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This is a iheart podcast. Guaranteed human. Lately, I've been trying to be more intentional, even with small decisions like cooking at home instead of ordering out. It's simple, but it helps me save for things that truly matter. That's why I love the State Farm Personal Price Plan. It lets you bundle home and auto insurance to create an affordable price that fits your needs. It's one of those thoughtful choices that support the life you're trying to build. Talk to a State Farm agent today to learn how you can choose to bundle and save with the personal price plan. Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there. Prices are based on rating plans that vary by state. Coverage options are selected by the customer. Availability, amount of discounts, and savings and eligibility vary by state. Navigating social media and tech with teens can feel tricky, but if you feel they're ready, there are tools to help. Instagram teen accounts come with automatic protections by default. Things like content settings, contact limits and daily time limits or sleep mode to help teens build healthy habits. Teens under 16 need a parent's permission to adjust these settings. Instagram keeps adding features to make experiences more age appropriate and supportive for families. Learn more about Teen Accounts and Instagram's ongoing work to protect teens online@instagram.com teenaccounts indeed sponsored jobs gets you quality candidates when you need them most. Spend less time searching and more time actually interviewing candidates who check all your boxes. Less stress, less time, more results when you need the right person to cut through the chaos. This is a job for Indeed Sponsored Jobs. And listeners of this show will get a $75 sponsored job credit to help get your job the premium status it deserves@ Indeed.com podcast. Terms and conditions apply. Need to hire? This is a job for Indeed Sponsored Jobs welcome back to On Purpose. Today, we're talking about something that affects every single one of us. Friendship. As kids, making friends seemed effortless. But why does it feel so hard to make and maintain friendships as adults? I get it. Life gets busy. We move, we change. And suddenly finding people who truly get us feels like an almost impossible challenge. But the truth is, no matter how busy or how independent we are, we all need connection. We need people who challenge us, support us, and remind us that that we're not alone. So in this special episode, I've gathered insights from some of the best minds out there to help you build meaningful friendships, strengthen your connections, and create a support system that truly lasts. Because the right relationships can change your life. And I believe everyone deserves to have those. Let's start with A challenge so many of us face but rarely talk about. Why is it so hard to make friends as an adult? And when we're younger, we see the same people every day. We share experiences and we grow together. But as we get older, life pulls us in different directions. And suddenly finding and keeping close friends feels like an uphill battle. To help us break it down, we have Mel Robbins, bestselling author, speaker, and expert on human behavior. She's here to help us understand why adult friendships feel feel so different, why connection matters more than ever, and how we can take control of building meaningful relationships. Let's dive in, Mel. Why is it so hard to make friends as we get older?
B
There is a massive shift that happens in adult friendship when you hit 20 that nobody sees coming. The rules of friendship completely change when your 20s hit. And I'm going to explain the rules when you're little. And then we're gonna talk about the rules of adult friendship. So when you're little, your entire life is organized around friendship and making it possible. Cause you're with people your age all the time, in class, in sports.
A
So true.
B
You move in groups. Cause you're on teams and you're in neighborhoods and you're always together. You also celebrate the same milestones, you're hitting the same birthdays, you're all talking about the next level of school or the this thing this summer. You're watching the same movies. Cause you're all the same age. And so there's so much synergy and relev. And the conditions to spend a ton of time together are there. Then you get to university and you spend even more time together. And what happens when you hit your 20s, right, is that it moves from this big group sport where you just kind of expect to be around your friends all the time. You expect the group to get invited because that's what's always happened. You expect to see them all the time. Cause you do always see them all the time. But then your 20s hit, the rules change, and what I call the great scattering happens. Everybody moves in different directions, and friendship goes from group sport to individual sport. You can no longer expect friendship. You are no longer part of a group that is expected to be invited everywhere. Because everybody scatters. And suddenly everybody's on different timelines. You're in different cities, you're moving in different directions. So there's no way to locate yourself inside your friend group. And the only thing that's keeping you together from your friends, from your little, is a text chain that starts to go quieter and quieter and quieter as people start to focus on the people in front of them. And that brings me to two major shifts that I want you to embrace using the let them theory. Number one, you can no longer expect friendship. You have to take a way more flexible approach and a more proactive approach. You gotta let people come and go super important. And then you gotta let me take the actions to create the friendships. I gotta go first. I gotta be the one planning. I gotta seek out new people. But there are three pillars of adult friendship based on research that are also gonna help you understand that when people come and go in your life, 99% of the time, it's not personal. And you actually haven't lost them as a friend. One of the three pillars is missing. So the three things that need to be required to have a friendship happen are the same three things that were around all the time when you were a kid. Number one, proximity. Proximity matters tremendously. Proximity means who are you actually physically next to? In fact, they've done research, Jay. If you and I were in a dorm and we lived across the hall. I don't remember the percentages exactly, but it's like 90% chance we're gonna be friends.
A
Interesting.
B
The poor person at the end of the hallway, 10% chance that we're gonna be friends with him because of proximity. Even a matter of 50ft makes a difference. And so when you were little, you were in proximity to people your age
A
all the time, all day.
B
Exactly. The research also shows that to have, as an adult, a kind of casual friend, you need to spend approximately 70 hours with somebody to have a close friend. 200 hours. So when you're an adult, that creates a big problem, because who are you spending all your time with once you're 20? The American Times study shows that it's with people you work with. So why aren't we best friends with people at work? Because you have proximity and you're spending a lot of time together. But here's the thing. Timing. When you were little, you were in the same timing of life with everybody.
A
Yeah.
B
When you hit your 20s and it's now individual, everybody's on different timelines. Some of your friends are getting married. Some are going to graduate school. Some are now pursuing jobs. Other people are moving out of the city into the city. Everybody's timing is now different. And this also explains why you're almost never best friends with people at work. Because the timing is off. You're sitting next to people that are in very different times of their life. You may like them a lot. And you may be friends, but you never spend time outside of work because they're at home with their family and you're going out with your buddies your age on the weekends. And then that brings me to the third thing that needs to be present for a friendship to truly click. And that's energy. And the thing about energy is it changes. And you can have fantastic energy with somebody. And then if you decide you're not drinking anymore, the energy's off. If you decide to get really focused on fitness, the energy's off. If you have very different political beliefs, the energy's off. It's not personal. It's one of these three pillars. And it has helped me so profoundly, Jay, to realize that people come and go, and it's a beautiful thing. And you should let them. And you should really, if you have a friendship that starts to dissipate. Right. Ask yourself before you blame them or you blame you. Are any one of these three pillars missing? Are we not near each other anymore? Is the timing of our lives off? Is there just something about the energy that hasn't clicked? Because you can't force those things. But what I've found is that when you recognize that those are really important factors to your connection to someone else, that if a friendship starts to fade, for me, it's so easy to say, let them. And I don't wish anybody bad. I literally wish people well. Because the other thing that I've learned, and you know, being 56, I've had a lot of friends come and go in different phases of my life, that you would be startled by how many people from your past that you no longer quote, Consider friends. Cause you haven't seen them in a very long time or things just got weird. If you actually called them, they'd pick up the phone.
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They would.
B
If you texted them. The research shows that when you get a surprise text from somebody that you haven't heard from in a long time, the amount of joy that you feel. And so I want you to consider, if you're very lonely right now, that there's actually probably hundreds of people from your past that still consider you a friend. And if you take the approach that I'm talking about, which is friendship is your responsibility, you need to go first, let me create the friendship and the connection that I want. And you can start by literally taking a look through your past and thinking about people that you remember fondly and just sending them a text. And you will be startled by what comes back because they're there. They haven't actually gone anywhere. The connection is still there. And oftentimes, even if you've had somebody where something's been off again, let them and wish them well. And there will be a time, I promise you, where the timing or proximity or energy comes back around again.
A
Yeah. And often you're so right. When as I'm listening to you talk, I'm just thinking of how conscious we have to be with all of our relationships, the ones that matter to us, the ones that we want to invest in. And it's what you said there was. We were actually dealt such a tough card in the fact that basically from the moment you joined school at four till the moment you were 21, if you went to college, you basically didn't have to make really any major decisions or think about the next step because you went from seventh grade to eighth grade to ninth grade to whatever it is.
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Right.
C
And.
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And so then all of a sudden, you're in the world at 21.
B
Yeah.
A
Or 18, if you didn't go to college. And you all of a sudden now have to figure out what to do for the next 50, 60 years, all
B
structure of your life just evaporates, just
A
disappears, because the hardest structure, and it makes no sense. And as I'm hearing you talk, it sounds like to me that it would have been harder to watch your daughter have to practice the let them theory than it is for you to practice the let them theory.
B
Yes.
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When she was going through her breakup. When it comes to building meaningful relationships, we often put too much pressure on one person to fulfill all of our emotional needs. But the reality is, different relationships fulfill different needs. Some friendships may bring adventure, others offer comfort, and some are simply there to listen. When we start seeing our relationships this way, we open ourselves up to a deeper, more fulfilling sense of connection. One where we can appreciate each friendship for the unique role it plays in our lives. To help us explore this idea further, we have Andrew Huberman, neuroscientist and professor at Stanford University. He's dedicated his career to understanding human behavior, brain function, and the science behind connection. Let's hear his insights on how small intentional habits can help us build stronger, more fulfilling friendships. The second thing that I was reminded by as you were speaking was I feel like writing down. I always encourage a lot of my clients to do this, to write down a list of emotions they'd like to experience with people. So it could be things like adventure, discovery, comfort, humor, love, whatever it may be. Just write down a list, and then for each one, write down the Name of a different person, ideally, that fulfills that need in your life. Because often I feel like we put a lot of pressure on our romantic partners or one person in our life to be all these things. And the truth is, no matter how phenomenal anyone is or how much they love us, they just can't be that. And so if you have, hey, I reach out to this friend when I want some adventure because they love it too. If I want to see a sports game, this is the person I reach out to and then do the same in the opposite way. Which one of those do you fulfill for your friends? What emotions do you help other people create? And I feel like if you look at friendship as a spectrum, as this broad set of connection points, rather than like, this is my best friend, as you were saying, or this is my number one friend. And we get away from hierarchy and we move more into it spectrum. I feel like that mixed in with the text today starts creating a much more healthier network of what connection means as well. It's also not just the same person doing the same thing every week.
D
Yeah, I love the idea that by staying in contact regularly, we don't have to get caught up and that then we can just drop into what's most meaningful on that particular day and maybe even have more available to us to have a new experience. Right. As opposed to just catching up. And then of course, there are those friends that we catch up with and it feels like it was just yesterday, definitely. But I'd be willing to bet that those were people that you spent a lot of day to day time activity with. You knew them from university or you, you spent a lot of time just in the kind of everyday shared experience for a while. And then when you see each other again, it's like being right back there. The neuroscience of this hasn't been explored nearly enough, but given that our very own Surgeon General highlighted the loneliness crisis as one of the major crises in the world today, I think that in terms of simple solutions to big important problems, developing more connectivity with people through simple practices. And again, we're talking about a text here. I mean, I will be the first to say that if you can hop on a phone call or you can get on a video chat with somebody, that would certainly be better, but many people just don't have time for that for sure. So in terms of spending time with people in a deeper and richer way, getting the drop in time, as it were. I love that you mentioned adventure. I'm almost 49. I turned 49 in just over a month. And I would say that the first 49 years of my life have been marked by a real thirst for adventure, a ton of curiosity. Now I really feel myself entering a completely different season of my life. I'm sort of hoping this would eventually happen, in part because, you know, I took some. Some kind of dangerous turns. You know, I took risks with my. With my life at points where I didn't really intend to do that. But, you know, you seek enough adventure, you're going to. You're going to find adventure, and you have to be quite careful. I have friends with whom I had tons of adventure, and then now the adventures are far more docile and quiet. And of course, the internal adventure is real as well. I think that friends with whom we can just be one version of ourselves are wonderful. Friends with whom we can be all versions of ourself is especially wonderful. That's the acceptance piece. Typically, I think we look more for that in romantic relationship. This notion of just like, safety and acceptance being hallmarks of healthy romantic relationship. I think those are also the hallmarks of healthy friendship. It's just that with friendship, we can be a bit more segmented in terms of the number of different aspects of self that we need safety and acceptance with. I think with friendship also, I've found it to be the case that really knowing what's going on with people has become a little bit more difficult. There's this kind of odd thing. We're more interconnected in terms of availability of communication, but we're less aware of what's really going on for people. In fact, on the way here, I had a call with a friend, and their headset was making a lot of noise. And so we agreed. They said, hey, how about I just turn mute mine? And for the next two minutes, I'm not kidding. This is what they said. They said, just tell me, like, what's on your heart or what's in your heart. Hopefully it wasn't on your heart. What's in your heart? And I was like, oh, wow, that's tough. You know, that's tough. I mean, okay. And I know that they're listening, but it's very silent on the other end. And I'm kind of speaking into a vacuum there because they're not hearing anything. And then had maybe just two minutes before we curled up the hill because of the reception in the area that we're in, as you know, is always complicated to just get feedback. It was very interesting. Like, I realized that I felt close to them before, but just the notion that they would ask me that, how do I feel? Not what's going on lately. Not, you know, am I feeling good or bad? Like, evaluation of feelings, but just, like, what's going on? And I stumbled a bit at first, but I can realize in sense it now. Like, I'm quite moved by the fact that they would ask that of all things, as opposed to, like, what's going on? What's your next podcast about? Are you coming to visit? That sort of thing. And so, like, I'm taking a lot of cues these days from people that make me feel very seen and accepted. You're one of them, I must say. Like, I don't just say that because we're in front of these microphones and sitting here. Like, you and I have been in touch a lot lately through good times and hard times and a lot of different things. It's not a coincidence, though, that I think that we're here and talking about this, because I think that ultimately the questions that we ask of the people we care about are just as important as reminding them that we're there. Because when we ask a question like, what's in your heart? What we're really saying is, what's really going on for you? As opposed to what's the next podcast about? Which is an interesting question to me. So this is more your territory than mine. But I think in the end, I think it comes back to safety and acceptance. Simple behaviors, like a good morning check in, and then asking questions that might feel a little bit challenging for the other person to answer at first, but that really show a depth of care and interest that go beyond just kind of like narrative and storytelling. And I think one thing that I'm also very eager about these days is breaking down some of the traditional stereotypes, like, for anyone that's listening to this and goes, oh, men don't talk that way, or something. It's like, actually, they do. They do. And if given the chance, they will open up about things that perhaps they hadn't even thought about. And I confess, I'm one of those people. Maybe it was my Y chromosome got in the way of me thinking, like, wait, what do you want me to talk about? What's in my heart? Hey, actually, that's a really great question. Thank you. And so I think this brings us back to these early circuits that are all about safety and acceptance, that are all about being able to predict things and basically to say, okay, I. I don't have to be vigilant. That's really what safety is about. Is about turning off the neural circuits for vigilance. When we turn off the neural circuits for vigilance, we can start to direct our neural circuits, vision, auditory, whatever, thoughts, towards an awareness of things that are both inside us and around us, that keep us in that calm state. I mean, vigilance is associated with stress. Stress is associated with a narrowing of the visual field, a narrowing of the auditory fields. I'll just use this analogy because my sister and I, last summer, we always go to New York for our birthdays together. We went and saw the Harry Potter play.
A
Oh, it's so good, right? I saw in New York too.
D
Yeah, it was wild. I mean, the effects are so unbelievable. She's a big Harry Potter fan. I'm not, but I am. Okay, but just spectacular effects. It was just so wild, I couldn't believe it. But there's this library in the play where it's a magic library, where when one of the books is taken out about a particular subject, the books around it actually morph and change to reflect the same subject material. And when I saw that, I immediately said, that's how the brain works. The way the brain works is a kind of pseudo hypnosis. Hypnosis is about context and context, setting and narrowing of context. All of us have such a wealth of historical, present and future thinking cognition in our brains. But when we get anchored to a particular emotional state or topic, what ends up happening is that the. The available topics around it change in reference to how stressed we are. When we are stressed, all the topics, all the books on the shelf around that stress are about that thing and how to solve it. And actually, this is why stress enhances our memory for solving that. The things that can help us solve that particular issue. But guess what is given up all the other distantly or not so distant related topics that lend themselves to creativity, to thinking about novel combinations of things. This is why our friend Rick Rubin, I think, is such a spectacularly creative individual. Because he spends a lot of time putting his brain and body into a state in which he can remain in contact with these other related or seemingly unrelated topics. Whereas when we're in a stressed mode, when we have to problem solve, when we are in vigilance, excuse me, we absolutely narrow our cognitive fields, our visual fields, our auditory fields. We limit what we think is possible. And so I think great friendships to bring it back to it. Great relationships of all kinds have enough safety and acceptance in them that we can make our way through the practical constraints of the relationship in the day, the week and the year, but that there's also a sense of creativity, that there are new elements allowed to be brought in because there's enough safety and acceptance that we can turn down those vigilance circuits.
A
Absolutely. Hey, it's me, Jay and I just wanted to share this one phone call I had with a friend. It was when I just made one of the biggest decisions in my career and I was nervous about how it would be received. Then my friend called me out of the blue just to check in. And hearing their voice, their encouragement, completely changed my perspective. That moment reminded me how powerful a simple connection can be. And did you know that 2026 will mark 150 years since the first phone call? March 10, 1876. From that one call, it all grew. The first long distance lines, the first call across America, the first across the Atlantic, the first commercial cell service, even the first 911 system. AT&T has been connecting people in so many ways for 150 years. I can't help but wonder how many lives were changed, how many important conversations happened to even how many lives were saved all because people could reach each other. 150 years of connecting. That's not just history, that's a reminder. When technology brings people together, we can do incredible things.
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Connecting changes everything. AT&T
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having the right people in your corner to support you is a great form of self care. Just like the friend who shows up to a housewarming party when you get that dream home celebrates your big promotion or goes with you on a walk to clear your mind. State Farm is there to help you feel supported. They have different coverage options whether it be for your home, car, motorcycle, boat or even rv. With Estate Farm agent, you know someone is there to help protect what's important. And with so many coverage options, it's nice knowing you have help finding what fits for you so you can continue to celebrate all of life's biggest milestones. Go online@statefarm.com or use the award winning app to get help from one of their local agents. Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there. If you're a parent of a teen or have teens in your life, it can be hard to figure out the right way to approach social media and technology. Ultimately, if you feel like your teens are ready, there are tools to help. Instagram teen accounts have automatic protections for what your teens see and who can contact them. Plus time management tools like daily time limits and sleep mode. And Instagram will continue adding built in safety features to help create age appropriate experiences. Learn more about teen accounts and Instagram's ongoing work to protect teens online@instagram.com teenaccounts that's instagram.com teenaccounts. As adults, building meaningful friendships isn't just about finding people who uplift us. It's also about how we show up for others. The strongest friendships are built on trust, joy and a sense of community. And when we find that balance, our relationships become more meaningful and can be life changing. Robin Sharma, leadership expert and best selling author, shares his perspective on how the right friendships can shape not just our personal lives, but our growth and success as well. Let's hear what he has to say and develop the idea that we can have a group of people that we grow around and then you have a group of people that you have to give to often, right? Like I think that's what our life is made up of. Like life isn't just, we're not just surrounded by people that help us grow because we're obviously taking from them as well. And we don't want to be in a position where we're only giving. We want to be able to grow. So it's almost like we all have, we have two sets of groups in our life at any real given time. Would you agree with that or.
F
Well, I would just say trust. Trust your joy. I think joy is a great gps and so yeah, I'm not in any way suggesting be around people only who fuel you and who help you become you at your best. I'm simply saying it's about what's healthy. It's about your joy. It's about being around people who you vibe with, who understand you, who have similar values, who support you and who encourage you. So I think your community is definitely an absolutely key form of wealth.
A
And you mentioned this earlier. I want to come back to it was this three great friends rule. And I love that you talk about having three great friends. I heard recently somewhere, I can't remember, I was browsing on social media and someone said you need 3am friends as well. Like friends you can call at 3am and they'll pick up the phone. How do you know? What is the quality of a great long term friend? What is a great friend? I'm not sure we even know anymore.
F
A great friend is someone you can be yourself with and they still love you. Great friend is, I had a line in the book, you know, you're in a foreign country and 3am they hop on a plane and they come get you. A great friend is someone who you can laugh with great friend is someone who you're going through your most difficult times and they'll listen to you for hours. A great friend is someone who accepts you, someone who helps you be seen. A great friend is someone who, when you're with them, you feel joyful versus depleted. So I think it's really important, you know, in this world where we are maximalists, we want. We want to be all things to all people. We want to have so many different friends. Focus on three great friends. We want to read a hundred books, master three books. Maybe it's Jobs, Isaacson's autobiography on Jobs, like you mentioned. Maybe it's the Prophet by Khalil Giboran. Maybe it's the Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein. Maybe it's Meditations of Marcus Aurelius, one of my favorite books of all time, you know, But I think just being a minimalist is so powerful. Build your life around a few things, even in work. I mentioned it. Rather than pushing out a thousand pieces of mediocrity, do one thing incredibly well. You know, even if it takes five years, 10 years. There's a chapter called make your project X in the wealth money camp, and the example is the Duomo in Milan. You know how long they spent on it. In this world where we want to do something in an hour and they get the rewards, or maybe a week, maybe a month. It took 600 years to create the Domo. These are values of a unspoken age. 600 years of calibrating, refining, optimizing to create the Domo. And so that's what a Project X is. Rather than doing lots of things, you do one thing. Maybe it's one work of art. Michelangelo took four years of working on the chapel of the Sistine ceiling, but he got the job done. So minimalism is very, very powerful.
A
And one of the things you said that this idea of we're almost trying to be so many things to so many people that it's hard to find the right friends. One of the things you talk about is do not be a doormat. And I find that that becomes that people pleasing mentality, that ability to I can mold and I can be whatever you want me to be, and I can be lots of things. And we feel validated that way, but in the end, we're just becoming a doormat. Everyone crosses over a doormat and a doormat welcomes everyone in the same way. So when I read that, I was like, how do we be kind but not be a doormat? How do we be service oriented but not Be a doormat. How do we balance that art of being welcoming but not being a doormat?
F
Well, you know, for many years, like you, Jay, I've talked about the power of just being, of being kind, you know, and it sounds so simple. But being kind, staying in a hotel, remembering there's someone going to clean my room after I leave the room. So put the bath, the towels in the bathtub, straighten out the bed, leave the room service tray clean. Little acts of kindness not only are a gift you give to someone else, it's a gift you give to yourself. You respect yourself more. So then people come sometimes, say to me, well, if I'm kind, people will take advantage of me. And I would say, people will only take advantage of you if you allow people to take advantage of you. Let's not confuse kindness with weakness. There is a time to always be kind, but that doesn't mean you let people walk over you. And that makes me think of another idea that I write about, which is the importance of, you know, in this world right now, it's so easy to live the same year 80 times and call it a life. And there's one chapter called Be a Perfect Moment Creator. And the story I tell in there is of Eugene Kelly o'. Kelly. Excuse me. And Eugene o' Kelly used to be the former CEO of kpmg, the accounting behemoth. And one day he walked into his doctor's office to get the results of a routine medical. And the doctor came out with an expression, you never want to see on the face of your doctor when you go to get your results. And he was told he had 90 days left to live. He had an inoperable brain tumor. So confronted with his mortality, he realized for the first time he had never. In all his years as a corporate titan, he had never taken his wife to lunch. He had missed so many Christmas concerts of his daughter. He had never spent time with his friends walking through Central park and having conversations. And so he decided to re engineer his last 90 days. And he said, I wanted to become a perfect moment creator. And he spent those last 90 days. He actually died roughly 90 days after the report from his doctor. But I think that's so powerful. You know, when you're with your family, when you're with your work, when you're with yourself, each and every day, find some way to create a perfect moment. Maybe it's giving a gift to someone through a compliment. Maybe it's taking some time to do something that fills you with joy. But being a perfect moment creator, I Think is a form of wealth money can't buy.
A
This episode is brought to you by ebay I'd never owned a vintage camera before. There was something about it that felt almost unnecessary in a world where everything lives on our phones. But I wanted to change that. So I started the hunt for a point and shoot camera. When I finally found the perfect one on ebay, I didn't keep it to myself. I left it out on a table, always within reach. And that's when something interesting happened. People started picking it up without asking family, friends, everyone to take a photo of whatever felt important to them in that moment. A laugh, a meal, someone they loved, something small they didn't want to forget. There was no editing, no retakes, no scrolling back to see if it was good enough. You took the photo and that was it. The moment became real right away. What I loved most was that it wasn't about capturing everything. It was about choosing something, deciding this matters, and letting that choice belong to whoever was holding the camera. Even if it came out blurry. The vintage camera didn't belong to one person. It belonged to the room, to the moment, to the people in it. Over time, the photos started to pile up. On the fridge, on shelves, tucked into books. Each one a reminder that meaning isn't always planned. Sometimes it's noticed. The things we keep can do that. They can invite us to slow down, to share ownership, and to see what the people around us find worth remembering. That's what I appreciate about ebay. It's a place where you can find things that bring people together and pass along things you no longer need, so they can become part of someone else's memories. Visit ebay.com to shop your favorite finds. Find what you love, sell what you don't. EBAY Things people love have you ever thought about what makes a truly good friend? Not just someone you can grab lunch with, but the kind of friend who truly sees you. The version of yourself you might even forget sometimes. Trevor Noah has spent years navigating relationships in a world full of unpredictability. And his take on friendship is powerful. He shares how his closest friends act as his anchor, helping him reconnect with himself, especially in the loneliness of stand up comedy and touring. Let's take a look. How a who are the friends? What are you talking to them about? Like, what's your consistency? I'm fascinated by that because.
C
So who are the friends? Predominantly, my friends are from South Africa, friends I met doing different things.
D
All.
C
All organic meetings, which I'm a sucker for. I'm terrible at making friends partially because I don't trust people easily. I exist in a world where I can be friendly with many people, but, you know, it takes me a while to accept that this person is actually a part of my life.
A
Right.
C
And I think for a long time it was because, and still is sometimes because a. I have an idea of putting something on that person where I may need them means that they may disappoint me. And then on the other side of it, them needing me means I could be in the position to disappoint them. You know, and, and, and so as we learn people, I find we learn what they can and cannot do, we learn who they are or are not. And it's always situational for me, you know, that's, that's when I'll call you like a friend is that I know how you are in most situations.
A
Yeah, it's a good definition, you know,
C
that, that, that for me is the definition of a friend. So, you know, I can be, we use it loosely obviously, but you know, I can be friends with you and we always meet for lunch and always meet for. But, but then I only know you in, in one way, my friends, I start to be able to, to
A
almost
C
store in a vault in my mind I can say for a fact if we're friends. If Jay was here, this would bother him. He would like that. He would probably say this and that's why he would act this way.
A
Yeah.
C
And that's, you know, that's how I think of my friends.
A
Yeah.
C
So they've been a major part of making me feel at home, you know, my job. Stand up comedy is a really lonely career, you know, and I remember talking to a comedian, it was a few weeks ago, talking about how there was like a period where a lot of stand up comedians were committing suicide, you know, and would be, you'd hear this devastating story of a comedian that everyone loved. They were in a hotel room and then they committed suicide. And I was petrified because I always think it can happen to me. You know, I go, that if that happened to them, why did it happen? If I don't understand, then what is it? Another comedian, Another comedian, Another comedian, another comedian. I think being a stand up comedian is a really lonely job in that we're traveling oftentimes alone, we don't have a band, we don't have backup dancers,
A
we don't travel with a comedian. Can you imagine? You got your backup dancers and yet
C
every night you're going out there and you're making people laugh. You're having fun with them. They come with their families, they come with their friends. They come with their loved ones. You leave alone. And it's this constant exchange of energy. And what I learned was my friends became that hub. My friends became my recharge. My friends became the couch I could lie on and say nothing or everything. And thanks partly to technology, I've been able to keep in touch with them. There's no catching up for us. It's literally a running. We've got a WhatsApp thread that is now, I'm gonna say, 15 years old.
A
Yeah.
C
Like, literally, I can go back and search something from maybe 10 years ago. Sometimes I can go back on the WhatsApp thread and go, what happened? And I can search and I can find it. That's how long we've had the same group and the same friends and the same everything. And obviously, it's grown over time, but that core has kept me. You know, I always think, did you end up reading Harry Potter?
A
I didn't ever read it. I've watched all the movies, yeah.
C
Oh, you watched it. Okay.
A
Yeah, I watched all movies. I know. I'm a big fan, actually.
C
Okay. Okay. So I feel like your friends in life are your Horcruxes.
A
Oh, interesting. