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  • Eric: Hey everybody, Eric Worre here.

  • Welcome to Network Marketing Pro.

  • And today we have a special guest.

  • If you don't recognize her already this is the one and only Mel Robbins.

  • How are you doing Mel.

  • Mel: I am alright.

  • Actually I am fantastic.

  • Eric: You are actually fantastic.

  • This woman is a powerhouse.

  • And she spoke at our recent GoPro Recruiting Mastery event.

  • I first heard of her because I spoke at a company convention, a network marketing convention,

  • and you, we didn't meet that day.

  • But you had spoke earlier in the day.

  • And everybody was raving about the 5 second rule, the 5 second rule.

  • And I am like what the heck is the 5 second rule.

  • Because I hadn't hear about it.

  • I had tons of people like rushing up to me, that day, at the airport, everywhere.

  • They were like "Sorry the 5 second rule, I have to talk to you cause it's in the 5 seconds.

  • Once I heard about the concept.

  • I was really intrigued because, it was an interesting thought.

  • It's like a Malcolm Gladwell thought.

  • Mel: I love that you said that because I have a brain crush on him.

  • Eric: Do you?

  • Mel: Yes.

  • Eric: Like, he has his 10,000, whether it's the tipping point thought or the 10,000 hours

  • in order to become an expert.

  • These little tiny things, I don't even remember most of the rest of the book.

  • But I remember that.

  • Mel: Right.

  • Eric: And it made an impact.

  • And it stayed with me.

  • It was sticky.

  • And I watched people that, who have engaged in the 5 second rule, and it's sticky.

  • It is.

  • They, it changes the way, fundamentally that they look at life.

  • Mel: Yes.

  • Eric: So.

  • Tell me how this whole thing, where did it come from?

  • Mel: (Laughs) Oh it came from the worst moment of my life.

  • So the 5 second rule is one of those amazing things that first of all, it's so simple,

  • so obvious, and on some level, I am just going to come right out and say it.

  • It's kind of stupid when you first hear it.

  • I don't want you to make the mistake of dismissing the power of this thing because it sounds

  • a little silly, obvious or stupid.

  • Because there is some ridiculous science behind it.

  • So the bottom line is, short story, 2009, like a lot of people that are watching, my

  • husband and I hit rock bottom, financially, facing bankruptcy, we were fighting all the

  • time.

  • The liens started to hit the house and I developed a habit of hitting the snooze button.

  • Now in the scheme of life, having a habit of hitting the snooze button, and getting

  • up late, and kind of starting your day off on the wrong foot, it's not that big of deal

  • in theory.

  • But what you know, and what you absolutely are teaching people around the world.

  • It's actually the smallest moves in your routine and the discipline and decisions that you

  • make every day, that turn from somebody is just thinking about doing something to someone

  • who is a pro at doing something.

  • And so for me, I had this habit of hitting the snooze button all the time.

  • And I was very frustrated, because I knew what I should be doing.

  • I knew that successful people don't hit the snooze button every morning.

  • I don't think Richard Branson lays in bed and hits the snooze button three or four times

  • and picks up his phone and main lines Facebook.

  • He's not doing that.

  • You aren't doing it either.

  • I knew that at this point in my life, that I should be out looking for, you know, another

  • opportunity, I should be reaching out to friends.

  • I should be exercising.

  • But I wasn't doing it.

  • And you see this is something that the 5 second rule will help you do.

  • It's going to help you bridge the gap between knowing what to do, and actually getting off

  • your butt and doing it.

  • And it does it in 5 seconds flat.

  • So, what happened, this is a really dumb story but this is actually what happened.

  • I got inspired because I saw a commercial that had a rocket ship launching.

  • And I thought I am just going to launch myself out of the bed, like a rocket tomorrow morning.

  • I am going to count backwards, like NASA.

  • So the next morning, liens on the house, fighting with my husband, all kinds of problems, feeling

  • like a loser, the alarm goes off, I immediately feel like I don't want to get up.

  • But I started counting backwards.

  • 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, and then I stood up.

  • And that was how I discovered it.

  • And I am going to be honest with you.

  • For the first two to three years Eric, that I used it.

  • I had no clue why it worked.

  • It was if somebody had handed me a magic wand.

  • And suddenly I had control over myself, because what happens when you first start using the

  • 5 second rule.

  • And the way that you use it is this.

  • The moment that you have an instinct to act on a goal.

  • So its one of those should moments.

  • You know if you, you obviously listen to Eric, so you know what you should be doing to grow

  • your business.

