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 1, Part 2, 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 1, Part 2 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 to Tuesday.

I'm so excited for today and I'm sure you

are too, and not just

because it's International

Kite Day and Second Halloween for Pets.

Apparently, it's National Dress Up Your

Pet Day, but because

it's also Feast of the Ass

Day.

Now, I can't repeat that for ratings

purposes, but you heard me

right, and to say it another

way, it's Feast of the Donkey Day, which

first of all, I've never heard of.

But it began apparently as a medieval

Christian feast, and it

commemorates the Israelites'

flight into Egypt.

So there you have it.

Now you can't say I

never taught you anything.

Today also marks the beginning of the

Orthodox New Year, or Rosh Hashanah.

Okay, well let's go ahead and jump right

on into today's

episode with today's quotes.

As usual, it's one fun nostalgic quote,

and then a second quote

to tease our book review

later in the episode.

I hope one of these quotes will speak to

you and jumpstart your

day in a positive direction.

Alright, the first quote is, "Think of a

place that's really perfect.

Your own happy place.

Go there, and all your

anger will just disappear."

Now that's great

advice from Chubs Peterson.

That's Carl Weathers'

character in Happy Gilmore.

I think my happy place is probably

sitting on the bungalow

porch overlooking the most

bluest of waters in Bora Bora.

That's definitely it.

Thanks Chubs for that memory.

Alright, today's teaser quote from the

book review is, "Take

interest in others, and

they will be interested in you."

Now as usual, we'll go ahead and unpack

that here in just a few

minutes during the book

review segment, but first, let's go ahead

and jump into our usual

dose of fun and historic

facts from this day in history.

Okay, today's news

facts are for January 14th.

In 1784, the Continental Congress

ratified the Treaty of

Paris, essentially ending the

American Revolution.

Then in 1943, President Roosevelt

traveled from Miami to

Morocco to meet with Winston

Churchill.

That made him the very first American

president to travel overseas by airplane.

In 1952, The Today Show premiered on NBC.

It starred Dave

Garraway and Jack LeCouillie.

In 1970, Diana Ross and the Supremes,

they staged their final

concert as Ross moved on

to her solo career.

In 2005, the Hoyt-Gens entry probe landed

on Saturn's largest

moon, Titan, and it marked

the first time a spacecraft landed on a

planetary surface in

the outer solar system.

And finally, if you were looking to see

what was on primetime

TV tonight back in 1987,

you would have seen shows like Perfect

Strangers, Head of the

Class, Dynasty, Magnum PI.

Did you watch any of those shows?

Okay, moving on to birthdays.

Happy birthday if today is your birthday.

You share a birthday with Carl Weathers.

He was born on this day in 1948.

Rest in peace, chubs.

Mr. Smith, better known as

LL Cool J, he's 57 today.

David Grohl, the lead singer

of The Food Fighters, he's 56.

And fellow small

podcaster, Jason Bateman, he's 56.

Now to the music of the

80s and the 90s and 2000s.

The number one song on this date in 2002

was "How You Remind Me" by Nickelback.

How You Remind Me was the most played

song of 2002 on US radio stations.

It was also the most played radio song in

the US during the

first decade of the 21st

century with over 1.2 million spins.

It was followed on this list by Trains

Drop of Jupiter, which

was over 1.1 million times

during the 2000s.

The next number one song by a Canadian

artist was "Rude" by Magic in 2014.

And the number one movie on this date in

1991 was "Home Alone."

It was probably more appropriate for me

to highlight this movie

a couple weeks ago, given

it's a holiday movie.

In fact, I think my kids probably watched

it about 15 times in

the days leading up to

Christmas.

But, in its opening weekend, "Home Alone"

topped the box office,

making over $17 million

and maintained its number

one spot for a full 12 weeks.

And it remained in the top 10 until June

of the following year.

The last fact about this movie is Kevin's

backyard treehouse, you remember that.

It was not originally

part of that property.

It was actually just constructed for the

making of the movie specifically.

And then it was demolished

once the filming was ended.

Okay, let's go ahead and 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.

We're reading through Dale Carnegie's

"How to Win Friends

and Influence People."

As you know, it's a timeless book that is

consistently on all

the must read lists and

it's packed with rock solid advice and

actions for all of us to use and build

healthy foundational

concepts to live by.

Now, yesterday Carnegie left us with this

quote from

psychologist Alfred Adler's book,

What Life Should Mean to You.

And that quote said, "It is the

individual who is not

interested in his fellow men who

has the greatest difficulties in life and

provides the greatest injury to others.

It is from among such individuals that

all human failures spring."

End quote.

Now, this is a pretty deep quote talking

about the negativity

and the repercussions that

all these selfish people

inflict on our society.

Right?

