Transcript of How to Make 2026 the Best Year: 6 Questions to Ask Yourself
The Mel Robbins PodcastHey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. It has been one heck of a year, hasn't it? Well, that's exactly why this episode and the conversation you and I are going to have today, it is arriving at the perfect moment. I am so happy you are here because today, you and I are going to do something together that means so much to me. I'm going to share a year-end ritual with you. I'm going to walk you through it. This is something my husband, Christopher and I have done every single year, this time of year, for 22 years. There are six questions that I will walk you through that you need to answer right now. If you want to make next year your best year ever. Now, these six questions are backed by a ton of research, and they guide you in both looking back at the last 12 months of your life and also So looking forward. These six questions, they just have a funny way of giving you instant clarity about what you want. I mean, truly want in the coming year. Every single time I do this exercise, I am shocked by the wisdom that comes out of the experience.
If you've done this exercise with me before, then you know just how powerful and game-changing this can be. You're probably just as excited as I am to do it again together. To make this year-end ritual both as powerful and as easy as it can be, check this out. My team and I have created a free companion workbook for you. It is ready to go. I'm holding it here. If you're watching on YouTube, you can see it. It's beautiful. It's this beautiful purpley color. It just draws you right in. Here's the cool thing. You can download it right now. Just go to melrobinds. Com/bestyear. That's melrobbins. Com/bestyear. You download this companion The Free Workbook for free. This has been a doosy of a year. If you've had a challenging year, you deserve to make the next year your best year ever. I promise you, these six questions, the free workbook and how I'm about to guide you through this planning ritual right now. It is the first step to creating it. So let's dive in. Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I am ecstatic that you're here today. It is such an honor to be together and to spend this time with you, but today in particular, I am fired up that you're here.
If you're a new listener or you're here because somebody shared this with you. I just want to take a moment and personally welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family. I cannot tell you how excited I am about today's conversation and the year-end planning exercise that you and I are going to be doing together because I'm about to teach you how to make next year the best year of your life using six powerful questions that you need to ask yourself right now. Now, this is a year-end ritual that my husband, Christopher and I have been doing together for the last 22 years. Our three adult children now do this with us. It's based on research. It is so simple. It is shockingly powerful. I cannot wait for you to extract the wisdom and clarity that you need in order to make this coming year one of your best years ever. Here's one of the things I want to encourage you to do. Share it with your friends, share it with your family. Share it with colleagues at work. In fact, you can hit the share button on this episode right now. When you all get together, you can print out your free workbook.
Just go to melrobbins. Com/bestyear. Let me tell you about the workbook, okay? I got the workbook right here. It is 20 pages long. It is beautifully designed. It is free. We designed this because it acts as a companion to the episode that you're listening to or watching here on YouTube. Here's what I love about the workbook. The workbook is going to guide you in digging even deeper into the six questions that you're about to hear me ask you and that I'm going to be answering for myself alongside you as we go through this ritual together. You might be asking yourself, why do you need to do this? Simply People. If you never stop and force yourself to take a look at your life, you miss the chance to take control of your life and make it better. See, an amazing year, an amazing life, it doesn't happen by chance. It happens by choice. One of the biggest mistakes that I see people make when they sit down to plan the year is that they miss the critical first step of the planning process. I've done this, too, because you're so excited to end the year and to get that That fresh slate and the clean start, and particularly a year like this, where it could feel like a dump through fire.
You're like, Let's just put this sucker out and move on to the next year. I'm done with 2025 for crying out loud. I just need a clean slate. I need a fresh start. I need to look ahead. I do not want to look back. But if you only look ahead and you don't take a moment to look back at the last 12 months, you missed the single most important part of planning. That is taking a very close look at what just happened this year. You've experienced so many things, good and bad. You've had highs, you've had lows, you've had lessons, you've had wins, you've had losses. If you're like me, you've probably forgotten 99% of them, really. I mean, you might think you remember what happened in the last 12 months, but you don't. You can't trust your brain. That's reason number one that we're going to, in a very specific way, we're going to look backward before we start to look forward. I don't want you to answer the questions based on memory. One thing that I find very helpful is that not only you're going to have your workbook next to you, and if you don't have the workbook, no problem.
You can just use a piece of paper. But the second thing I want you to have when you sit down and truly take the time to go through this planning ritual and to ask yourself these six questions and to really dig deep and answer them, I want you to have your phone next to you. What you're going to notice is as you go through your camera roll and you go through each of these first three questions, what were the lowest points of your year, what were the highest points of the year, and what are the lessons that you learned and the wisdom that you gained from these last 12 months of your life? What you're going to notice is you had a lot of life these last 12 months. There was so much wisdom The second reason why we're going to look back, it just has to do with the mechanics of navigating and getting a set of directions. Because you may be in this moment very clear about some of the things that you would love to have happen next year, the goals that you have, the things that you're wishing for. Maybe you're really clear, I want to make more money.
I want to take better care of myself. I'd like to see my friends more. I really want to meet the love of my life. I'd like to lose some weight. I'd like to be in better shape. I'd I'd like to travel a little bit more. I'd like to change my job. I'd like to learn new skills. That's fantastic. But it only tells me where you want to go. Consider this. You can't create directions for where you want to go unless you know where you're starting from. In fact, it's mathematically impossible to create directions unless you know the starting point and then where you want to go from there. You also cannot not create a plan for where you want to go next year that's going to work until you fully understand exactly where you're starting from right now. In fact, this is my favorite part about planning for next year. My favorite part is looking back at the past 12 months and extracting everything I can from it because I don't want you to repeat the same mistakes. I want you to double down on what went well. I want you to pull out the lessons and carry them forward because you're going to use them to make this next year of your life one of the best years of your life ever.
It is one of the secrets to my success because it really helps me get intentional about what I want. Before I came up here to talk to you and share this exercise with you, I went into Chris's office and I went through his files and I found this folder and it's labeled 2006 Goals. You can see this is a very old folder. I opened it up and I found The original planning that Chris and I did in 2004. Oh, my gosh, this is so cute. I wanted to get pregnant. I wanted to get pregnant and have a little boy. Oh, my gosh, that's so awesome. This is before Oakley was born. How cool. Oh, gosh. I'm still working at getting out of bed. I wanted to consistently get out of bed at 6: 00 AM. This is so cute. Chris has got stuff on here, a lot about health. But anyway, it's just amazing to look back on this. We started doing this with our kids about 10 years ago. I have been doing this for 22 years. When people ask me, What is one of the secrets of your success? Other than hard work and doing the things you feel like doing and obsessing over the details because that's what makes you exceptional instead of just good at something.