  • So all day long you are going to have that instinct, where you are like, "Oh this is

  • a cold prospect marketing moment going.

  • Here we go.

  • Oh act like I am in a hurry and compliment the person, and you know, if I could, would

  • you.

  • You know the steps to do, right?

  • But the problem is, you stop and think.

  • And the moment you stop and think you are going to get trapped there.

  • So the 5 second rule, you have a should moment, you know what Eric has taught you to do.

  • 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, move.

  • Now what happens when you count backwards, and this is why the rule is crazy.

  • Is you are actually leveraging an amazing amount of silence.

  • It's not just a silly little mantra to do.

  • You are manually switching the gears in your brain.

  • So I didn't know this in 2009.

  • All I knew is that suddenly I was getting up on time.

  • Suddenly I would 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, and walk out the door and get to the gym.

  • I would 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, and I would get in the car and drive to the bank and deal with

  • our financial issues.

  • I would 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, and stop myself Eric, before I snapped at Chris or the kids.

  • I would 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, and I would put down the Bourbon and walk away after one Manhattan

  • because we all know that after two you are not that nice.

  • So nothing good happens, as my husband likes to say to our teenage daughters, "Nothing

  • good happens after midnight, so make sure you are home by then."

  • Eric: Right.

  • Right.

  • Right.

  • Mel: And nothing too great happens for sure after the second Manhattan and in my case

  • not so great after the first one.

  • So I started to use it to basically interrupt my habits of doubting myself, of overthinking,

  • of hesitating, grabbing the drink, snapping at the kids, all that kind of emotionally

  • driven behavior.

  • Eric: Defaults.

  • Mel: Yeah, yeah.

  • Defaults completely.

  • It's a way that you can in a moment have that inner wisdom of knowing what you should do.

  • Because we all know what we should do.

  • It's actually a tool that you can use to interrupt the default behaviors that are encoded in

  • your Basel Ganglia, count backwards 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, it does a bunch of remarkable things

  • at once, number 1 it interrupts the habit loops in your Basel Ganglia.

  • Eric: What's a Basel Ganglia?

  • Mel: Basel Ganglia is the interior part of your brain, it is the part of the brain where

  • all of your default behavior patterns are encoded.

  • Eric: Ok.

  • Mel: Everything from procrastination, to self doubt, to anxiety, to the way that you pour

  • your coffee.

  • To whether or not you write with your right hand.

  • Eric: All of your programming stuff.

  • Mel: Correct.

  • So when I use the word habits, this is all new to me.

  • Habits are nothing more than behaviors that you can do without thinking about them.

  • And 50% of your day, what we know based on research, is that 50% of your days you are

  • in a default mode, you are on auto pilot.

  • Your body is basically just executing habits all day.

  • From how you pour your coffee, to how you pull on your pants.

  • You probably put on one leg before the other, you don't even think about it.

  • You do it the same way every day.

  • Believe it or not, self doubt, hesitating, telling yourself you are afraid to talk to

  • your friends about your business, overthinking the list of calls that you need to make, those

  • can become habits.

  • Patterns that are default behaviors that you repeat over and over and over without even

  • realize you are doing it.

  • Eric: So fascinating because, inside of the network marketing space, and it's got to be

  • everywhere in the world, but we deal with people in network marketing, right.

  • All the time.

  • They have hopes and fears, that's why they joined.

  • Mel: Yes.

  • Eric: And you see in some people, that just are paralyzed, absolutely paralyzed and don't

  • know why.

  • They are like, "Ah I am stuck.

  • I just can't seem to do it." and another day goes by they didn't get fired.

  • They didn't get kicked out of the business so they can repeat that behavior, but their

  • self esteem drops and drops and drops.

  • And they are like, "I know what I need to do.

  • Why can't I make myself do it."

  • Mel: I know why, I know why.

  • Let me see if I can explain this very succinctly.

  • The problem is that you have a habit of getting stuck up here.

  • You will never grow your network marketing business by thinking about it.

  • It's not happening.

  • And what I can tell you based on years and years of research, because, in trying to figure

  • out why does something, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, so simple, create such profound change, at not

  • only a behavioral, but a neurological, and a mindset and a habit level for people all

  • over the world.

  • The reason why you are having an issue, if you feel paralyzed or stuck is because you

  • spend too much time thinking.

  • And thinking too much itself becomes a habit.

  • Now here's what I want you to understand.

  • The only cure, the only cure for paralysis, the only cure for fear, the only cure for

  • feeling insecure, the only cure for feeling like a loser, like you are going to fail at

  • this thing, the only cure for the hopes and dreams, is action.

