Morning Cereal

Start your day with inspirational quotes, followed by a fun journey through nostalgic facts from this day in history. Then, we dive into the first chapter of Dale Carnegie’s iconic book, How to Win Friends and Influence People.
In Part 2, Chapter 2, Part 1, we’ll explore Carnegie’s timeless advice on building authentic connections, the art of influence, and creating positive interactions in every area of life.
In This Episode:
  • Daily inspirational quotes to spark your motivation
  • Fun historical facts from this day in history
  • A deep dive into Part 2, Chapter 2, Part 1 of How to Win Friends and Influence People
Whether you're a leader, communicator, or just someone looking to improve your relationships, this episode is packed with actionable insights.
Tune in now and let’s grow together!
Resources:
Carnegie, D. (1981). How to win friends and influence people (Rev. ed.). Simon & Schuster.
All photo’s utilized in this video are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported by Wikimedia Commons license and are free to copy, distribute and transmit.  No photos have been altered.

What is Morning Cereal?

Good morning, and welcome to Morning Cereal!
Pull up a stool, grab your favorite cereal, and let’s kick-start your day with a spoonful of inspiration, nostalgia and personal growth. Join your host, Shaen Inglis, as he highlights the music, movies, and moments that made the 80s, 90s, and 2000s unforgettable—kind of like digging for toy at the bottom of the cereal box. Each episode, Shaen also reviews a chapter or so from top wellness books, offering practical insights to help you set a positive tone for your day. Start your mornings right—no cartoons required!

Follow and subscribe to the Morning Cereal podcast and visit our Life Happens, Live Balanced channel and our website at shaeninglis.com to check out and follow our other podcasts. You can also follow Shaen @ShaenInglis on Instagram, YouTube, etc. Feel free to share the Morning Cereal with someone who could use a little fun and motivation to start their day right.

Good morning.

And welcome to morning cereal

Okay, good morning and welcome back to

another fantastic Monday morning.

Lots happening today with it being a

federal holiday

celebrating Martin Luther King.

Today is also

inauguration day and we'll be moving from

a Democratic president to

the Republican president.

Regardless of what side of the fence you

fall on, you should know that today is

also International Day

of Acceptance Day and

no name-calling week. So

let's just all get along.

Coincidentally, today

is also Blue Monday,

which is always the third Monday in

January and the meaning of this day is

filled with controversy because it's

supposedly the saddest day

of the year.

Many of us find ourselves in sub-zero

weather this time of year,

looking at our post-Christmas credit card

bills and realizing we might already be

breaking our New Year's resolutions.

So how's that for a good Monday morning

for you? Well, let's end

this on a positive note.

It's also National Cheese Lovers Day. So

there you have it. I totally saved this

Monday and this intro.

Let's get into today's quotes. One fun

nostalgic quote and then a second quote

to tease our book

review later in the episode.

As always, I hope at least one of these

will speak to you and jumpstart your day

in a positive direction.

Okay, the first quote is spoken by the

character Sergeant Eversman from the

movie Black Hawk Down and he says

"Nobody asks to be a hero. It just

sometimes turns out that way."

Our men and women in uniform are heroes

every day and thank you for your service.

And today's teaser quote

from the book review is

"People who smile tend to manage, teach

and sell more effectively

and to raise happier children."

And as usual, we'll go ahead and unpack

that here in just a few minutes during

the book review segment.

But first, let's jump right into our

usual dose of fun and historic facts from

this day in history.

Today's news facts are for January 20th.

In 1961, U.S. President John F. Kennedy

in his inaugural

address said the famous line

"And so my fellow Americans, ask not what

your country can do for you, ask what you

can do for your country."

End quote. And for those of you keeping

count, that's a third

quote for the morning already.

So we're on a really good roll here.

In 1980, U.S. President Jimmy Carter

announces the U.S. boycott

of the Winter Olympics in

Moscow after the Soviet

invasion of Afghanistan.

A year later in 1981, the Iran hostage

crisis ended when 52

Americans who had been held

hostage for 15 months

were finally released.