This planning exercise is an example of a secret that I have been using for 22 years so that no matter what's going on in the world around me, I take the time to get very clear about what I want, very clear about what's working, what's not working. I use this exercise, if I really think about it in the broadest sense, as a way to change the settings in my mind, this is what a lot of the neuroscientists have talked about on this podcast, to intentionally program my mind and let it know what's important to me. There's one piece of research I want to call your attention to. It's from California State University and UCLA, and they looked just at the act of writing a short letter to your future self. Now, this research appeared in the Journal of Experimental psychology applied. Here's what the research found. When you spend even a few minutes connecting the dots between who you've been, who you are right now, and who you want to become in the future, research shows that you feel even more closely bonded to the future version of you. Isn't that cool? That just taking the time right now with me, or if you're going to do this whole process after listen and watch once through, and then you're going to go and do it with people that you care about, simply taking the time to look at the last 12 months, to think about the future, to write all this stuff down, you're going to feel more strongly connected to the version of you that you see in the future.
In this study, the people who took the time to connect the dots between who I have been and who I really want to become, they exercised more. They were more intentional about how they went through their day-to-day life. Just a tiny writing exercise changed real-world behavior. That's exactly what answering these six questions is going to do for you, because you're taking the time to do this, and that means You're intentionally creating this bridge between where you are right now and the version of yourself in the future that you want to grow into. Makes sense, right? Of course it does. Let's go through the first three questions, and we're going to do this together. Question number one is, what were the low points of your year? Here's why I want to start here. I want to start with what were the lowest points of your year? Because if you had a lot of low points this year, you're not alone. I mean, you might be waking up most days with this low-grade sense of dread right now. Maybe you've been in a constant state of worry. It's been in the back of your mind. You're constantly worried about money or politics or war or the climate, or your kids, or parents, or your health, all of it.
If life has felt hard a lot of the time these last 12 months, here's the first thing I want you to know. That doesn't mean it was a bad year. That doesn't mean anything is wrong with you. First of all, it means you're alive and you're paying attention. I don't want you to beat yourself up because here's the funny thing about low moments and hard years. If I think about my life, not that anybody deserves a hard year, but if I think about my life, I learned the most and made the biggest positive changes in my life after the hardest years of my life. That's not to say that you deserve to be struggling. I'm not saying that at all. But there is a connection between those years where there's a lot of heavy stuff going on and this internal resolve and just like, that you need to say, I have to not have that happen again. I have to make a change. There's also a big science-back benefit, by the way, to starting here and to looking at the low moments and to looking square in the face at what was hard. Spending time with this question, what were the low moments, as difficult as it may be, this is actually good for you and me.
There's this study that was published in 2018, and it was done by researchers at UC Irvine in Penn State. Here's what they did. They tracked what happened when people had hard things happen and then just shoved down the emotions, tried to move on, and never sat down to intentionally process what happened or what they're feeling about it. The research is very clear on this that you do need to sit down. It is important to just take a moment and face the lowest parts of the year. Acknowledge it. Here's why it gives your brain a chance to process what happened. Listen to this. The researchers found that when people don't do this, when you just try to move on, let's just make next year a great year, even though this year was a dumpster fire and I hated every second. No. Researchers found that if you just try to move on, when Can you let the negative emotions just stick down deep down there and ignore it? Those feelings stay in your body. You're going to feel more stressed. You're going to have more issues with your physical health. Every day life starts to feel harder.
But when you Really take a moment to acknowledge what was hard and you write it down. You know what you're doing? You're freeing yourself of the weight of it. There's also really cool insights from Ethan Cross, who's a psychology professor at the University of Michigan, who appeared on podcast. Professor Cross says that taking the time to do an exercise like this, you know what it does? It also puts distance between you and your negative thoughts about it. Isn't that cool? Because we think it's the opposite. If we just ignore it and we try to move on and set new goals that somehow we're distancing ourselves, it's the opposite. You subconsciously drag it with you. Acknowledging it. It's a way to untangle the loops that are running in your subconscious that are pulling you down and create distance from those things that happen so that we can get into an intentional mindset that's going to give you clarity and that's going to help you make better decisions and that's going to help you focus on what's ahead instead of trying to outrun what was behind. Don't you think this is so cool? I love this stuff.
I absolutely love this stuff. I'm going to start scrolling through my camera right now. I know it can be hard to look back, but I'm telling you it's going to be the key to move forward. And so get out your camera roll. I want you to get out your calendar, and I want you to go all the way back to January 2025. I want you to think about question number one, what were the low moments? I also want you to think about question number two, What were the high moments, the highlights, the things that were amazing, or maybe the little things that happened that are, you even forgot it happened, but it brought you so much joy. The reason why I'm asking you to hold both of those questions in your mind is because you're going to start scrolling through your camera. It's going to happen to me, too. You're going to see both. You're going to see both. You're going to see things like, Oh, my gosh, I totally forgot that my aunt was sick and was in the hospital. I forgot how many days I showed up and was there to support her.
Oh, my gosh, I forgot about that snowstorm when the the boiler went out. Or, Oh, wow, I had to miss out on my family vacation because work got so Are you crazy? And work made me miss out on it. Maybe you're going to see that money was tighter than normal. Maybe you lost a job. Maybe business slowed way down. Maybe somebody that you love is no longer here. Maybe you had a plan to lose 25 pounds at the beginning of last year, but it all fell apart because you've been stressed out, you've been caring for everybody else, and so you never carved out the time for yourself because your aging parents needed you. Here's one other thing I'm going to invite you If at the end of last year, you did set some goals for yourself this year, bring them to this exercise. Because maybe you said you were going to get a promotion, or you were going to find the one, or you were going to buy a house, or you were going to get into the program, or that you were going to see your friends. Maybe none of that happened. What I'm going to tell you is it probably didn't happen because you never looked back to understand where you were from.
Because when you look back and realize, whoa, I spent my entire year taking care of young kids and taking care of my aging parents, and I was in school at night, and I was also working full-time, you're going to have some compassion for yourself. You're going to realize that part of being successful in achieving your goals is in being realistic about what your life looks like right now and being realistic about what you can fit in and succeed at. When you start from there, we can create a set of directions to get you where you want to go. We can create something that's both realistic and attainable and also inspiring to dream about. When you set goals and a vision for how this is going to be the best year of your life that are in direct response to what you experienced in the last 12 months and where you are right now, these goals, they become personal. They're no longer, I should do this because the Internet says They're a, You know what? I need to do this. I want to do this. I get to do this because I want to feel better.