  • That's it.

  • And so I love the 5 second rule and it's so important for you to understand in your business

  • and start to use.

  • Is because it is not a tool for thinking.

  • It's a tool for action.

  • It's a tool that teaches you to catch yourself the moment you start thinking and feeling

  • paralyzed, and doing one of those "UH OH.

  • This isn't going to work."

  • And you go down and you start thinking about all these things.

  • And talking yourself out of it.

  • 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.

  • It is how you interrupt that pattern of feeling paralyzed.

  • You quiet the self doubt, you quiet the paralysis and then you do something humongously important,

  • by counting backwards 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, you have just woken up your pre-frontal cortex.

  • Now the pre-frontal cortex, see his beautiful forehead right here.

  • Eric: I have a good one.

  • Mel: That's why he is so successful.

  • Because it is big and he uses it all the time.

  • The pre-frontal cortex is the part of your brain that is active when you are changing

  • behavior, when you are doing something new, when you are doing something that you are

  • excited about, and when you are doing something that is difficult, or uncertain.

  • So, let me give you an example.

  • I am righty, that's a habit I taught myself and started defaulting to the right hand,

  • right.

  • Now Eric could tie my hand behind my back and say Mel I want you to try to write with

  • your left hand.

  • Now I could try to write GoPro with my left hand but it would require this entire part

  • of my brain.

  • My brain would be so focused on trying to make those letters go.

  • And if my son came in and said, "Hey Mom.

  • Can I have a grilled cheese?"

  • I would literally do one of those "I can't talk to right now, because I have to focus."

  • And the reason why that your pre-frontal cortex is firing up is because it's got to use all

  • it's power to talk to the hand and direct the behavior, and forge new neural pathways.

  • So what happens when you count backwards 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, is you interrupt the default part

  • of your brain that runs on auto pilot and you awaken the part of the brain that you

  • need in order to change or do something new or scary, or uncertain.

  • And here's what's really cool by going 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, you not only outsmart your brain

  • you also, like that turn on the part that makes change easy.

  • Look at the special forces.

  • How do they start any exercise with the Seals.

  • 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.

  • Look at the...

  • Eric: Really?

  • Mel: Oh yeah.

  • I have had so many military folks, veterans, special forces, come up to me and say, "Ohmigosh

  • this brought me right back, this is how we started."

  • Eric: I have heard 3, 2, 1, go.

  • Mel: Well that's also Facebook.

  • You are aligning.

  • If you go into an elementary school, you'll see schools around the world, when they have

  • an assembly, the principals and the teachers, they start going 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.

  • Eric: Before we started, the sound guy.

  • Mel: Yes.

  • Eric: 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.

  • Mel: Don't count up by the way.

  • Don't count up, it wont work because you can keep on going.

  • You know, you will be like, "Yeah I don't want to do that."

  • The other reason why counting backwards works is because you don't do it all the time, so

  • it's a habit, so it requires focus.

  • So here's what's really cool.

  • We had a woman write to us, after being at your GoPro event, and seeing me talk about

  • the 5 second rule for 20 minutes.

  • She said, "I am an extrovert, but doing that walk up to strangers through the cold prospect

  • marketing piece," she said, "I just couldn't make myself do it."

  • You used the word paralysis Eric.

  • I would see somebody and I would know that I should go walk over and I knew all the steps

  • but I would suddenly feel paralyzed.

  • And I would start to doubt myself.

  • She said, " I started using the 5 second rule to push myself through that self doubt."

  • She said, "That in the beginning, it's shocking because you find yourself doing this stuff

  • that normally you don't do."

  • And she said, "The thing that happened over time."

  • And this is the thing that is super cool.

  • Is that over time when you used it.

  • Counting backwards 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, will not only help you interrupt your self sabotaging

  • default patterns, but it becomes what psychologists and neurologists call, "A starting ritual."

  • A starting ritual is a positive pattern that you repeat, that triggers your positive behavior.

  • And so what your, one of your biggest fans wrote to me and said that she has noticed

  • after about a month and half of using this, not only has approaching cold prospects and

  • marketing to them, and recruiting them into her business become easier.

  • She has also realizing that she is developing confidence.

  • And so this is another really important note about building your business.

  • So I used to believe that confidence is a part of a personality trait.

  • Not so, not so at all.

  • Confidence is a skill.

  • It's a skill that you build through action.

  • In fact this is advice that dates all the way back to Aristotle.

