I finished Mel Robbinās book Let Them Theory last month and itās a great mantra to keep in mind throughout the day. My friend didnāt respond to a text about stopping by, let them. Spouse leaves the dishes in the sink (while the dishwasher sits empty), let them. Flat tire on the way to an appointment, let them. Your boss is in a bad mood, let them. Your dad judges your new job, let them. Mel Robbinsā Let Them Theory has unlimited use moments. Every day.Ā
Robbins talks about seeing old friends on social media having a great getaway weekendā¦without her. She spiraled. How could they? What did she do wrong? That whole feeling of FOMO and feeling the injustice that someone could overlook her or shut her out. I think of this as the āstory Iām telling myselfā; where I create a whole story that everyone is against me and somehow Iām not worthy. Itās futile, damaging and painful. And itās completely self-defeating. It does absolutely no good.Ā

Here are the steps to Let Them and Let Me:
Know what you can control. Almost everything that is outside of me is outside of my control. The weather, time, gravity, peopleās opinions, other peopleās effort, other peopleās decisions and other peopleās habits. My worry and consternation cannot change something that I have no control over. Making someone interested in you, getting a job offer, being picked on the kickball team, making the traffic jam disappear or getting that screaming baby to calm down on an overseas flight.Ā These are outside of my immediate control. What can I control? Thatās the let me part. I can focus on what Iām interested in, I can keep putting out resumes and expanding my network, I can practice my kickball skills or pursue basketball instead, I can be grateful for the break in a traffic jam and hope that no one is seriously injured, and I can put on headphones or offer to fill a bottle for the baby. There is also my response to all these aggravations. I can breathe deep and stay centered instead of reacting or turning up the volume on my inner critic. I look for what I can control and that is where my peace lies.
Know your brain. We all do our best thinking when we have access to our prefrontal cortex (PFC). This is where the magic happens. We plan, we find solutions, we are creative and we are innovative when we are able to be in our PFC. Unfortunately, stress hijacks us out of our PFC and into our Amygdala. When we are in our Amygdala, itās all fight, flight, freeze or fawn. This is when I say stupid things and frequently do things I regret (Iām looking at you Ben and Jerryās). I was alarmed this past year when I read in a research study that it takes a minimum of 20 minutes to get out of our Amygdala and back into our PFC. So, if Iām called out at a budget meeting in front of the entire senior staff, Iām not likely to have a well thought out eloquent response. In my opinion, this is the time to get some kind of break so that I donāt put my foot in my mouth. There are also centering exercises like thinking about my big toe, taking 3 deep breaths, or rubbing my thumb and forefinger together to feel my fingerprint ridges. The point is to focus on your body instead of your brain which is currently drowning in chemicals. So, before I engage in responding, I need to know where my brain is. Am I in my Amygdala or my PFC? Once I know the answer, I can take the next best steps.
Know your power. Learning to let them is very powerful.Ā When I get caught up in someone else blocking my way or getting sucked into wanting to change them, I feel empty and fragile. By pushing back or resisting, I end up expending a lot of energy and I feel depleted. Itās like trying to push a rope.Ā I realize now itās futile and exhausting. Let them helps me feel more powerful because Iām focused on what I can do and control instead of getting wrapped up in what I canāt.Ā
Know your values. The Let Them Theory frees me up to make choices that align with my values. Iām not trying to appease someone or worry about āhow somethingā will look to others. As long as itās aligned with my values, then I can Let Me. I get to take ownership of where I want to be and what I want to do instead of (unsuccessfully) trying to drive others to what I want. Or what I think they should want. I get to follow my values and let them follow theirs.
Know others. Itās impossible to change someone else. Robbins spent several chapters on a woman who wanted to get her husband to shape up. Nagging and cajoling just donāt work. The more I push the less the other person wants to comply. If itās not their own idea, itās not going to happen. My son isnāt going to apply for an early decision at my alma mater. My partner isnāt going to quit drinking. Respect that each person is on their own path and they get to decide which direction to go. Robbins suggests setting the example and then let go. So, If I want to get my friend to start running every morning, I can go running every morning and tell them how great I feel when I do. Beyond that, sit back and see if they get there on their own.
Relinquishing power to control others is so powerful. Robbins does a great job making it so easy in just two words: Let Them. And then, Let Me. Let me respond with my values and set the example of having the boundaries that align with them. Can you let them?