This is what psychologists call intrinsic motivation. It's the internal fuel that comes from you having a deeply personal meaning tied to the types of things you want to change this year. Because if it really matters to you to not be lonely again this year, Because as you scrolled through the photos, you're like, I didn't spend any time with my friends. I wonder I'm really lonely. It really matters to me. This is something I deserve. This is something I need. This is something I get to do, is to prioritize this. If I saw my friends more, it would be one of the best years ever. Well, when you can connect what you want to do to that deep intrinsic meaning for you, you will do something about it because you know why it matters to you. If you keep seeing yourself standing in the back of every photo because you don't like how you look. If you see yourself taking photos of your family, but you're sitting on the bench while they're off on the hike, if it really matters to you to not be out of breath when you're walking up the stairs because you're starting to say, Hey, some of the low moments is I didn't opt in.
I didn't feel good about myself. I didn't participate with my kids or my friends the way that I wanted to. When you connect it to something you deserve, when you connect it to something that will make your year better, when you do it for you because you get to and because you deserve to, that's that intrinsic motivation. That's how we create the best year ever. That's why you can't skip this question. Okay, here's a major low point for me. I don't even want to show you this photo. This is me on January 26th. I I am so sick. I missed a friend's wedding. I had worked myself into the ground. I was in bed for four days. Mel, you really need to take a break, woman. I mean, wow. Okay, let's keep going back. There's lots of photos of hotels, of airports, of me on the go, go, go. Look, I can't really complain about work because I'm self-employed. I did it to myself. This year has been just unbelievable. I think it's the highlight of my career. That said, I did not take care of myself at all. I was inconsistent with exercise. I could get my morning walk in, but you know how all the experts are constantly like, You got to get a lot of protein.
You got to do your resistance training. You got to stay hydrated. I I did not do a good job of that. I mean, how could I if I was just go, go, go, go, go? It's so hard. It's hard to implement the advice when you're constantly stressed and you're constantly worried. It's not even that it was negative stress. It was just constantly on the go. You might see that, too, that in and among all the photos, what you're not seeing is you taking care of yourself. You're just seeing yourself on the move and doing things. That's very, very evident that despite the fact that I really wanted to take better care of myself, I'm embarrassed to tell you it was even a goal last year of mine to do more strength training, to eat more protein, because that's what so many experts come on this show and tell us over and over and over again, whether they're a neurologist or a cardiologist or a psychologist or it's women's hormones or it's muscular health or any of it. Everybody's saying this. I did not do a great job of that. Not at Look, you may not even be jumping on a plane.
A lot of people have jobs that require them to travel, whether that means jumping on a plane because you work for a consulting company or jumping behind the wheel because you're a long haul truck driver or working. Oh, my gosh, for those of you that work shifts in a hospital and you're on that 12-hour rotation, and isn't it true that hospitals don't exactly have the healthiest options for the people that are working there as you're on the go and you can't take a break? Or if you're a teacher, holy cow, when are you going to take a break and take care? You're not. Whether you're just crazy busy because work has been crazy busy or your life is just busy, you are running from an email to a Zoom call to a phone call with your mom to trying to wrestle down a doctor's bill like busy, busy. This year was, I think, unprecedented busy for all of us. I think one of the big themes for me, when I look at the low points, if I have to summarize it, is A, I didn't spend enough time with friends. B, I did, I would say, a C plus job of truly taking care of myself.
That means getting resistance training in. It means getting the proper nutrition, getting the amount of protein that I need every day, and not taking care of myself. It just spills over into the next day because there's a lot of photos in here that I'm not going to show you of me taking a selfie in bed, and I just am clearly exhausted. That's because I ran myself into the ground and I was sending the selfie to my husband. I have more photos of my two dogs and my cats when I do my family or my friends. That's a problem. Another low point, Oakley left for sophomore year. I don't know about what anyone else feels, but in terms of the empty nest thing, the first year, there's such a buildup I don't know, I felt really sad, and the house was incredibly quiet, but I also saw it as this amazing opportunity. Then they come back. They come back for a break, they come back, they come back for the summer. There was something about him leaving this fall for the second year that it's like, Oh, this is actually the new reality. Oh, He's going to come back less and less.
Oh, I better wake up and not just expect to see the kids because they're coming home. I got to get very intentional about going to them I am. That's a really important insight that comes from seeing the low point that the house was really quiet. I worked too much. I didn't see my friends enough. I took lousy care of myself, and that's I got to do better this year. I just have to do better. Have to do better. Here's what I want you to understand. Do you see how I'm not shaming myself? I'm just being like, Matter of fact, this is what happened. Matter of fact, okay. Because when you tell the truth about what knocked you down, what drained you, what broke your heart, you're not being dramatic. You're being self-aware. That awareness is the starting point for change. That brings me to the second question. If we're going to look at the lows, we're also going to look at the highs. As you're going through here, I want you to look at the things that were highs for you. It doesn't necessarily mean the big flashy stuff. I mean, one of the huge highs for me is even though we didn't get a great family photo of the five of us, I'm talking like one that everybody in the family be like, Oh, I love that.
One of my huge highlights of these last 12 months is I spent a ton of time with family. I made an effort to see my parents. They made an effort to come see me. My husband and I made an effort to go to where our kids were and to spend time with them. We did some really amazing family things in terms of camping and experiences that we did together. I made a point to do a trip solo with my daughter Kendall, something we had never done just the two of us. And think about that, she's 25 years old. But because she's my middle daughter, every time I would go on a mother-daughter trip when they were little, I'd always take Sawyer, too. If Sawyer wasn't with us, we always went with another mother-daughter. I'd never done anything with just Kendall. It was incredible. I'm sitting here looking at these photos of us at Round Top. It was one of the highlights of my year, spending that time with her and making the time to do it. That's a highlight. That's also a lesson. You got to plan this stuff now. This stuff is not going to happen by accident.
I want you to go through your calendar and look at some of the highs because there are so many. I'm seeing a photo of me walking in the park before work one morning with Christine and my daughter Sawyer. I'm looking at... There's just so many good things here. Great people that I got to meet this year. Lots of smiles as I'm at work with all the great people we work with. Wow, there's lots of good stuff here. Chris and I went to Montana and we went fly fishing, which is exactly what we did for our honeymoon 28 years ago. I went down and saw my parents for a couple of days in Florida. Oh, and they did their first Sound Bowl healing with me. Oh, gosh, here's another one. My parents came to visit me in April. Oh, gosh, here we all are together again in May in Chicago. You know what is interesting about this? Is that I have this narrative that I don't see my parents a lot. And yet here right on my photo roll, Before the middle of May, I had seen my folks four times this year, which is huge when you consider that we live a 16-hour drive apart from one another.