  • And there is a very famous psychology professor by the name of Timothy Wilson, that's written

  • a lot about confidence.

  • And Aristotle, the saying back to Aristotle is to say, "Do good, be good."

  • Meaning if you do good acts, you will start to become good.

  • You do things with action, your mind follows.

  • And so what Timothy Wilson talks about is just thinking.

  • You see when we talk about mindset.

  • Yes thoughts are important but for those of us that struggle with insecurity, with self

  • doubt, with feeling paralyzed.

  • It's really hard to think yourself out of that hole.

  • The fastest way to change your mindset is by taking action and proving to yourself,

  • through 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, one action at a time, you can rely on yourself.

  • When this women was going 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, and pushing through paralysis, what she's doing

  • is really important.

  • And it goes way beyond building your business.

  • She's proving to herself that her dreams matter enough to her, that she can rely on herself.

  • She's proving to herself that no matter what she might feel in her body or what excuses

  • she might have, that she actually can rely on herself, to make it happen.

  • And there is nothing more powerful in life than if you dig yourself out of a mental hole,

  • and you become the kind of person that doesn't default to thinking, but that actually defaults

  • to self trust, and to taking action on your dreams.

  • And all you need to do to grow your business, is listen to this guy.

  • Like take every single one of the steps, all the tools, this is another thing that people

  • do, right.

  • You get handed all these amazing tools,

  • Eric: And you don't do anything with them.

  • Mel: You don't do anything.

  • Or its the tools problem.

  • I don't like the tools, I don't want to use the tools, I don't like these conversations,

  • they work for him but they don't work for me.

  • That's another default pattern.

  • You have gotten used to complaining instead of taking action and try.

  • Eric: Let ask you a question about that.

  • Mel: Yeah.

  • Eric: So I am a big believer in, action does help you build self worth, self confidence,

  • your own self esteem.

  • So a person is out there and they're, they are like a scared little mouse right now.

  • You know they are nervous.

  • Mel: Yes

  • Eric: But they are like, "Ok Mel.

  • I am going to give it a try.

  • Next time I feel this little thing, like Nope, I will do it later, I will do it some day,

  • I am going to do 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, and I am just going to do it.

  • Mel: Yes.

  • Eric: And they do it.

  • And it blows up in their face.

  • Mel: Great.

  • Eric: So.

  • Because sometimes the scared little mouse, when they go 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, and the lion goes

  • RAWR and they go right back into their hole and they don't come out again.

  • So I know my answer to this.

  • What's your answer to building this new muscle?

  • Mel: Ok.

  • So my answer to this is I don't look at life ever as things that you succeed or fail at.

  • I look at life as confidence in my mind and your dreams they hinge on your willingness

  • to try.

  • That's it.

  • And if you are willing to 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, and make a 5 second decision and push yourself

  • to try, you are either going to succeed or you will survive.

  • But either way, you just took one small step closer and I want you to consider something,

  • being 41, going to a really fancy ivy league school, having a law degree, living in a really

  • expensive neighborhood and then facing the prospect of not only blowing up our entire

  • lives, but also taking a lot of other peoples money with us, is a bunch businesses that

  • we had that were failing.

  • That was as big of a failure that I have ever faced in my entire life.

  • And if I hadn't had that happen, I would have never discovered the 5 second rule.

  • And I think, here's the other reason that I love this simple rule so much, is that again.

  • I am going to go back and start with a simple premise.

  • You are really smart.

  • You may feel paralyzed, you may have self doubt, you may be nervous about your ability

  • to make your dreams come true.

  • But the truth is you're actually really smart and you know what to do.

  • All we got to do is to train you take action.

  • Eric: Do what you know.

  • Mel: Yeah.

  • Do what you know.

  • And this is a tool that will get you out of the habit of thinking.

  • You know here's one other point that I want to talk about real quick, and I want to come

  • back to the word that you said, paralysis.

  • Eric: Yeah.

  • Mel: One thing that's really important to understand about life.

  • And this was new to me.

  • Is that we cannot control what happens in our bodies, meaning whatever you feel in a

  • moment, and I am going to give an example.

  • What's one of your favorite people, and if you could go see anybody in concert, who would

  • it be?

  • Eric: Alive, or dead?

  • Mel: It doesn't matter.

  • Eric: I want to see Freddy Mercury from Queen.

  • Mel: Oh you are kidding.

  • Eric: I would love to see him but it's too late.

  • Mel: That's alright, that's alright.

  • So Freddy Mercury, so you are standing in the font row.

  • Eric: Prince, Prince.

