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 Mel Robbins, The Let Them Theory. The Let Them Theory shows how letting go of control creates freedom, better connections, and peace of mind.
In This Episode:
  • Daily inspirational quote to spark your motivation
  • Fun historical facts from this day in history
  • A dive into Chapter 16, The Let Them Theory
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:
Robbins, M. (2024). The Let Them Theory: A life-changing tool millions of people can’t stop talking about. Hay House.
 
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 your morning cereal.

All right, good morning

and welcome to Friday.

We did it, we made it.

We might all freeze

to death this weekend,

but hey, we've got

today and it's a Friday.

And it's also national pie day,

which is definitely the

universe's way of telling us

you've made it through a

tough week, have a dessert.

The only question is

what's your favorite pie?

Well, before we dig

into that sweet cherry pie,

the answer to yesterday's

trivia question was Cairo.

Capital of Egypt is Cairo.

And now the essential

vitamins in your morning cereal.

Today's quote is from

birthday girl who turns 52 today,

Tiffany Amber Thiessen, who said,

"Balance is key.

Too much of anything isn't good for you."

End quote.

And that feels especially

appropriate today on pie day,

life's best enjoyed with

intentionality, not gluttony.

All right, well, you have

heard more than enough from me,

so let's pour in some let

them theory by Mel Robbins.

And today's chapter, the

hard truth about healing.

This chapter, it lands

gently, but it's firm as well

on a truth that many of us resist.

Healing doesn't

happen because time passes.

Healing happens because we

choose to face what hurts.

Robbins explains that many

people say they want to heal,

but what they really want is

relief and without discomfort.

So healing doesn't work that way.

She writes, quote, "You

don't heal by avoiding the pain.

You heal by allowing

yourself to feel it."

End quote.

That line alone, it refrains how we think

about emotional recovery.

Suppressing emotions

doesn't make them just disappear.

It just gives them a backstage pass to

show up later in messier ways.

Robbins challenges the myth that closure

comes from other people changing,

apologizing, or finally

just getting it, right?

Instead, she reminds us

that healing is an inside job.

Quote, "Healing begins when you stop

waiting for someone else

to become different."

End quote.

That's the moment your power comes back.

And this chapter also dismantles the idea

that healing should be linear or pretty.

OK?

Some days you feel strong.

Other days, old feelings

resurface unexpectedly.

And Robbins emphasizes that

setbacks don't mean failure.

They simply mean that

surprise you're human.

Progress isn't about

feeling good all the time.

It's about responding

differently when you don't.

One of the most impactful ideas here is

learning to sit with discomfort

instead of rushing to fix it.

She says, quote, "Your nervous system

needs safety, not speed."

End quote.

Healing slows us down, asks us to listen,

and invites compassion

where judgment used to live.

Ultimately, Robbins is reframing healing

as an act of courage, not weakness.

It's choosing honesty over numbing,

awareness over avoidance,

and self-trust over shortcuts.

All right.

Your Friday takeaway is healing starts

when you stop running from discomfort

and you start listening

to what it's teaching you.

So enjoy that pie today, but maybe let it

remind you that balance matters

and growth is allowed to be messy.

Now the prize in the

bottom of the cereal box,

the morning cereal

trivia question of the day.

In the Peanuts comic strip, what is the

name of Linus and Lucy's little brother?

All right.

Hey, have a great weekend.

Stay warm if you are in this cold front.

We will see you back here on Monday for

the answer to the trivia question

and more sugar for the soul.

Hey, thanks for listening

to morning cereal today.

And until then, have a fantastic day.

Don't forget to follow and subscribe to

the morning cereal podcast on the One

Life Live It channel.

You can find more episodes and videos by

visiting our YouTube channel

and the website at

seaningless and at seaningless.com,

where you can also follow our other

podcasts, the Mr. and

Mrs. English podcast

and the Life Happens podcast.

And these other podcasts will dive deeper

into everyday issues,

self-improvement, well-being, business,

and finance, and we

welcome special guests too.

So join us.

It will be a good time.

I promise.

Thanks again for listening.

Have a fantastic day and

we'll see you tomorrow.