort of just gale-force wind that is going outside, so you might hear the swirl in my voice or you might hear it outside, but boy oh boy do I have something to share with you. And I'm gonna kick off today by telling you a story. So the other day, I was talking with a friend of mine, and I'm just gonna call my friend by the name Molly. Molly has an interior design business, and just to set the table, she's extremely talented. I mean, Molly has been doing the interior design thing for years. She has employees. She has a bunch of jobs that she's always working on. And the last couple times that she and I have connected, she would always ask me for advice about social media, and she would be asking me questions like, "Hey, you know, Mel, how can I get myself out there? You know, if you were starting where I'm starting, what would you be doing? I know I need to be doing more in the social media, in the marketing space, in the digital marketing for my business, but I don't know where to start." And I would always give her all kinds of things that she could do. I would talk about courses she could take. I would talk about the fact that she could just tip her toe in the water and start posting every day to kinda get used to it. She could start on Pinterest. I referred her to accounts to follow. And I know that this is something that a lot of people struggle with, how to put yourself out there on social media, because it's a little overwhelming. So the other day, Molly calls me and we're chatting away, and when she calls me, I could tell something was off. You know how when a friend of yours just sounds, ugh, blah? And when I asked her, "Molly, what's wrong? I mean, you don't sound like yourself. Is everything okay with the kids?" She said, "Yeah, yeah, yeah, the kids are fine. I'm not." And I said, "Well, what happened?" She said, "Well, something the other night just really triggered me. I saw something and it just sent me into a spiral, Mel. I have been crying ever since. I feel like I've just made a major mistake in my business." And so I'm listening and I'm thinking, "What the hell could have happened? My gosh, like, this is really serious." Well, it turns out that someone in the neighborhood who has no interior design expertise, this is a person that my friend Molly knows. She's known her for a while because they all met in a mom's group, and, you know, she's known her because they've kinda raised their kids in the same town, and without disclosing names, this person, not exactly my friend Molly's favorite person. (laughs) You know, the kind of person in a friend group who draws the attention to themselves, maybe they're always talking about themselves kinda loud, someone just kinda rubs you the wrong way. And you maybe have somebody like this in your life where you think you're the kinda person where you're like, "Yeah, yeah, yeah, I just want everyone to win. I'm a positive person. I cheer for everyone," just not this person, you know? You know what? I aren't gonna name any names. Everybody has someone like that in mind. Well, that was this person for my friend Molly. And so, all of a sudden, this woman is now, quote, getting into the design business, and it just rubbed Molly the wrong way. Like, you know how some people can just, just like a thorn in your side? Because this person, as Molly explains, they, they didn't go to school for this like I did. "I studied for years. I have all these accreditations. I've been doing this for years." And now all of a sudden everybody's talking about how talented she is, and then the next thing you know that this person that is irritating to my friend Molly is posting on social media. And next thing you know this person's posts are starting to blow up, and now this person is starting to get thousands of likes on her Instagram photos of literally just photos of her own house, which just burns Molly alive because Molly's like, "You didn't even decorate your own house." And now this irritating person is going live on TikTok, and she's on Instagram giving design tips, and people love her, which really burns Molly. And so last night, my friend Molly, after a long day of work dealing with her clients, puts the kids to bed, sits down on the couch, turns on the TV, picks up her phone. She starts scrolling on social media, and guess who is all over her feed? This irritating woman. And Molly, right there on her couch, in her house, loses her fricking mind. And so I just sat there and I listened.And as I'm telling you this story about my friend, Molly, I know you've had this experience, that someone out there is triggering you. Maybe the situation is similar to the one my friend Molly is in. Maybe you're in the real estate business and you've been doing this for a decade, and then all of a sudden, there's this brand new person that enters real estate and suddenly they have the $3 million listing down the road. I mean, what the heck? It's triggering. We've all been there, right? And so after I listen for a while, Molly takes a breath and she goes (exhales) . "Mel, what do you think I should do?" And I paused because the truth is, I've been in her