  • I never go to see Prince

  • Mel: Prince.

  • So imagine you are standing in the front row.

  • Prince is about to come out.

  • What are you feeling in your body?

  • OH my god.

  • He's standing right there.

  • So what are you feeling in your body.

  • Eric: Anticipation, fun, I don't know.

  • Mel: You get butterflies?

  • Stomach problem, armpits sweating a little bit, palms get a little clammy, right, maybe

  • your throat gets a little dry.

  • Your heart starts to race.

  • He's excited because Prince is about to come out.

  • Now lets talk about me.

  • I am a little mouse, that's really afraid.

  • And I see a prospect over there, and I know I should talk to them, but my sister in law,

  • who I am dying to bring into this business is with me, but ohmigosh what if she doesn't

  • like it.

  • What am I feeling?

  • I am feeling fluttering in my stomach, my armpits are sweating, my hands are clammy,

  • my throat is tight, my heart is racing.

  • Now the only difference between what is happening for Eric at the Prince concert and what's

  • happening for me the little mouse over here who is feeling paralyzed is Eric's brain is

  • saying, "Ohmigosh I am so excited I am about to see Prince." and my Brain is saying, "Holy...

  • I am about to die."

  • Your brain is reading your body signals and what you feel is excitement and my brain is

  • reading my body signals as death.

  • Exactly, we can use that to our advantage.

  • Let me show you how.

  • Because your body, you can't control what your body is going to do.

  • Your body is going to have moments where you get flustered, where your heart races, but

  • you can always control what you think, and what actions you took.

  • So if you are in a situation, where you start to feel the body sensations, right, of the

  • stomach, the heart race, the tight throat, the sweating, remember the first rule, excitement

  • at a Prince concert, fear out of talking to someone you don't know about your business,

  • exact same body sensations.

  • Only difference is what the brain calls it.

  • So if you go, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, you interrupt your brain from actually calling it fear.

  • When you hit 1 I want you to have a thought, you can do two thing, you can either have

  • a thought, a vision something very kind of specific about what you do as your ritual

  • when you close a piece of business.

  • What do you do when you bring on somebody, what do you do when you create conversation.

  • How proud you are of yourself that you shared this thing that you are rabid fan, this service

  • or this product.

  • So have that vision in your mind and what happens is that you stabilize your mind and

  • your body, because your mind now goes oh her stomach is upset because she's decided to

  • go talk about this.

  • Now here's the second thing that you can do.

  • So in the situation where you feel nervous, or maybe you are already in the middle of

  • a conversation.

  • So you are like the little mouse and you have done an amazing job and you found some 5,

  • 4, 3, 2, 1, courage and now you are having a conversation and now you are up in your

  • head.

  • You are not up in the conversation anymore, you are not asking questions, you are not,

  • kind of thinking about setting, you know when you are interested and setting a time and

  • getting out of there, like Eric trains you to do.

  • You start thinking.

  • Catch yourself, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.

  • Before you start to get nervous about it.

  • Then you can use research out of Harvard.

  • This is a really interesting study that you can find, if you google reappraising performance

  • anxiety.

  • They studied people before taking a test, before singing karaoke, before running a track

  • meet, and they taught them to do one thing, and your body does the, I'm at Prince concert

  • and I am excited, or I am terrified because I am going to talk to somebody about my business

  • and I am afraid.

  • 5,4,3,2,1 they didn't use the 5 second rule in full disclosure but what they taught people

  • to do, is to say I am excited, I am excited to go talk to this person.

  • I am excited to take this test.

  • I am excited to get to know somebody and make a new friend, because you also talk about

  • the fact that you are not really, you are not necessarily first and foremost selling.

  • If you are thinking more about gathering new friends that are really interesting and sharing

  • this thing that you are rabid about, you win.

  • Full stop.

  • I am excited to talk to this person.

  • I am excited to get to know somebody.

  • I am excited to find out what that person is doing.

  • Immediately switches how your brain reads what your body is doing, immediately.

  • Eric: Interesting.

  • Mel: And if you use the 5 second rule first, it's 5,4,3,2,1, and you start saying I am

  • excited to x,y,z.

  • You have awakened the pre-frontal cortex and made it easier to change.

  • Eric: So I have a couple of core beliefs.

  • One is a positive belief about myself and the other one is not as positive belief about

  • myself.

  • Mel: (laughs) Ok.

  • Here we go.

  • Eric: The positive belief is this.

  • I never lose.

  • I never lose, I win or I learn.