Another year after that, in 1982, this is

when the infamous story

during an Ozzy Osbourne concert in

Des Moines, Iowa, an audience member

threw a bat onto the stage. And Ozzy

initially thinking that

the bat was fake, he attempted to bite

its head off, just being

crazy and wild. However,

Ozzy quickly realized that it had in fact

been an actual living

bat. After the show,

Ozzy was immediately rushed to the

nearest hospital for rabies

shots. That's an iconic story

for the ages. In 1993, Belgian-born

actress Audrey Hepburn, who created

unforgettable film roles as

the epitome of sophistication and

glamour, while also bewitching audiences

with her quirkiness and

charm, she passed away in Switzerland on

this date in 1993. In 1997,

Vermont ice cream company,

Ben & Jerry's, I know you've heard of

them, they introduced fish

food, that's with a P-H-I-S-H.

That was a new flavor that was named

after the popular band of the same name.

Then fast forwarding all the way up to

2008, Breaking Bad,

created by Vince Gilligan,

starring Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul,

it premiered on AMC. And for the record,

that's another great series that I own a

useless DVD set to. And

finally, on this day in 2009,

Barack Obama was sworn in as the 44th

president of the United

States, becoming the first African

American to hold that office. Okay,

moving on to birthdays. Happy birthday if

today is your birthday.

You share a birthday with Bill Maher,

he's 69 today, and Buzz

Aldrin, he's 95 today. You might

remember Buzz, he's a former astronaut

engineer slash fighter

pilot. He made three space walks

as a pilot of the 1966 Gemini 12

missions. And he was the lunar module

Eagle pilot in the 1969

Apollo 11 mission, which means he was the

second person to walk on the

moon after mission commander

Neil Armstrong. Following the death of

Michael Collins in 2021,

Buzz is the last surviving

Apollo 11 crew member. Now to the music

and the movies of the 80s, 90s, and

2000s. The number one

song on this date in 1990 was "How Am I

Supposed to Live Without You?" And "How

Could We Live Without

Michael Bolton for This Long on the

Show?" "How Am I Supposed to

Live Without You?" was Bolton's

first number one hit as a solo artist and

earned him his first

Grammy. I'm not sure he won any

awards, but some of his appearances on

Saturday Night Live have been epic. And

the number one movie

on this date in 2002 was "Black Hawk

Down." You probably remember this

gut-wrenching movie,

it was directed by Ridley Scott, and the

movie was based on a book

of a true story of US special

forces that were sent into Somalia in

Black Hawk helicopters in 1993. And I

won't spoil the movie

if you haven't seen it, but I'll just say

the mission ran into some

serious problems, and it's

a very intense, fantastic movie.

Interestingly, "Black Hawk Down" was the

first war movie released

after 9-11, and it won 11 awards and 37

nominations. Okay, let's move on to some

personal growth in the

book review segment of "Morning Serial."

This is where we take a few

moments to reflect on lessons

learned from the current book we're

reading. And currently, we've been

reading through Dale

Carnegie's "How to Win Friends and

Influence People." It's a timeless book,

and it's consistently

in all the must-read lists, and it's

packed with rock-solid advice

and actions for us all to use

and build healthy foundational concepts

to live by. And last week, we

finished up part two, chapter

one, which was entitled "Do This, and You

Will Be Welcome Anywhere."

And Carnegie is showing us the

importance of taking a real, genuine

interest in other people. Take real

interest in other people,

and they will in turn, they will take

real interest in you. This interest we

take in people, and it

should be in all people, it doesn't have

to be grand gestures, but

it does have to be sincere,

and it does need to be beneficial for

both parties. Carnegie

ended chapter one of part two,

giving us his first principle, which is

"Become genuinely

interested in other people,

and you will be welcome anywhere." So

today, we start chapter two,

part two, and it's entitled

"A Simple Way to Make a Good First

Impression." Carnegie

begins this chapter with a quick

anecdote about a woman at a dinner party

who had inherited a large

sum of money. And clearly,

she had spent a lot of the money on

making sure she looked

the part. But Carnegie says,

even though she was dressed to the nines,

she didn't do anything

to dress up the expression

on her face, which "radiated sourness and

selfishness." And to

this, Carnegie says, "The

expression one wears on one's face is far

more important than the

clothes one wears on one's back."