shoes more times than I would like to count. I knew because I've been there that, uh, Molly didn't need a pity party. She did not need me to be feeling sorry for her. What she needed was for someone to kick her in the ass and to be brutally honest. And before I tell you what I told her, which is also something that you need to hear, I want you to just stop and think of that friend or maybe it's someone online that you don't know, but their success really bugs you. Maybe you feel like they don't have the right qualifications or the right skills, or you just don't feel like they deserve the attention they are getting and it's irritating you. Do you have that person in mind? Good. Because I wanna tell you the same thing that I told my friend Molly, and I want you to remember this the next time you find yourself triggered, because you will. And the next time you get triggered and you start feeling sorry for yourself, and you start being annoyed that this other person has a thing that you want, I want you to remember that pity is not what you need, because no one should feel sorry for you, and I don't feel sorry for you. In fact, if you are triggered right now from someone else's success, I'm happy for you. And the reason why that I am happy for you is because whoever or whatever is triggering you is here to teach you something. And what I told my friend Molly is, "Molly, I don't feel sorry for you. And you shouldn't be mad at this irritating woman. You should be thanking her." Crickets. I was like, "You there, Molly?" Silence. "That's right. You should be thanking her because this irritating woman is teaching you something. And by the way, she's not teaching you about what she has. She is teaching you that you aren't doing simple things every day that are leading you to where she is. And clearly you want it, which is why you're triggered. In fact, I don't think anyone else on the planet can teach you this lesson, Molly, and it has to be her, it has to be this irritating woman who is the one that is successful, and let me tell you why. Because my friend Molly already follows all the successful interior designers that are creators online. She already follows Leanne Ford and Jake Arnold and Studio McGee and Joanna and Chip Gaines and, uh, Amber Lewis. She follows them all. And if you like interior design, you probably follow them too." Well, none of those people have inspired Molly to get serious about social media and marketing. It had to be that irritating woman with no experience, and I wanna unpack this a little with you, okay? And the reason why it had to be her is because when you look at somebody that's way far away from you, and in fact before I unpack this, I just wanna make sure that as you're listening to me, you're gonna make this relevant. So I want you to stop and think about something you want before I unpack this. Like, maybe you wanna become a professional golfer, or maybe you wanna get a job in sports marketing, or maybe you wanna start flipping houses. There is somebody who is famous and successful that's already out there doing it, but they're not inspiring you to get started or they're not inspiring you to stick with the tedious, boring things that you need to do. And this was my point to my friend Molly. It has to be this irritating woman because you've been watching all these famous interior designers, you've been talking about doing social media for five years, but you have all these exalt, they have a team, they have a this, they do that, they have time, they have the other thing, because there's so much distance between you and the people that you're following online. But this irritating woman, holy cow, if anything, you've got more qualifications than she does, which is why it has to be her. She's triggering you because she's showing you that you are capable of doing the thing you've been avoiding too, and in fact this is the interesting thing about people that trigger you in this regard. You need to be thanking them because you're not actually mad at them. The truth is you're mad at yourself because you know that you should be doing the little things every day that get you where you wanna go when it comes to social media, because let's just stop and ask ourselves, "Why is this woman that my friend Molly doesn't like going viral?" Oh, oh, she has some just unbelievable unicorn strategy that nobody's thought of before? No. She's going viral the same way everyone is, by putting content out every single day. I mean, just imagine.What a- what- what a genius idea, that you would show up on social media and talk about your business and you would do it every single day and eventually things would start to build. Imagine that. Imagine that you could hire someone to help you do this. Imagine that you could take one less client in your interior design business and then spend the time doing the thing that you're avoiding. And here's what I love about this story. Your triggers are your greatest teachers, not because they show you what you need to be doing, they do that all right, but because they galvanize your anger. And you're not angry at them, and that's where