  • One way or the other, in every experience I am always going to end up better.

  • Ok so, that's my core belief, on one side.

  • The other belief is that I am an introvert.

  • An introverts hoard their energy, you know what I mean.

  • Because getting around another crowd it makes me my energy go...

  • It drains your batteries.

  • Like a faulty iPhone or something.

  • So they end up hoarding their energy, they protect their energy, they go, you know they

  • like, they know they should be they like, do I wanna lose my energy by going and doing

  • that.

  • So you start this process.

  • So part of me is, I have to psych up.

  • Like when I am gonna go recruit, in full disclosure to everybody, if I am as a distributor, I

  • am retired, permanently from that now, serving the profession, if I was a distributor, when

  • I was a distributor, I would have to psych up and it was as if I was putting recruiting

  • clothes on.

  • And I am going to go for like 30, 60, 90 days, and that's all I am going to do, and I am

  • staying in that zone.

  • That was my coping mechanism.

  • Mel: I don't think I call that a coping mechanism.

  • Eric: To making me do it.

  • You know like take the recruiting clothes off and I was like aaaawwww, thank god that's

  • over, let's work together.

  • Let me work with you now that you're in the business.

  • Mel: I would like to blow your mind a little bit.

  • Ok.

  • First of all I love that you are sharing this, because I would imagine that a lot of people

  • are surprised, A to hear that you are an introvert.

  • Because introverts and extroverts, it really has more to do with whether or not being around

  • other people energizes you or it really drains you.

  • Eric: What are you?

  • Mel: I am definitely an extrovert.

  • And I am married to an introvert.

  • And so...

  • Eric: So he needs to stare at the wall sometimes, like I do.

  • Mel: Oh yes.

  • There are times that he sees me coming and he is running in the other direction.

  • Not you right now.

  • But one of the things that I want you to realize is that you said that one of them was a positive

  • and one of them was a negative, you actually just explained what psychologist call acting

  • out of character.

  • So your personality has both fixed and flexible traits.

  • So there are aspects of your personality that you get drained by being around a ton of people,

  • that I get more energy, that are tend to be fixed.

  • But there are pieces of your personality where you can act out of character, if it is pursuit

  • of a higher purpose.

  • So for those of you who keep saying you are too introverted to be successful in this,

  • that is garbage.

  • So let me give you and example.

  • If your kid or your dog fell in the river and you were afraid of fish, you could act

  • out of character and jump in there and save them because it's in pursuit of a higher purpose.

  • And just like Eric explained he came up with a way to psych himself out.

  • Believe it or not a tremendous number of CEO's and college professors are actually introverts.

  • They act out of character when they are teaching a class because it is in furtherance of a

  • higher goal of wanting to connect with people this information.

  • So I don't, not for one second are you allowed to use the excuse that you are introverted.

  • Because the point, the thing about introversion is that, yes it has a lot to do with what

  • you need to do in order to restore yourself in terms of your energy, but your dreams are

  • your responsibility.

  • And when it comes to your dreams, you have the ability to act out of character.

  • And whether you do something, like Eric is talk about, where he does things to psych

  • himself up.

  • Maybe it's listening to music or it's exercise, or it's cold showers, or whatever it may be

  • that like gets you going.

  • You can create your own ritual, you can use the 5 second rule.

  • There are strategies that you can use intentionally.

  • And this is about being pro.

  • Are you going to sit around and hope that you are lucky and that your dreams fall out

  • of the sky, which we know doesn't work, or are you going to get serious about your dreams,

  • and do what's necessary to act out of character or out of those default modes in furtherance

  • of what you want and deserve,

  • Eric: Now here's one of the biggest lies I think in the world.

  • And I am interested to get your take on this.

  • It's just do what you love, only what you love.

  • It's the biggest lie ever.

  • Like find what you love and you will never work a day in your life.

  • It's the biggest bunch of nonsense I have ever heard.

  • Because and Olympic athlete loves the goal of, to win the gold medal.

  • But they don't love all the training.

  • You know you love to contribute to the lives of other people.

  • But it wasn't...

  • Mel: I hate the travel.

  • Eric: It wasn't wonderful being on the airplane today.

  • Mel: No, no it was not.

  • Definitely not.

  • Eric: So, so some people as soon as it gets a little tiny bit uncomfortable, they go "Well,

  • they told me to find what I love, and I am not loving this."

  • So they say, "I am out."

  • Mel: I think that you could give, there is some great advice in there.

  • Which is, first of all.

  • Yes it is true.

  • Eric: Love the objective.