We're all enjoying this calm, tranquil

pond of life, if you

will, when the selfish person

comes along and heaves a heavy stone of

negativity into the glassy

waters that we're all enjoying.

Now, perhaps a better example is the guy

who is speeding up to

the front of the long line

of cars and pushes himself in because, at

least in my

household, we call those people

the most important people in the world.

But it's his selfishness that brings

negativity and anxiety to

everyone else in that line

of cars, maybe even

making other people mad.

Now, that's an example of someone who is

not interested in other people.

And we immediately don't

really like that person.

While, on the other hand, someone that,

even just as simple of an

act as opening and holding

the door open for us, such a small act of

kindness, I

immediately think positively of

that person.

And it's interesting.

Carnegie builds off of these gut feelings

that we get from people

based on their actions,

and he describes an editor of a magazine

who reads dozens of stories a day.

And the editor says that he can tell

after reading just a few

paragraphs whether or not

the author likes people or not.

Now, this is not directly selfishness,

but it is similarly

off-putting when you can just

feel the vibe, and that's my word, not

Carnegie's, obviously, but

you can feel the vibe that

someone just really doesn't like other

people, and they are not

interested in participating

in life with the rest of us

in a clear and positive way.

But catch this.

Back to the editor.

He says, "If the author doesn't like

people, people won't

like his or her stories."

Now, Carnegie says here that he's not

trying to tell you things

that your preacher would

tell you, but the logic still fits.

If people will not want to read your

stories because they can

tell through your writing

that you're really not interested in them

or you don't like

other people, then is it

also logical to think that that same

sense will be multiplied

when you're face-to-face

with someone?

Carnegie says, "Absolutely."

You can be sure it's

true of dealing with people.

Carnegie then tells a story of some time

he spent in the dressing room of a famous

magician of the time, Howard Thurston.

Apparently, he was very successful.

Well, Carnegie asked Thurston what his

secret of success was,

and it wasn't that he was

exceptionally well-educated.

He had dropped out of school and ran away

from home as a small boy.

He essentially lived as a

hobo, as Carnegie puts it.

He also said it wasn't because he was the

greatest magician with

all these great secrets.

He said there were many other magicians

out there who knew more

than he did, but he did

say there were two

secrets to his success.

First, "He had the ability to put his

personality across the footlights to

connect with people.

He considered himself a master showman

that understood human nature.

But secondly, and more relatable to those

of us that have no need

to be a master showman,

Thurston said he had a

genuine interest in people.

He said he believed he thought about the

audience differently than other magicians

did, the magicians who thought somewhat

poorly of their audience

as a bunch of people they

could easily trick.

But Thurston suggested his

method was totally different.

These people had come to see him.

They paid money to see him.

And he was grateful for that.

He was grateful that they afforded him

the ability to make a great living.

And because of that, he was going to give

them the very best that he could."

And over another story or two, Carnegie

is painting us this picture.

And I'll sum up his intention of these

stories succinctly by

simply saying, "Take interest

in others, and they

will be interested in you."

He tells a story of a book that President

Roosevelt's valet,

James Amos, wrote about

him.

It was entitled, Theodore

Roosevelt, Hero to his Valet.

And in the book, he wrote about little

incidents and anecdotal

things Roosevelt would do.

For example, every time he rode by the

valet's house that was

on his property, he would

yell out hello to he and his wife, just a

friendly greeting as he drove by.

One time Roosevelt overheard the valet's

wife say that she had

never seen a certain

kind of bird.

This was before the internet, obviously.

And Roosevelt took the

time to describe it to her.

And sometime later, Roosevelt called her

house and said if she would

look out her front window,

she might see that bird.

And for perspective again here, this is

the President of the

United States of America.

And he's taking time to be kind.

And to Carnegie's point here, to be kind

and interested in other

people of all stations

in life.

And honestly, these were people that it

would have been really

easy for Roosevelt to just

race by in his hectic schedule.

Carnegie asks, "How could employees keep

from liking a man like that?

How could anyone keep from liking him?"

And I imagine that is how we all want to

be thought of as well.

Okay, that's a good

stopping point for today.

What I think my takeaway and homework

here for the day is

asking ourselves about the

people in our lives.

Are we taking a real

authentic interest in them?

Is our behavior and our interactions and

our everyday lives,

are we making it hard for

others not to like us?

Or are we just cutting in front of the

car line at the very front?

Don't do that.

Okay, tomorrow we'll talk about how

important even the

smallest of interest in others can

make.

Now remember, life is what happens when

you're busy making other plans.

So make these moments in between matter.

Have a fantastic day.

Don't forget to follow and subscribe to

the Morning Serial

podcast on the OneLife Live

It channel.

You can find more episodes and videos by

visiting our YouTube channel and the

website at ShawnEnglish

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 will be a good time, I promise.

Thanks again for listening.

Have a fantastic day and

we'll see you tomorrow.