I think we miss the incredible teaching here. You're angry at yourself for not doing what you need to be doing. So whoever it is that's triggering you, number one, it had to be them because no one else has come along that is waking you up. And I also want to be clear about something, you don't have to be happy for their success. In fact, I do not want you to be fake about it. Molly shouldn't go to this woman's post and start liking it and being like, "You go," because she doesn't mean that. She's got to take the lesson and galvanize the anger and get herself moving. And today we're gonna be talking about getting real, and we're gonna talk about the real power that your triggers have and how they can push you forward. And, in fact, I'm one of 'em, because part of my success is that I keep showing up. And today I am going to teach you that a critical part of your success is being on the lookout for three different types of triggers that are gonna show up in your life, and Molly just taught you one of those triggers. Trigger number one is when the irritating person in your life gets what you want. And to just kind of unpack this a little bit more, 90% of the time when there is an irritating person that has what you want, it's because they are showing up every day and they're putting in what I call the reps. That's what you do at the gym, you just put in the reps and then the muscle builds over time. And yeah, I will acknowledge that there's probably 10% of the people that are triggering and irritating that just showed up. You know, the trust fund babies, like half the influencers in their 20s on social media these days where the grandparents did the work and now they're living off the money from the grandparents and they're posting all these fancy photos traveling around the world, that's not who I'm talking about. I'm talking about the 90% of the time when someone irritating is triggering you because they have something that you want and you don't like that it's them, but what they're there to show you and what you're probably not seeing is all the little things that they've been chipping away at, the boring, the hard stuff, the things they've been doing in the dark while you weren't watching over and over and over and over again. And you know what you're angry about? You're angry at yourself 'cause you didn't start doing it 10 years ago. You're angry that you keep making excuses. You're angry that you didn't turn it into a project and prioritize it. And so you needed to learn from them that this matters, and what I'm here to do is to help you recognize that when it happens, that this type of trigger is number one, natural and normal, but number two, it's a gift. It's a very painful gift. You can imagine it's like handed to you in this disgusting, sticky, gross paper and you gotta tear through it, and what you're gonna find inside when you really unwrap this gift is you're gonna find fuel to motivate yourself. What kind of fuel? Anger. Anger is a very important motivator, and you need to use it. And so let me just focus on my friend Molly for a minute, because she's been talking about jumping into social media marketing for five fricking years, just like you've been talking about writing that book or starting that YouTube channel. Talk is cheap. You know you need to do something, and you also know because you listen to this podcast that thinking about something is not the same thing as doing it, and inspiration is not enough to get you motivated to do something. So inspiration is cheap, and as I've already explained to you, one of the reasons why it can be really demoralizing to stare at so many people that are successful ahead of you is because you're present to the gap. I mean, why do you think it took me so long to start this podcast? Because I saw all these incredible successful people in front of me and I felt like, "I'm never gonna get there." So as much as it is inspiring to see that it's possible to get something done, it is inspiring to see that that's where I want to head, you can't stay there because all you see is the gap, and that's gonna be hard to keep yourself motivated to try to close, and that's why anger is really important because it's a very different emotion. That's why your triggers are your teachers. That's why that person on social media or the irritating one in the mom's group or all of a sudden Aaron down the hall, all of a sudden he's quitting his job and he- and- and he's working full time at a custom boat business that he's been working on in the dark while you've been busy running spreadsheets, that's why it triggers you, because the people you know that do it, you know you can't make excuses for why you haven't. You can't make up an irritating story for the person who's sitting next to you at work who now just quit because they've been building a business on their weekends while you've been doing something else because you know there's no superpower, there's no trust fund, there's no upper hand, they just started doing it.And that's why it had to be them. That's why that irritating person is your teacher, because you're confronted that your