That's a lot of ones, but it's true.

Here, Carnegie mentions his old friend

again, Charles Schwab.

You remember Schwab's success was

partially due to his ability to arouse

enthusiasm in people

by treating them with respect and

appreciation. Well, apparently

Schwab had another seek to his

success, and it was simply his smile. He

was told he had a million

dollar smile. Perhaps it had

something to do with his million dollar

salary, but it was this

smile along with his personality,

his charm, and his ability to make people

like him that were also

responsible for his extraordinary

success. And it's this first impression

of a simple smile that

Carnegie says, "A smile says,

I like you. You make me happy. I am glad

to see you." And it's true.

Something as small as a smile

goes a long way in this world. Try

smiling at someone, and I

bet you they'll smile back.

Carnegie likens this back to the example

of dogs being so happy to

see as that they practically

jump out of their skin. And that's one

reason we love our furry

friends, because they make us feel

good by greeting us with such love and

affection. And it's the same

logic that Carnegie calls on

here that we can implement with a simple

smile. Carnegie says, "A

baby's smile has the same effect.

It lightens us. It actually triggers a

release of dopamine

in the mother's brain,

and maybe not a surprise here, but a

frown does not have the same effect."

Also, I think we've all

heard of the studies that say other

people form their first

impression of you within the first

seven seconds of meeting you. And smiling

at them sounds like a pretty

good start. Again, Carnegie

is quick to point out here that he's not

talking about insincerity. He

says, "An insincere grin? No,

that doesn't fool anybody. We know it's

mechanical, and we resent

it." Carnegie is talking about,

"A real smile, a heartwarming smile, a

smile that comes from

within." Maybe it's the kind of smile

that we reserve for our family, or our

best friends, or only

when the right mood hits us.

But we shouldn't just reserve it for

those we're familiar with. Carnegie

quotes Professor McConnell,

a psychologist from the University of

Michigan, who said this

about a smile, "People who smile

tend to manage, teach, and sell more

effectively, and to raise happier

children. There's far more

information in a smile than in a frown.

That's why encouragement is a

much more effective teaching

device than punishment." And that's why a

department store manager

told Carnegie that she'd

"happily rather hire someone with a nice

smile with no education

than hire a doctorate with a

somber face." I'll just interject here

briefly that I do have a

t-shirt that my kids gave me

that reads, "I'm not mad. This is just my

face." The point being, you

don't need to be blessed with

a million dollar smile like Schwab or

Denzel Washington.

Anyone's smile, including yours,

will elicit the same effect that Carnegie

is speaking about here.

Okay, that's a great stopping

point for today. This was an easily

digestible reading today, just talking

about simply smiling

more. Tomorrow, Carnegie will dig deeper

into just how powerful the simple,

sincere smile can be.

So be sure to come back as we dive deeper

into the second chapter of part two.

Okay, I hope your day

is off to a great start. And if you're

facing a big project,

personal goal, or just another day on

the grind, know that you've got this.

Have the courage to just keep moving

forward in a positive

way. Life is what happens when you're

busy making other plans. So

make those moments in between

matter. Have a fantastic day, and we'll

see you back here tomorrow.

Don't forget to follow and subscribe to

the Morning Serial

podcast on the One Life

Live It channel.

You can find more episodes and videos by

visiting our YouTube

channel and the website at Shawn

English and at ShawnEnglish.com, where

you can also follow our

other podcast, the Mr.

and Mrs. English podcast

and the Life Happens podcast.

In these other podcasts, we'll dive

deeper into everyday issues,

self-improvement and

well-being, business and finance, and we

welcome special guests too.

So join us.

It'll be a good time, I promise.

Thanks again for listening.

Have a fantastic day and

we'll see you tomorrow.