Isn't that interesting? You're going to You're going to actually see a lot of things in this that might also challenge the way you beat yourself up. Oh, Jessie's baby. Jessie had a baby. It was our first baby here at 143 Studios. The highs show you what you want more of. The highs show you what you're willing to work for. What I also love about the highs is that you're going to notice there are these small moments that really are the big moments. Here's a photo that I'm looking at right now of Chris and Oakley and I. We went and surprised him. He was playing at this big ultimate tournament, and he's got tears in his eyes. He's just hugged Chris, and he couldn't believe we were there. That was a huge high for me that moment. I mean, it's the little stuff, honestly, that you're going to notice are the things that really mean a lot to you. Maybe you're in a job where you sit all day, but this year, you started walking in the morning and you see photos in your camera roll of the little hearts, whether it's the rocks or the leaves or things on your walks that you noticed.
There were tons of flowers on my camera roll. Maybe it was a really good book that you read. I read one of my favorite books of all time. This was a high, The Emperor of Gladness this year. Or it was a photo or a painting that you hung in your living that makes you smile every time you walk past of it. All of that counts. Anything that puts a smile or an aw on your heart. One of the most amazing highs was we went to the Coldplay concert. If you've ever been to a Coldplay concert, they do all these explosions of confetti. In fact, it's the thing that inspired me to shower the audience with huge ticker tape confetti at the Let Them Tour. Wait till you experience this if you're coming on tour with us in 2026. There are all these photos from this summer when we were at the Coldplay concert and the confetti flying through the air and our kids in it. That is something I'm going to remember. Oh, the smile and the, Oh, Because the more you look for good things, the more you see them. I've already said that I feel like I am in the single biggest moment of my career.
That what has happened this year in my life, in my career, with this podcast, with the Let Them Theory book, it is nothing short of jaw-dropping. Never in my wildest dreams could I have imagined what has happened. I do want to take a moment and just thank you because you're a huge highlight of my year, the way that you showed up for yourself and started listening to a podcast that makes you feel good that empowers you to make changes in your life that make you feel better. We are the number one most followed show on all of Apple podcasts. Are you kidding me? My jaw's on the floor. The number one most shared episode on all of Apple podcasts is a Mel Robbins podcast episode, the one that we did with Dr. Stacey Sims from Stanford, who came on and taught us how to do the body reset. In fact, I was joking with her this morning. I'm like, I blame you, Dr. Sims. I blame you because you're the one that told me I had to start doing resistance training. You're the one that told me the importance and the critical nature of getting complete protein in my life.
You're the one that put me on this journey of understanding that I needed to do this because it's very hard to get the amount of protein that you need. It's very hard to do the resistance training when you're constantly as busy as you and I are, but we're doing it. Another thing I have to thank you for is the Let Them Theory Book. The Let Them Theory Book is the number one book in the world. Look, you can write a great book and it can do really well. That's an incredible thing that is very, very rare. But the Let Them Theory is almost beyond description because it has become an actual phenomenon. You don't just have a book come along that 8 million people read or listen to in 11 months. What that tells me is that the let them theory and the book and the experience of reading and listening to it, that it not only empowered you, but it was something that you felt was so empowering that you were giving it to other people and you were recommending it. It's a real highlight of my life and my career. I think it's important for you when you have a win that you claim it, too, that you celebrate it, too.
So thank you. Thank you for being a huge part of this success. Thank you for being interested in making your life better. Thank you for recommending the episodes that have made a difference for you with the people that you care about. I am deeply humbled by what's happening. Then that brings me to the Let Them Tour. That was one of the most fun and rewarding experiences of my life. I met so many of you in person. When I sit here above my garage or I'm in the studios in downtown Boston, I don't see you. I don't see what you're doing with this. As you're doing this, I can imagine it because I read the comments and I read the emails you send in the inbox, and we circulate those to the team. But it was so extraordinary to be in the same room with you and to feel the collective energy that happens when you're with a group of people who want the best for themselves, and they want it for everybody around them, too. I mean, that's just extraordinary. But the single best part was actually doing the tour experience with my daughter, Sawyer, and my daughter, Kendall.
I don't know why I thought that doing skits in front of a live audience about our mother-daughter issues would be fun because it wasn't fun until we got into the rhythm of it. But here's the thing that I will claim as the highlight. The highlight is that at the age of 56, I forced myself to do something I had never done before. I had never acted, I had never done comedy, I had never put on a show like that. It was so hard and so incredible at the the same time, and I just grew and I grew and I grew because of it. So don't overthink it. Just scroll through the photos, scroll through your calendars, and ask yourself, Was it fun? Did this experience light you up? Did it make you feel like yourself? Is there something about this that makes you want to do more of it in the coming year? If the answer is yes, it goes on the list. This was a highlight. I even shutter to tell you the good stuff about me because it's so once-in-a-lifetime stuff. But if you've got something that's in a lifetime. Your first baby was born, your grandchild was born, you got married to the love of your life.
If you put on an art exhibit at your local town and people showed up, that's a high. If you got into nursing school, if you got through nursing school, if you decided that you were going to change your major because you didn't like accounting or medicine, that's a high. Claim these things because they say something about you. Now, before we jump into question three, I want to take a quick pause so we can hear a word from our amazing sponsors. During this break, if you haven't yet, make sure you grab your companion workbook at melrobbins. Com/bestyear. Take a second and share this episode with everybody in your life because we all deserve this incredible six-question, End of Year Reset, and the free workbook that goes with it. Maybe this is something you could do together. I love doing this with my family. I'm doing it with you, but I'm going to then take the workbook and we are all going to print it My family, all of us, all five of us, our three kids, Chris and I, we're going to be doing it. I would love to see you do this with the people that you care about, too.
All right, let's hear from our sponsors. Let's share this episode and this planning exercise, and don't go anywhere. We got question three, question four, question five, question six. So much more to dig into when we return. So stay with me. Welcome It's your buddy Mel Robbins. I am ecstatic that you're here with me because today you and I are answering the six simple but powerful questions that will help you make next year the best year of your life. If it's not the single best, best, best. It's going to be one of the best years. You deserve that. So are you ready? Good. Let's move on to question number three. Are you ready? What did you learn about yourself this past year? This is where I want you to dig because you've I've already done a lot of the legwork for this part. Your answers to the first two questions, and again, when you do this in your workbook, melrobbins. Com/bestyear, the answers in the workbook and the way that we structured the workbook to guide you to go a little deeper, holy cow, the answers in there, they're going to help you answer this question number three.
What did you learn this year? If a low point was that you were constantly worried about somebody somebody that you love who's sick that you're taking care of and you were so worried about them that that's all that you did and you had no life outside of that. Maybe you learned that this year, you can't let yourself get that overwhelmed. You do need to ask for help. You do need to reach back out to those friends who said, Is there anything I can do for you? And he's like, No, I got it. You might have found that you're more resilient than you thought. If you see that something was really bad about a friendship or about a work relationship or about your marriage. Maybe you're done tolerating a certain type of behavior. Maybe you learned that you're capable of changing your careers or that you need help with your mental health. There's no shame in that. See, the highlights and the hard parts, the highs and the lows, they're not just memories, they're data. Those experience are telling you something about what you like, about what you don't like, about what you need more of, what you never want to go through again.