excuses are just excuses, that it is possible. And you're also gonna come to learn that it's normal to be upset, totally perfectly normal. But if you're serious about being successful, you have no time and you do not have the right to be upset if you have not been doing the tedious, boring stuff that leads you to the thing that you want. And so that is trigger number one. Really important, really painful, it's gonna happen a lot in your life, so get ready for it, welcome it, learn how to use it. The second (laughs) type of trigger, holy smokes, this one was a doozy for me. And this was a extremely painful experience, and it's about being in a situation where you have no idea what you're doing. All right, so there's a difference between impostor syndrome and literally having no idea what you're doing, and that's what this story is about. So I'm gonna try to make a long story short, but I once talked myself into a job that I had no idea how to do. (laughs) Even in telling you this story, I'm sitting here so embarrassed by this. But I had left the practice of law, uh, back in 1999 and jumped into the first dot-com startup boom here in Boston, and I had this extraordinary experience, uh, working for a startup here in Boston, number four person in the door. I had a front row seat to building a company that was in the content space. We put up all kinds of online tests. It was absolutely amazing. But what happened is that company got this funding from a venture capital firm in San Francisco, and they were requiring the company to move. Now, I had a baby at home, I had a baby inside me, I was pregnant, my employer did not know, and so I needed to get a job. And I started to go out for interviews, and I ended up talking my way into a job to be, get this, the senior vice president of content for a company that was building a platform, we're talking back in the day, 2001, that was connecting, uh, creators like graphic designers, and video editors, and people that did all kinds of creative services with anybody that need those kinds of services. Now, this was, like, before Facebook. And so they were building this marketplace online, and I was all excited, and the reason why I got the job is because I could talk a big game, because I had had a front row seat to watching this incredible startup get built. But here's the thing, I didn't do any of the things that I could talk about. So I could talk about what I had seen, but I couldn't actually execute it. And so I land this job, I get a great salary, I'm all excited, we're in a beautiful startup space, and it's, like, full of engineers, and I show up for my first day, and I realize as I'm sitting there I don't have a clue what I'm fricking doing. Not a clue. And I didn't say anything. I sat there... I- I went to that job every single day (laughs) I'm laughing ... for six months, and I sat there at my desk and I typed my little emails and I pretended to look busy, because I didn't have a clue what the hell I was doing. And eventually, the people that ran the company figured it out. And one day, sure enough, every day I would go in there, it was so triggering because I knew... It's not just that I felt like a fraud, I knew I was so out over the tips of my skis, I knew I had no idea what was going on. And talk about being a dummy, I didn't spend my time trying to figure it out, I spent my time hiding, just pretending, just being there, just doing the best that I could. I never said a thing. And then there was one day where the two founders called me very publicly, it was an open floor plan, so I'm sitting in this loft space and I get called in and I'm feeling kind of funky, like, "Oh my god, they're gonna ask me a question I don't know the answer, I'm gonna have to fake it again." And they sat me down and they said, "Mel," I said, "Yes?" And they said, "We think you're awesome as a person, but you don't have a clue about what you're doing (laughs) , do you?" And I said, "No, I don't." Silence (laughs) . I mean, complete... Just... You wanna talk about being triggered? Completely called out on my BS, at work, by the founders, in a glass conference room. I was told that my things were being packed up as I was sitting in there, and that's when you get this feeling that everybody behind you knows that this is happening, it's like the world's worst breakup, but you. The box is being carried out to my car. I remember, like, saying to myself, "Don't cry, don't cry, don't cry," 'cause I was one of the only women that worked there in a sea of engineers, I had no idea what anybody was doing or what they were talking about or what to do in this job, I just pretended. And I walked out looking at my feet, I- I didn't even look straight ahead, just like, "Look down, look down, get a..." And as I walked through the door, and that door closed behind me, it was one of those doors that when it swings shut, it sort of sends this, like, whoo, at your back and your hair kind of flies forward, and I'll tell you something-Having someone call you out on your BS is one of the most triggering things that could ever happen to you. When somebody says, "You're