  • Mel: Yes, love the dreams and find what you love about what you are doing.

  • Maybe it is the connecting with people.

  • Maybe it's the fact that you are just such an incredible fan of the stuff that you are

  • using, that you are selling and sharing with people, that, that's the piece that you love.

  • But there are things in life that you are always going to hate.

  • But you have got to do them.

  • You see I have this, I said this thing...

  • Eric: But that's what you can use the 5,4,3,2,1 to be able to just get past it to get to the

  • things that you love again.

  • Mel: Excuse me do you love unloading the dishwasher, seriously do you love picking up dog poop?

  • Do you love doing the laundry?

  • Do you love getting up at 4:30 in the morning and driving hockey car pool for your kids?

  • No.

  • You do it, you do it anyway.

  • So one of the things about life, is that it is kind of sad, when we were kids, we had

  • people who just saw greatness in us, potential.

  • They pushed you, they coached you, they had maybe a youth group leader, or parents, or

  • aunts and uncles, or older brothers and sisters, or maybe a scout leader or coach or somebody

  • that saw something in you, a teacher and they pushed you past your excuses.

  • They made you do stuff you hated.

  • I hated math, hated it.

  • Mr Core, Glen Core, Glen Core incredible engineer, he was my high school math teacher, I was

  • terrified of him.

  • I hated going into that class, one of the reasons why I am an incredible business woman

  • is because of how, my math acumen.

  • It is because he pushed me.

  • And the sad thing about being an adult, is that when you get older is we don't have those

  • people in our lives.

  • It's up to you.

  • Like when you move out of your house and you become an adult, you have to parent yourself,

  • all that annoying stuff your parent told you to do, that you know we are now telling our

  • kids to do, clean the room, feed the dog, pick up your backpack, no I am not giving

  • you money.

  • What did you do with your allowance.

  • All that stuff that was annoying.

  • They were pushing you to be great.

  • Well now that's your job.

  • You are lucky because you have got this guy.

  • But one of the things that you can do, when you find that you are alone, and you just

  • hate doing this thing.

  • Cold Calling, I hate it.

  • Throwing a party, I hate it.

  • Learning the new stuff, I hate it.

  • You know, well I am successful now, why do I have to keep recruiting people?

  • Duplicating your business.

  • Why do I have to learn how to train the trainer?

  • I hate that stuff.

  • Why can't I just, 5,4,3,2,1.

  • If your dreams matter to you, you will do stuff you hate.

  • That's life.

  • And you know I also think that there is a lot of value in the figuring out your hate

  • list.

  • Because if you have a list of things that you hate, it tells you a lot about the things

  • that you love.

  • And that you are passionate about.

  • And as you get bigger and you learn those things that you hate.

  • Well guess what, you can hire people to do it.

  • Eric: I know it.

  • That's what I do.

  • Mel: But first you have got to know how to do it.

  • Eric: Yeah you got to know how to do it and then you train them and then you surround

  • yourself with people who handle the stuff that you are not wonderful at.

  • It's the best thing in the world.

  • I highly recommend that.

  • Well listen, I have appreciated you spending time and talking to people about this.

  • Let's talk about the book.

  • Because the 5 second rule book is out, available, people can pre-order, they can order, you

  • are giving away a bunch of stuff.

  • Here is my recommendation to you...

  • Mel: Buy it...(laughs)

  • Eric: My recommendation to you is this, I am not getting anything in exchange for this

  • recommendation, there is no compensation in any form, other than the fact that I think

  • it will be worthwhile for you and everybody on your team to incorporate this mind virus

  • into your head to take action.

  • 5,4,3,2,1 take that product, share that product, share that opportunity, go to that meeting,

  • register for that convention.

  • Whatever it is that you are avoiding doing, the thing that you know you should do and

  • you are not doing, use this tool to do it.

  • And the book is going to help you.

  • Now we want to help her in whatever way we can, get to the top of the best seller list,

  • the book is just newly out.

  • So what I am going to ask you to do three things, one buy the book.

  • Just go, you can go to Amazon.com or any bookstore.

  • Mel: Yeah.

  • It's only 16 bucks.

  • Eric: 16 bucks, or so, whatever it is.

  • Go buy it.

  • Get it immediately.

  • Two I would ask that you recommend this to your teams.

  • If you think this will help them to take action, then recommend it to your team.

  • And get this, make it a book club or a book of the month or a study group thing that you

  • can do team wide, because this will really help you.

  • And three I would like all of you to go on Amazon and give it a review.