Just sit with this for a bit. And for me, when I look at question number three, given everything that happened this year, what did I learn about myself? What I learned about myself is, number one, I love spending time with you. I love spending time with you in real life, not just on this podcast, but I love meeting you in person. And I'm not just saying that. I really do feel that. It brings me so much energy, and so I want to find ways to connect with you more in real life. That's number one. That was just such a huge highlight, and it was a big takeaway for me that in-person experiences just give you life. I love that. Second thing. Now, this is something my husband Chris would be able to tell you because Because he is a very organized person. He is a systems person, and he knows that this is a challenge for me. But it is so clear that I am at my best when I have structure, when I have routines, and when I have systems. I'm going to give you an example. There were a bunch of photos in my camera roll of a particular week where I just looked so energized at work.
I went back to my calendar and I was like, What was going on that week at work? I realized, oh, my gosh, I had meal prepped. I know this sounds so dumb, but there's this particular soup. I've talked about it before. It's swamp soup. The recipe comes from Wishbone Kitchen. It's this green mess of a soup with chicken and rice, and I love to make it. But I started making it in September, and I would then bring it down to our studios in Boston, and I would eat this chicken soup all week. I was getting enough protein, I was getting proper nutrition, and I felt phenomenal. I was in control. I was less impulsive. I was focused. I was energized. I was waking up early enough to go to Pilates or use the hotel gym. I mean, it was a complete contrast to the weeks where we would be taping the podcast episode and I'm like, I don't even know what to eat. I'm tired, I'm sluggish, I'm moody, I'm unfocused. So the bottom line is, I want to feel healthier in my life, and I cannot and do not plan to overhaul it. I need simple, repeatable structures and systems that I can add into my day that give me the proper nutrition because it's like a domino effect.
When I eat healthy, when I'm getting wholefoods, when I've prepped my meals, when I'm getting enough protein, I feel great, I sleep better, I wake up earlier, I exercise. For me, it's like that domino that falls and The rest of it's easier. The third lesson for me, it's a huge one, and I know this, but this is why this is so important. The things that you know are important, you need to be reminded of them. I realized that it's obvious advice to say, if you want to see your family more, freaking get out your calendar and schedule more time with your family. But life is so busy and a year goes by in a blur that this slowing down and looking back really sears into your cellular structure. What's important to you? My relationships are the single most important thing in my life, and they're the most important thing in your life, too. The reason why I started the year on a trip celebrating my dad's 80th birthday is because two years prior, we had put it in the calendar. The reason why I saw my folks a lot this year is because we made the plan to do it.
The reason why I spent a lot time with my kids one-on-one is because I made the effort and I made the plan. The reason why I saw my friends in Montana is because we scheduled it in. It's a reminder of how fast a year goes, how fast it's just all over. It puts into focus that love, it's really the only thing that matters. I mean, isn't that the truth? I need to keep that front and center because the things that were the highs about my life this year were all about other people. This is backed by research. Professor Carl Pillumer at Cornell University, he runs Cornell's Legacy Project, where he studies People in their 80s, 90s, and their 100s. They look at what are the top regrets of people who are nearing the end of their life. Their top regret is leaving things unsaid. It's not spending time with the people that you about when they were here and when you had the ability to do it. Another piece of research, the Harvard Study of Adult Development, Relationships are the number one predictor of whether or not you live a good life. This year, every single high that I had was because I was spending it with people that I love.
I am proud of myself of building good habits. That's another lesson. I'm proud of myself, and I want you to look at what are you proud of? There's There's a bunch of habits from the experts that were on the Mel Robbins podcast this year that I really was good about despite how busy things were. Number one, I was fantastic about getting out for a daily walk. No matter where I was on the planet, I was out for a daily walk. I see myself all over the place walking, a lot of times alone because I'm traveling for work, but I'm still doing it. I got rid of the plastic cutting boards in our kitchen and all the plastic containers that you store things in. I feel Good about that. My husband and I both go to therapy, and it's really improved our relationship, and I certainly feel like a better version of myself. The other thing is I use the let them theory. I am a different person because of the let them theory. I had no clue how controlling I was and how judgy I was. The let them theory has made me a better person from the inside out because it's taught me how to just truly let people be who they are, let them think what they're going to think, and resist the urge to control them or change them or be upset with them when they don't meet my expectations.
I'm a more compassionate person. I feel more peaceful. I hope as you've used the let them theory, part of what you can reflect on is how good it feels to stop controlling everyone and everything and just focus on the let me part. That's a huge thing I'm going to carry forward because I love how I feel using this theory. The best part about this is that if there's aspects of your life that you don't like or that didn't feel very good this year, you have it within you, the ability and the capacity to change it for the better. And that brings us to the next three questions. But before I share that, let's take a quick break. Let's hear a word from our sponsors. You can get that workbook at melrobbins. Com/bestyear. And thank you in advance for sharing this episode with people in your life who you want more for. I love that you care about people that way, and everybody deserves this. I mean, what an incredible opportunity. What a gift to share with other people. Thank you for doing that. Don't go anywhere. We'll be right back, and I'll be waiting for you after this short break.
Welcome back. It's your friend Mel. And today, you and I are answering six questions that help you make next year your best year yet? And these next three questions are so simple. I love this part. I also use this in my business planning. It's called Stop, Start, Continue. These three questions, what are you going to stop doing? What are you going to start doing? What are you going to continue doing? They come from a strategy framework that global companies and leadership teams use all the time because it's simple and it works and it's strategic. Now that we've extracted all the lessons and you know the highs and the lows, it is so easy and obvious to answer the question, Stop, Start, and Continue. I love this. The The insights that you just uncovered create the clear plan for next year. Here's your next question. Isn't this exciting? Can you tell I'm now getting really exciting? What will you stop doing in the next year. Here's what I want you to keep in mind. One of the fastest ways to change your life and level up is to identify what you're going to quit. Winners quit all the time because there's a big difference between quitting something out of fear and quitting something because it no longer aligns with your values, it's no longer important, it's no longer working.
Winners quit the habits, they quit patterns, they quit expectations, they quit jobs, they quit relationships, they quit projects, they quit obligations, they quit customers, they quit career paths that drain them. They quit all the time because they quit the things that keep them frustrated, exhausted, distracted, so they can actually move forward. One of the biggest things that I can see about the let them theory is it helped me stop controlling other people. It helped me stop trying to change other people. That was liberating. Honestly, it goes against the way the world teaches you to live. I mean, you and I are surrounded by this pressure to do more, add more, push more, as if the only path to a better life is piling more on your plate. But that's not true. One of our guests this year on the Mel Robbins podcast, Georgetown University Professor Cal Newport, who's an expert on time and productivity, said something that really struck me. Real productivity isn't about doing more. It's about focusing on what really matters. Subtraction before addition. Subtraction because it creates room for what matters. That's why this question is so important. It forces you to stop everything and start being deliberate.