cheating, aren't you?" Or, "You're drinking again, aren't you?" Or, "You spent that money I gave you, didn't you?" Or, "You didn't get the job and you've been pretending you did," or, "You don't know what you're doing." And here's the thing I wanna tell you about that extraordinarily triggering thing, because I'm not gonna lie to you, it was so embarrassing. I felt so ashamed. I felt mortified. I was mad at myself. I was mad at myself not just for lying about my capability but then pretending for so long, but I was also mad that while I was sitting there, I didn't do anything to actually learn any skills. I didn't do anything to try to ask for help. And so as painful as it was to sit for six months in a job that I was royally screwing up pretending everything's cool, this was a key to my success, and let me tell you why. Without that trigger, I wouldn't be the person that I am today. Without the trigger of someone calling me out on being a liar, on not saying I don't know what I'm doing, I would have never have learned what a superpower it is to say at any moment, "I don't know what I'm doing," to say, "I don't know the answer," to say, "I've never done that before," or to say, "You know, this is way out of my comfort level, but can I hire someone to help?" or, "Can I take a class on this?" And what I've come to learn that I wouldn't have known without that triggering moment of somebody else calling me to the mat is the power of just being honest. In fact, you guys constantly write in and you're like, "Oh, gosh, Mel, you're so authentic. You're so this." It's because I am the first person to say, and in fact you hear it on the podcast all the time, don't you? When I'm like, "That's a big word. What does that mean?" Or I say, "Well, I don't even know what you just said. Can you explain that in a way that, that I could understand?" I don't have any embarrassment about that. In fact, I think it's a sign of intelligence, and it also, based on the research, get this, when somebody says, "I don't know," it creates tremendous trust, because when somebody tells you they don't know, you go, "Oh, I can trust this person to tell me when they don't know." And that is a massive teacher in my life. I have zero fear about not knowing something. I have zero fear about asking for help. I have zero fear about telling somebody that I need support in something, and that has led to me taking major risks. That's led to me being honest. It's led to me solving problems faster, and it will lead to the same thing for you. So, wherever it is that you're hiding out, someone's coming. Someone's coming. Someone's coming, and it's gonna be painful, so you might as well learn this lesson from me today and start speaking up. So, let's talk about the third type of trigger, and the third type of trigger is those moments in your life where you're playing small because you're scared. Now, this is that impostor syndrome trigger, that feeling like you're a fraud. And, and here's the thing about impostor syndrome. Impostor syndrome is when you're in a situation where you wanna be successful and no one around you is underestimating you. You are underestimating your capability. See, in the situation I just told you where I was fired from that job, I wasn't underestimating anything. I was lying and pretending. That's very different. But there are situations in your life where you have the capability to learn, you have the capability to step out of the tiny little box you've put yourself in, but even though people around you are giving you more or telling you, "Go for that job," like, "Apply to the better school," like, "Start that business. I see something bigger for you," you keep yourself small. And that happened to me at the very beginning of my, uh, speaking career. When I first started getting paid to give speeches about The 5 Second Rule, we're talking 2013, 2014 here, m- my husband and I were in so much debt that I didn't feel worthy of getting paid a lot of money. And the other thing that was really working against me and that kept me feeling really small is that I just felt like if I asked for more money, people would not hire me. And so I had to keep my fee small because that way more people would book me. And then, all of a sudden this thing happened. I gave a speech in Vegas at a big event for event planners and somebody saw me speak and they were wowed, thank God, and they decided, "Okay, I'm gonna take a shot and I'm gonna book this woman for an event that I am organizing and creating for a massive, publicly traded bank." I'm talking like a Fortune 50 bank. The CEO and the chief HR officer were doing an executive retreat. It was in Philadelphia. I will never forget this, and it was one of the first of the speeches that I gave where I was consistently getting paid, and I did not charge a lot of money because I was scared to charge a lot of money. I didn't think I was worth it. I was afraid people wouldn't book me. "Who's gonna, who's gonna pay a woman like that X amount of dollars? I mean, she doesn't have a book. She's not a celebrity. She's not some fancy-pants person. How is she worth that?" And so I kept