  • After you have read it, good bad or indifferent just give her a review, take a second to do

  • that.

  • I know it's a pain in the neck to do, but if you do it, it makes a big difference and

  • it's gonna have an impact for her.

  • She supports what we do inside of the network marketing profession, her message supports

  • what it is that we are trying to accomplish in the network marketing profession, and if

  • you get value, lets help her do what she needs to do, which is to spread her mission around

  • the world.

  • There's also, you are giving away a bunch of stuff.

  • Mel: Ohmigosh.

  • So I want to tell you why, this book took me three years to write.

  • And one of the things that's really remarkable about it is that I though about you as I was

  • writing it.

  • There are more than 150 social media posts from around the world, people building businesses

  • just like you throughout the entire book.

  • So you are seeing other people and how they are using the rule to beat procrastination,

  • end anxiety, double their business in 5 months flat, recruit 50 people to their business

  • in a matter of weeks.

  • Why?

  • Because this is a tool for action.

  • There is also pages that you can tear out that are designed to be tacked up to inspire

  • you, and to keep you going.

  • And that's not all.

  • There is a URL in the back of the book, we taped 31 video mentoring sessions that come

  • with this book, that are deeper lessons into the Jedi Mid Tricks.

  • The 5 Second Rule is just one of them that I use in my life, my business, my marriage,

  • my parenting.

  • Stuff I use to cure myself of anxiety, you know on and on and on.

  • Filmed it at our house at our office, hilarious stuff.

  • Eric: And that's all free?

  • Mel: It's all free.

  • It comes with the book.

  • And we have something else just for you.

  • Eric: What do you have?

  • Mel: We have a free gift for you.

  • We have a course.

  • We have a course that we are giving to you, that is called the million dollar morning

  • course.

  • Because it is a science backed, my science backed morning routine, that I do the first

  • 30 minutes every day, and believe it or not it does not involve exercise.

  • Not in those 30 minutes.

  • So you are going to go with me through my morning routine as I show you what to do to

  • become more productive in those 30 minutes than you probably are all day long.

  • And I am going to prove it to you involving the science.

  • Eric: So how do we get there?

  • Do we have a link?

  • Mel: Yeah you go ... MelRobbins.com/FreeGift but you know the book, I know that you will

  • love it and on top of all of the 31 sessions and how cool the book is, on the website we

  • have a tremendous number of videos, to help you teach your team and your kids how to use

  • this.

  • And by the way, I am going to warn you, this is a very serious warning.

  • I told you the rule is simple, I told you it's stupid, I told you it's kind of annoying,

  • it happens when you teach your team, because if they catch you griping, or catch you procrastinating,

  • or catch you not doing stuff, they are going to turn the rule back on you.

  • Some days I regret that I taught my children this rule, because they are constantly " second

  • rule mom.

  • Watch your tone."

  • Eric: What if people want to get bulk?

  • They want to get a hundred of them?

  • Can they do that?

  • Mel: I will just put you in touch with my publisher and they will give you a great deal,

  • how about that?

  • Eric: So they go to MelRobbins.com and contact your office.

  • Mel: Go to MelRobbins.com/5secondrule is where all the book stuff is.

  • Or MelRobbins or go to hello@MelRobbins.com and we do bulk orders all day long.

  • Eric: Ok cool.

  • So if you want to get that for your team, you have an event coming up and you want to

  • have it at your event and sell it to your team whatever you want to do.

  • I would recommend that you do that.

  • So I hope you got some great value here.

  • And if you have I am going to ask you to share this with somebody who might get value, might

  • be stuck, might be procrastinating, might be looking for a key to break out.

  • But she's given you the secret to unlocking your potential 5,4,3,2,1.

  • So I now you are thinking about buying this book, so here we go.

  • 5,4,3,2,1.

  • Go get it.

  • Enjoy your day.

  • And Mel Robbins an I say Sionara.

  • See you later kids.

  • Mel: Thanks for your time.

  • Hey my name is Eric Worre and if you are involved in the network marketing profession, I want

  • to invite you to come to the Network Marketing Pro YouTube Channel.

  • Every week we put out content on how you can become a network marketing professional.

  • We have tips, ideas, strategies, interviews with million dollar earners in the profession,

  • interviews with global icons like Tony Robbins or Sir Richard Branson.

  • Lots of different things that we provide, they are absolutely free.

  • Do yourself a favor, click on the link, subscribe to the YouTube Channel, tell your friends

  • to do the same, and I can't wait to see you there.

Eric: Hey everybody, Eric Worre here.

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