When you ask yourself, What do I need to stop doing? You're not giving up. You're getting strategic. Here's a couple of examples of what you need to stop doing. I need to stop going into a job every day that makes me miserable. I need to stop telling myself that it's a very hard economy and I'm never going to find a job. I need to stop telling myself that I'm never going to meet the one. I need to stop beating myself up over the shape that I am in because that's not helping. That's not motivating. I need to stop trying to change my partner because it's creating a lot of resistance in my life. I need to stop telling myself, I'm too old, I'm too young, I'm too this, I'm too that. That's what I need to stop doing. I need to stop sitting alone in my house and feeling sorry for myself because it's contributing to the loneliness I feel. I need to stop sitting around and waiting for other people to call me. I need to take responsibility for the social life, for the connection to my family that I want. When you decide to stop because it no longer It bothers you.
It's a waste of your time. It's frustrating. It's stupid. It's annoying. Your values have changed. Your priorities have changed. You're going to make a decision to stop. Stopping becomes the lever that moves you forward rather than this weight that's holding you back. As your friend, I'm going to ask you, what are you going to stop doing next year? You're going to stop doomscrolling every night before bed and then getting a crappy night's sleep? Will you stop being available 24/7 for work texts and emails? Will you stop comparing yourself to strangers online or to your sister or your best friend? Will you stop blaming your sofa things that were never yours to carry in the first place? How about you stop giving your time to relationships that never give anything back? I know one thing that I'm going to stop. I'm going to stop making excuses around resistance training. I just need to stop making excuses. I'm a person who is very intimidated by walking into a hotel gym. I get overwhelmed very easily. I've used it as a big excuse because I don't know if you're this person, but if I walk into a gym and I don't know what to do, I just get overwhelmed and I then walk on a treadmill or I leave.
One of the reasons why I'm able to be successful at getting a walk in every day is because I know how to do it. It's not that intimidating. You don't need equipment and you don't need what to do and you don't need to manage anything. You can do it anywhere you are. I've been able to fit that in. But I need to stop making excuses about this, and I know what I need. Everybody's talking about resistance training and protein and proper nutrition. I just have to stop making excuses about this. I need I need to write this down. This has got to be my number one thing because it's a domino effect. The weeks I get this right, I am a different human being, and I'm so sick of my excuses. There's probably something in your life that you're just sick of yourself about it. You're sick of the excuses. You're sick of how it feels. I'm going to stop nagging my husband. I'm going to stop micromanaging my kids. I'm going to stop checking my ex's location all the time. I'm going to stop. Whatever it is for you, I invite you to think about the thing, and it's important to have one.
You can write down a bunch more, but I really want you to have a big one because then you're going to be successful at it. I already know what I need to do. That brings me to the second question that you're going to answer, which is, what are you going to continue doing? What are you going to continue doing? My continue doing ties to what I'm going to stop doing. I'm going to stop making excuses around exercise, and I'm going to come up with a seven-day plan. Four of it involves resistance training, two upper body, two leg days. Boom, we're done. I can do the same boring exercises 30 minutes or less. The other three days, I get to do what I want. I can walk, I can do pilates, I can do whatever I want. I'm going to continue to lean into AI. Here's why I want to do that. I use AI at work. We I have incredible tools that we have built that are really amazing for how we run business. But I realized I'm not leaning into it in my personal life. I had this epiphany when we did an episode this year about AI with an expert on AI, and I just kept thinking about how little I know about it when it comes to how you can use it as a tool to help you be more of yourself, to help you find time to do the things that are super meaningful for you.
I mean, right now, if I'm being honest with you, I use AI personally almost like Google. You type in something and you're searching for something. To me, this is really important to just share about because I really do think women in particular, and those of you that are a little bit older like me as a 57-year-old woman, I do not want you to be left behind. Women, they estimate, are falling behind at a rate of 25%. Just consider that this moment is like saying, I just don't want to learn email. I don't want to use a cell phone. Okay, well, that's your choice, but how are you going to connect with people? How are you going to be successful in a job? How are you going to be able to stay in touch with your kids or your grandkids? On that topic, I want to know what my kids are using. I do have concerns like you do about how fast AI is evolving and how unregulated it seems. I'm concerned about the impact on the environment. I'm concerned about privacy and about data. But how could I possibly be an effective advocate for regulation or change if I don't even use it or understand it?
It's easy to sit on the sidelines and cross your arms and complain all the things that are scary, but you're going to be much more effective at being part of a positive change if you actually understand how to use it. Here's how I'm using it. I figured out the other day because we wanted to meet our son halfway between where we live and where he lives on a Sunday night in the middle of nowhere in Vermont, and I asked it to help me find all the options for places midway that we could meet restaurants that were actually open and that had a place to walk the dogs within a mile of the restaurant. Honest to God, this is what I did. It spit it out in 10 seconds. I was like, What? Then I asked it a few more. It helped me be able to make decisions and connect with Oak. I'm going to continue leaning into it because now that I've gotten a taste of how it can help me, it's going to sound weird, but I almost feel a little more human. I don't want to spend time stressing about that stuff. I'm going to continue leaning in and finding ways to save time and solve problems so that I can focus on the stuff that's meaningful.
That's it. Do you see how stopping something doesn't mean a dead-end? Continuing something doesn't have to feel like an obligation. You're just rolling things forward. Here's another thing I'm going to continue. I am going to continue scheduling time with friends in advance. In fact, yesterday, as I was getting ready for this episode and I was starting to scroll through my photos, I saw that one of the highlights was going to see friends in Montana. So what did we do? I said to Chris, We got to see those guys again. Please call the golf course and please find if there's some tournament that we could all do. Sure enough, Chris found a tournament for next year in September, and we sent a text to our friend saying, Hey, are you guys available this weekend in September next year? So I'm going to continue being super proactive about finding time for friends, scheduling time with family. Finding events to go to because it makes a difference. I'm also going to continue going to concerts because two highlights of my life were seeing Coldplay and Noah Khan. I can't stop talking about it, and I got to continue doing that.
