Psychologist and speaker Naomi Holdt shared the reasoning behind many people's exhaustion at this point in the COVID-19 pandemic. She believ

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Psychologist and speaker Naomi Holdt shared the reasoning behind many people's exhaustion at this point in the COVID-19 pandemic. She believ

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Legendary writer Kurt Vonnegut cleverly explains how to write the 3 stories everyone loves
By Tod Perry via David Comburg/YouTubeKurt Vonnegut explains the shapes of stories. To be a great fiction writer requires understanding basic story structures and being clever enough to disguise them so your audience doesn’t know they’re watching or reading something they’ve seen before. Academics suggest that there are only a finite number of plots and structures, but that number varies based…
It goes all the way back to the days of ancient Greece.
"If y'all can help us out, we need to go back to basics."
“If you’ve never left, you can never understand what it’s really like…”

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A lovely news story about a community doing something good and positive in the world. I wonder if they could get a Guinness Record for this? 300 people. 9,100 books. 2 hours. ❤️
300 people. 9,100 books. 2 hours.
https://www.upworthy.com/motivation-expert-explains-how-2-simple-words-can-free-you-from-taking-things-personally-ex1
HEALTH
Motivation expert explains how two simple words can free you from taking things personally
You don't need to take responsibility for everything and everyone.
Tod PerryUpworthy Staff
01.28.25
Towards the end of The Beatles’ illustrious but brief career, Paul McCartney wrote “Let it Be,” a song about finding peace by letting events take their natural course. It was a sentiment that seemed to mirror the feeling of resignation the band had with its imminent demise.
The bittersweet song has had an appeal that has lasted generations and that may be because it reflects an essential psychological concept: the locus of control. “It’s about understanding where our influence ends and accepting that some things are beyond our control,” Jennifer Chappell Marsh, a marriage and family therapist, told The Huffington Post. “We can’t control others, so instead, we should focus on our own actions and responses.”
This idea of giving up control, or the illusion of it, when it does us no good, was perfectly distilled into 2 words that everyone can understand as the “Let Them” theory. Podcast host, author, motivational speaker and former lawyer Mel Robbins explained this theory perfectly in a vial Instagram video.
“I just heard about this thing called the ‘Let Them Theory,’ I freaking love this,” Robbins starts the video.
“If your friends are not inviting you out to brunch this weekend, let them. If the person that you're really attracted to is not interested in a commitment, let them. If your kids do not want to get up and go to that thing with you this week, let them.” Robbins says in the clip. “So much time and energy is wasted on forcing other people to match our expectations.”
“If they’re not showing up how you want them to show up, do not try to force them to change; let them be themselves because they are revealing who they are to you. Just let them – and then you get to choose what you do next,” she continued.
The phrase is a great one to keep in your mental health tool kit because it’s a reminder that, for the most part, we can’t control other people. And if we can, is it worth wasting the emotional energy? Especially when we can allow people to behave as they wish and then we can react to them however we choose.
How you respond to their behavior can significantly impact how they treat you in the future.
It’s also incredibly freeing to relieve yourself of the responsibility of changing people or feeling responsible for their actions. As the old Polish proverb goes, “Not my circus, not my monkeys.”
“Yes! It’s much like a concept propelled by the book ‘The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F**k.’ Save your energy and set your boundaries accordingly. It’s realizing that we only have “control” over ourselves and it’s so freeing,” 60DaysToLive2012 wrote.
“Let It Be” brought Paul McCartney solace as he dealt with losing his band in a very public breakup. The same state of mind can help all of us, whether it’s dealing with parents living in the past, friends who change and you don’t feel like you know them anymore, or someone who cuts you off in traffic because they’re in a huge rush to go who knows where.
The moment someone gets on your nerves and you feel a jolt of anxiety run up your back, take a big breath and say, “Let them.”
This article originally appeared last year.
From his vantage point in space, the astronaut experienced the 'overview effect' that made him realize what truly matters.
Why can't we all live like this?