myself small, despite the fact that friends of mine in the business told me, "You gotta charge more, dude." Like, "You're, you're, you're way underpriced." I'm like, "Oh, I don't know. I don't think anybody would hire me for that." So, long and the short of it, this person books me 'cause they see me at a different event. They bring me into an event in Philadelphia full of 100 executives, right? For this big bank, and speaking that day were a number of people... that I so admired. I'm talking New York Times best-selling, TED Talk this, like the intellectual giants. Dan Pink was there, there were some other people there. I was so enamored with this, th- these people that I flew in early and I sat in the back of the room like a church mouse, absorbing everything from these amazing, famous, intellectual authors and these super smart people, which was a terrible idea, by the way, because all it did was make me feel smaller, and smaller, and smaller, and smaller. And then, I got up, I was the closer, and I did my thing, and I told the story of The 5 Second Rule. And I thought, "This is gonna be the last speech I ever give, 'cause this is terrible compared to all this intellectual stuff that all these other people are talking about. I'm just talking about normal people changing their life, doing five, four, three, two, one." And it brought the house down. And then something extraordinarily triggering happened. The head of HR walked up and she said to me, "I feel an obligation to tell you something that is going to be very painful to hear, because I think it's important as a woman that I support another woman in knowing the truth." And I'm thinking, "Oh my God. What the hell have I done?" And she said, "You were ten times better than any of the speakers that we hired for this three-day summit. Ten times better, hands down. And we paid each and every speaker five times the amount we paid you. In fact, your price was so low that we didn't believe that you were as good as people said you were." And when she gave me that feedback, first of all I'm glad she didn't say what I thought she was gonna say, which is, "That was terrible and we're really disappointed and we need our money back." But when she said that it just like, ugh, hit me in the heart. When somebody tells you that you're playing small, and when they have the, just, generosity to also tell you the painful thing you're missing out on because you're keeping yourself small. And the truth is, as painful as it was to hear that, I got lucky that day, because it could've been just as easy for her to think that and not say it. And I'm telling you this story because I think it's important in any area of your life where you're playing small, you're keeping yourself in a box. Maybe you're not posting your music online, maybe you're not starting that YouTube channel, maybe you're not writing that book, maybe you're not writing that business plan, maybe you're not charging what you need to charge, maybe you're not firing that pain in the ass client that's taking up all your time and that nickel and dimes you on the bill. Wherever it is that you're playing small, you're ignoring the people in your life that are like, "You deserve so much better than this. You need to apply for that huge job that's out of reach. You need to apply to that dream school. You do need to take the risk and move across country or backpack around the world." Wherever you are playing small, you need to listen to the people that see something bigger for you, because you see it too, you're just scared. And if you see somebody in your life, be the chief HR officer for them. Tell them what they're missing out on by keeping themselves jammed in this small box. Is it gonna be an easy conversation? No. Is it going to be a conversation that teaches someone you love something they need to hear? Absolutely, which is one of the most loving things that you can do. Stop withholding this stuff from people and hit 'em straight between the eyes with it, because this is the kind of truth that we all need. And that's why triggers in your life are so important, and there's three in particular that I hope you will pay attention to. Number one, when someone you don't like, someone irritating, is getting what you want. Ooh, hate that. But I hope now you love it, because that's who it had to be. It had to be them, because you need your anger to get through your BS and get to work. Or when someone calls you out on your BS. You're not supposed to spend your life faking and lying and not saying stuff. You're supposed to have the courage and the conviction to tell the truth, and the easiest way to get help is to ask for it. The easiest way to figure out and to learn something is to start by admitting, "I don't know how to do this." And then you'll be surprised how quickly you can learn how to do it. And finally, someone who has the respect for you, somebody that you respect pointing out that you're playing small, oof, and what you're missing out on, or the fact that they gave something to somebody else 'cause you didn't step up? Oh my God, those moments suck, don't they? But they're also critical in your life. And so what do you do with this? Well, number one, just recognize it. Recognizing. Simply recognizing it. I hope, I hope this episode, by the way, was very triggering. That was my mission. My mission today is to trigger you, to make you annoyed, whether it's at me or somebody else so that you start to go, "Yeah, I'm kind of mad. I'm mad. I'm mad that I'm not doing the thing that I need to be doing. I'm mad at myself for sitting around. I'm mad at myself for being scared about what everybody's gonna think, instead of doing the thing I need to do. I'm scared, I'm da na na. I'm mad that I've gotten myself in over my head and I'm hiding instead of standing up and fixing this."Or I'm mad that I am holding myself back, that I know I am meant to play a bigger game but I refuse to get out of this box and actually take the damn risk to do it. And so now I want to connect these three types of triggers with the advice that you need, because when someone that you don't like is getting what you want and you're not dealing with the 10% of the situation where it's the trust funders or it's a situation of bias or it's a situation of privilege or it's a situation where they were just naturally born with a supermodel Brazilian bikini body. No, I'm talking about the 90% where someone, ugh, someone that, oh God, you just, ugh. They're putting in the work and they're getting where you want to be and it's irritating. Or someone calling you out on your BS. Yeah, you're gonna feel embarrassed, but you haven't asked for help or you haven't been honest with the people around you, or you haven't been proactive at actually up-leveling your own skills so that you can swim in the deep end. Or the third where a person is pushing you to take a risk and man, you are like a mule. You have dug those hooves in. You are staying in that box. I want you to apply to the better school. Go for the bigger job. Do not keep yourself small. I want you to welcome these triggers because they are the greatest teachers ever, feeling embarrassed, being over your head, getting angry. 'Cause the thing about triggers, the more you avoid doing something that you know you need to be doing, the bigger the trigger's gonna get. See, I find in my life, the more stubborn I get, life doesn't just disappear. Life shows up with a bigger sledgehammer. And so step one is just identify, oh, here I am, I'm triggered. Mel said this is good news. I recognize I got something I need to do. And here's step two. You want the formula? Play the 100-day rule. That's it. Play the 100-day rule. That's all you gotta do. You wanna grow your social media following? Post for 100 days. You wanna write a killer song? Write song lyrics 100 days in a row. Write crappy songs, 100 songs, 100 days in a row. You wanna publish a book? Every single day for 100 days you better be writing. You wanna get better at a three-point shot? 100 days, basketball court, 15 minutes hitting the three-point shot. That's how you do it 'cause that's where the work is done. And here's the other thing I want you to do. Any time you feel angry, good. Anger gets a bad reputation, but getting really angry at yourself, it can be really important if you know what to do with it because your anger is trying to tell you something. So if you're sitting there and now you're like really annoyed, good. I'm your trigger because that's exactly what this episode has been designed to do. Wherever you are in a situation where you know what you should be doing and you're not doing it, stop looking at all the people ahead of you. They're not gonna get you to do it. It's the one person that is near you that's annoying you. They have to be the one. Anger is the shot in the ass that you need. The trigger is just the universe shaking you, and the more you ignore it, the louder and more painful it's gonna be. All right. You know, funny, it stopped raining outside. (laughs) Uh, I guess that means my work here is done. Oh no, it isn't. One more thing. Recognizing the trigger is the hardest part, but it is the first step. And if you can stop yourself from just swirling and you recognize that the universe has handed you a teacher, holy cow, you're gonna be unstoppable. Absolutely unstoppable. And in case no one else tells you, I wanted to be sure to tell you that I love you, I believe in you, and I believe in your ability to create a better life, to learn social media, to not be bothered by what that irritating person is doing, and to show up every day and put your head down and just do the hard, annoying thing because that is what is gonna lead to all the success that you deserve. Talk to you in a few days. And for you sitting here watching with me on YouTube, I just want to say please share this with somebody. Don't just sit and watch. Please do something. And take a minute and subscribe to this channel because it's really a way that you can support me in bringing you new videos every single day, and I'm sure you're looking for something really inspiring to watch, to really move you, so I want you to check out this video next.

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