You see how this works? What are you going to continue doing? Are you going to continue to make time for your family and your friends? Are you going to continue to learn about AI or do skill building? Things that you've been wanting to make time for? Are you going to Are you going to continue to show up for your family? Are you going to continue going to school or continue improving your skills at work? What do you want to continue doing? Continue seeing your friends? Do you want to continue the pickleball league? Do you want to continue drinking more water and hydrating and taking great care of yourself? Do you want to continue that evening routine? Do you want to continue the morning walk and listening to this podcast and audiobooks and other things that really help you improve your life and learn? Do you want to continue to surround yourself with the people that lift you up? Do you want to continue to garden and pursue the hobbies that really make your heart full? Do you want to continue to sing in the church choir or continue learning the guitar? One of the things that I hope you'll put on the list is that you're going to continue using the let them theory, that you will continue protecting your peace.
You'll continue really protecting your time and energy. You'll continue to feel empowered. You'll continue to work on accepting people for who they are, who they're not, and continue to draw better boundaries around the people that, gosh, they just are who they are. That's never going to change. Maybe you're going to be one of the millions and millions of people that say, I'm going to continue using this let them theory because, boy, it's really working. Okay, final question. What are you going to start doing this here. This is the question where you get clear on what you're going to begin. Remember, a start doesn't have to be dramatic. Maybe you're going to start walking with a neighbor three mornings a week, or you're going to start a walking group. I did that when I first moved to Vermont. Guess what? It's something that still continues. Maybe you're going to start therapy. Maybe you'll start going to bed 30 minutes earlier and for real not sleeping next to your phone. For real, like putting it in the other room. Maybe you'll start showing up differently at work and you'll start speaking up for yourself and sharing your ideas in meetings.
Maybe it's traveling, even if it's just taking a day trip or speaking another language, or you're going to start dating again because this last year was the year that you had your heart broken. Maybe you'll start writing that book that you keep putting on the back burner. Maybe you're going to play the piano again. You stopped when you had kids, but now that you're an empty nester, now you're going to start again. I want you to rediscute discover all the fun and the challenge of starting something new. When it comes to what I'm going to start, this is a big one. There's a lot of little things that I'm going to start, but I want to tell you about this big one. I can't even believe that I'm saying this. You're the first person I'm telling. This is the first time I have said this out loud. I feel a little weird. I have butterflies. But you're the first person that should know. I am starting a new company, and I can finally tell you about it. It's a new company called PureGenius, and I am so excited about this. I have not been this excited about starting something new since I started the Mel Robbins podcast.
This is a personal thing that has happened for me, and so I want to tell you this story because you've heard me complaining about how this entire year, a lot of the lows was that I was traveling and I let myself go. I found it incredibly hard to eat healthy and to get the amount of protein in that I needed and to build muscle. I know you find it hard to do those things, too. But this goes back to the beginning of the podcast. I looked back at all the experts that have been on the Mel Robbins podcast. I have a list here. Episode number 77, we had Dr. Amy Shaw on, and she is a triple board, certified, Ivy League-educated medical doctor who talks all about nutrition and health. She started talking all about the importance of protein. Then 10 episodes later, she came back to talk about menopause and hormones and the absolute critical nature of building muscle, of resistance training, and of protein. From that conversation on, because I'm in menopause, I have been focused on, how can I build more muscle? How can I eat more protein? How can I leverage all this science to manage all the changes?
Here's what I found. It is so hard to stay on top of this. It is so hard to get the amount of protein that you need. But this is what kept happening for me. First, it was Dr. Amy Shaw. Then came Dr. Gabriele Lyons talking all about muscle-centric health and protein, protein, protein. Then we had Dr. Gwanda Wright, Dr. Stacey Sims, which, by the way, Dr. Stacey Sims came on the podcast, and she talked all about how essential protein and resistance training is. This is the same Dr. Stacey Sims and the same episode that Apple just named the number one most shared episode of all podcasts in the world of the entire year. When Dr. Stacey Sims came on the podcast and with weights, when weight lifting. It was like, You got to get more protein. You got to get more protein. It was like, I was so fascinated by that conversation and so empowered. Then it was doctor after doctor after doctor came on the show and talked about protein, Particularly as you're getting older. I know you've heard this, too. Here's what I found. It is so hard to get enough protein. I mean, between the egg bites and the chicken and the steak and the vegan protein and the bars and You need to refrigerate this stuff and forget about it when you're traveling.
Forget about it. I don't know if you're finding the same thing, but like, oh my gosh, it is so hard. It is hard to get the amount that the medical experts are recommending. I'm trying. I'm making the shapes. I'm doing the smoothies. I'm getting the bowls. I'm eating the chicken. I'm eating the eggs. I'm eating the fish. I'm eating the beef. I'm putting all the powders in. I'm buying the bars. I'm telling you, it is still hard I mean, there's only so many egg bites a person can eat. I knew I had a problem. I was having trouble solving it. I didn't know how to get more protein in, so I just started asking around. I asked all my friends that are in the podcast space. I asked my friends that were medical doctors. I started calling some of the doctors that appeared on this podcast. One of the interesting thing is, even some of the doctors said, There's a real gap in terms of what's available to people. I'm looking for something that's a high-quality, clinical-grade protein source that somebody could take in a shot. As I started talking about the problem that I had, which is it's really hard to get quality protein in that you can trust to bridge the gap, I bumped into a couple of people who had been working on this problem, and they had developed a first-of-its-kind protein shot.
I am so thrilled to tell you that I have joined a company called PeerGenius as a co founder, and I'm holding in my hand this innovative, revolutionary new form factor of protein. It's so cool. You want to know what's genius about it? Inside these three ounces that fit in the palm of your hand is 23 grams of a complete protein. It has all the amino acids that all of the medical experts recommend that you and I get for muscle building. And so this was a solution to a problem that I was facing, that everybody in my life was facing. So as soon as I decided I was going to get involved, the first phone call I made, Can guess, Dr. Amy Shaw, the medical expert that had appeared on this podcast in 2023 and first taught me and you the importance of protein and building muscle, particularly when it comes hormone health, when it comes to longevity. I called her and I said, Dr. Shah, I am going to jump into this project. I'm really excited about it. Would you ever go to California with me and go to the lab and kick the tires with me?
Because I'm not the expert in this, but you're the expert in this. You're triple board certified, Ivy-educated medical doctor who's recommending protein. Will you come and check this out? She's like, Of course I will. We hopped on a plane, we went out to the labs in California, we met the scientists, we were involved in the tasting. We looked at the ingredients. We changed things to make it better. We have been behind every single decision related to the rollout of this product. Here's the reason why the name pure genius is perfect. Because any tool that's simple, that is trustworthy, that solves a problem, and that's backed by research, and a normal busy person like you and me can fit it into a busy life without really thinking, that's genius. Now, it's not available to buy just yet, but I want you to get on the waitlist if you're interested in learning more. I'm not selling you anything. I'm just excited to tell you about this because It's everything that I try to be. It's a simple solution, it's smart, and it's easy to fit into a busy life, and it's backed by science and research. Isn't that genius?
