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.
Okay, good morning
and welcome to Thursday.
Let's not just sleep on
just another Thursday here.
Today is a special one.
For one, today is Carpe
Diem Day, seize the day.
And if that was not enough,
today is also morning
cereals 300th episode.
Let me just say thank you.
If you've listened once or every day,
you've been part of this bowl
of morning motivation ritual.
You folded the laundry with us,
you've nodded along to the quotes,
you've revisited songs that
still know all your secrets,
right?
And hopefully you've
turned ordinary mornings
into something just a
little more intentional.
And 300 episodes, it's
not about those numbers,
it's about the consistency of it.
It's about us growing as people, right?
It's about showing up
imperfectly, persistently,
and gratefully.
So today I'm raising a grateful,
slightly over caffeinated mug to you.
Here's to 300 mornings shared
and to many more still waiting
on the other side of the sunrise.
All right, yesterday's
trivia answer, Phil Helmeth.
Phil, he holds the most
world series of poker bracelets.
All right, now it is time
for the essential vitamins
in your morning cereal, today's quote.
And it's from birthday
boy turning 73 today,
Michael Bolton, who said, quote,
"It's important to remember where you
came from," end quote.
So here's your morning decode, right?
Maintaining humility,
gratitude, and perspective
by staying connected to your roots,
by your past
struggles and your upbringing,
even after you achieve your successes.
All right, well, let's go ahead and hear
from the experts now.
It is time to pour in some let them
theory by Mel Robbins.
And today we are finishing
surviving heartbreak, okay?
This sub-chapter is gonna pick up
where we left off yesterday
with Mel's six practical recommendations
for moving forward after loss.
And what makes this section powerful
is that it is not fluffy.
It's really structured,
it's stabilizing for you.
So Mel begins with the first
and hardest step, distance.
Quote, "Distance is medicine," end quote.
She writes, "Every time
you check their social media,
reread old texts, or
reach out just to see,
you're reopening the wound.
Healing requires
separation from the trigger.
So it's not forever, but long enough to
regain your clarity.
Second, she
emphasizes physical regulation,
sleep, hydration, movement.
When your heart is
broken, your nervous system
is in overdrive."
Quote, "Your body needs safety
before your mind can
find the peace," end quote.
Now that line should reframe self-care
from indulgent to essential.
Okay, here's number three.
She urges reframing the narrative.
Instead of, "I lost the one,"
she encourages shifting towards,
"I learned what doesn't align," right?
That shift, it moves you from victim
to participant in your own growth.
So here's number four, lean into support.
"Isolation magnifies pain," she writes.
"Heartbreak convinces you to withdraw,
but connection, it heals.
Even quiet companionship matters."
All right, here's number five.
"Redirect your focus
towards self-expansion.
New routines, new goals, new energy.
When something ends, it frees up
emotional bandwidth.
So use it intentionally."
And then finally, number
six, she reminds readers
that healing isn't linear.
Quote, "Every day you don't go backwards,
you move forward," end quote.
So progress, it isn't dramatic.
It's about being consistent.
So throughout all of
these recommendations,
the let them
principle remains the anchor.
If they choose differently, let them.
If they walked away, let them.
You don't beg for clarity, you create it.
So this section
reinforces something crucial.
Survival isn't passive, it's
participatory, right?
Healing requires boundaries,
structure, and forward motion.
All right, here is
your Thursday takeaway.
Healing heartbreak
requires intentional distance,
grounded habits, supportive connection,
and decisive forward movement.
All right, Carpe Diem, episode 300.
Same mission, start your
day stronger than you woke up.
Now the prize from the
bottom of the cereal box,
the morning cereal
trivia question of the day.
Here it is, what Middle Eastern spread
is made from roasted eggplant?
All right, thanks for listening to
morning cereal today.
We will see you back here tomorrow
for the answer to the trivia question
and for more sugar for the soul.
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 podcast,
the Mr. and Mrs. English podcast
and the Life Happens podcast.
And these other podcasts will dive deeper
into everyday issues,
self-improvement and wellbeing,
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.
Good morning and
welcome to Carpe Diem Day.
Seize the day.
Good morning, cereals, 300th episode.
Yesterday's trivia answer, Phil Helmeth.
Birthday boy, Michael
Bolton, who said, quote,
"It's important to remember where you
came from," end quote.
Maintaining humility,
gratitude, and perspective
by staying connected to your roots,
by your past struggles.
A Billboard top 10 in 1987 was,
"Nothing's gonna stop
us now," by Starship.
Let them theory by Mel Robbins.
Quote, "Your body needs safety
before your mind can find the peace."
Here is your Thursday takeaway.
Healing heartbreak
requires intentional distance,
grounded habits, supportive connection,
and decisive forward movement.
The morning cereal
trivia question of the day,
what Middle Eastern spread
is made from roasted eggplant?
Have a fantastic day.