I sure think it is. If you If you want to learn more, just go to puregeniusprotein. Com. There's a waitlist there. We don't have any to sell you at the moment. It is coming, but that's what I'm starting this year. I'm starting a whole new company. I have incredible cofounders. I am so excited to share with you all the research and everything that I've learned about protein. I'm excited to introduce you to our world-class founding scientific board. As you think about what you want to start, you Can either go big. You can go, but you got 12 months. You don't have to start a new company in January. I mean, I'm telling you this, and it's December. I've been working on it in the dark, but I'm not technically starting it until the end of this year. If you want to start a business, write it down. If you want to start getting more protein, write it down. If you want to start a community vegetable garden, write it down. If you want to start prioritizing your health, you want to lose some weight, you want to get in better shape. Write it down. If you want to start talking to your kids more, creating a better relationship with them.
Maybe there's something that happened that strained your relationship, and this is the year you're going to start to reconcile. Maybe you want to start to bring music back into your life. That might just mean having playlists that you love that are playing in the background at your house. Maybe this is the year you start to take your house back. You're going to clean out the attic, you're going to clean out the garage, you're going to clean out the back bedroom, and you're going to turn it into the home office or the guest bedroom or the crafting room that you've always wanted. Speaking of crafting, maybe this is the year you're going to start that hobby that brings you so much joy that you've been thinking about but you didn't find time for. Maybe this is the year you start saying, I don't know. Maybe it's the year you start saying yes. Maybe this is the year you start getting up earlier and you create a beautiful morning routine for yourself. You've been thinking about it, you've been learning about it, but this is the year How do you start doing it? What matters is that whatever it is that you want to start, that it pulls you toward a version of your life and yourself that feels good.
If that idea scares you a little bit, well, that's a sign that you're really reaching for something that matters. I'll tell you, when I look backwards at why I'm starting pure genius, I can see how the dots connect. I can see organic that all of these medical experts that showed up on the podcast and started dropping these kernels of important wisdom, that was opening up something inside me. But I can also see that as I've had friends, much like how I got inspired to launch the podcast. I noticed friends were starting podcasts, and I felt myself like, Oh, I think I might want to do something like that. As I've noticed, friends of mine starting small businesses. I have a friend that started a granola business business, just a local one, selling it locally. I have another friend that started their own beverage. That was cool to watch. I felt myself being pulled towards it. These are important things to pay attention to because what you may write down that you want to start, it may have actually been set in motion years ago. You may have been felt pulled towards it years ago. But you've just been saying, I'm too old.
I don't know how to do that. Things like that don't happen for a person like me. I'm not smart enough. It's too late to start. But when you write down, this is the year, I'm going to start writing that novel. This is the year I'm going to start writing that business plan for the restaurant I've always wanted to open. This is the year I'm going to start learning how to create a YouTube channel and monetize it. I'm going to start I'm making money online. I'm going to start a real estate business. As you write that down, you are pulling those things that are in your heart and in your mind outside of you, and you're making them real by writing them on the paper. Because as I leaned into the thing I'm starting, I realized I'd been nudged in that direction for quite some time. I guess I just wasn't ready to start yet. But when you take the time and you write down, this is what I'm going to start doing. You take it from an idea and you turn it into a reality. That's the first step. You have no idea what you're capable of.
You have no idea what's possible in your life. But one thing is for sure, you will never figure that out if you don't find the courage to write down what you're going to start doing this year. You now have laid the groundwork for the best year ever because you are clear about who you are, you are clear about what matters to you, you are courageous about the things that you hold in your heart that are possible for you, and you have written them down. And that right there Here is how you create the best you're ever. I promise you there is something about this exercise. You're going to want to do it again and again and again. It's that cool. It's that powerful. I'm so excited that you're here. I'm so excited that you have your workbook. Again, you can get that at melrobbins. Com/bestyear. I want to thank you for sharing this with people in your life because when they're energized, I'm so energized about this new thing I'm doing. That's why I want you to swing for the fences when you do start. Because if you take on something that you don't know how to do, you take on something that's new, you take on something that you're interested in, it infuses you with so much excitement.
It makes you interesting. It makes your life interesting simply to take something on where you're going to learn and you're going to grow. And boy, do I want that for you. And in case no one else tells you, I wanted to be sure to tell you that I love you and I believe in you. And I believe in your to create a better life. And what you and I just did today is the step-by-step roadmap for how you do it. All righty, I will be waiting for you in the very next episode. I'll welcome you in The Moment You Hit Play. People often ask me, How did you become so successful, Mel? I always... All right, let me start from the beginning again. We got to get the shitty first draft out, right? 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14. What are we doing? I am going to share a rear end. Today, you and I are going to do this for the Hold on a second. What just happened here? Okay. Oh, did that just reset? Okay, hold on. I got to start over. I mean, I don't even know how to tell you this.
We just found out this morning that I don't even know if I have it in front. Do I have it in front of me? Do we have the thing? If you want to start, what are some other things, everybody? I can't wait for you to try it. Okay, great. Thank you. Oh, and one more thing. And no, this is not a blooper. This is the legal language. You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you. This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes. I'm just your friend. I am not a licensed therapist, and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional. Got it? Good. I'll see you in the next episode. Siriusxm Podcasts.
Do you want to make 2026 your best year yet? An amazing year doesn’t happen by chance. It happens by choice. And there are only 6 questions to ask yourself for instant clarity and insight. Your answers will show you what the very next steps are in your life. The brand new companion workbook to this episode can be found at melrobbins.com/bestyear. In this episode, Mel walks you through her empowering, research-backed, year-end ritual designed to set you up for success. By the end, you’ll know exactly where to steer your energy to make next year your best yet. She will cover: -The powerful year-end ritual she has used for the past 22 years -The simple question to ask yourself to know what you really want -Why doing this every single year is the key to her own success - and how if you've done this process in the past, you can take it up a notch this year -How to use your camera roll to highlight your year -The one best step you should take after listening to this episode -Her own reflections on the year and the goals she is setting. This episode comes with a 20-page companion workbook. This brand new workbook is designed to help you get clear about what you want and empower you to take the next step forward in your life. And the cool part? It takes less than a minute for you to get your hands on it.Just sign up at melrobbins.com/bestyear. To learn more about Pure Genius, which Mel mentioned in today’s episode, click here to get on the waitlist.For more resources related to today’s episode, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked the episode, check out this one next: How to Reinvent Your Life Starting TodayConnect with Mel: Get Mel’s newsletter, packed with tools, coaching, and inspiration.Get on the waitlist for Pure GeniusGet Mel’s #1 bestselling book, The Let Them TheoryWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes ad-freeDisclaimer Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.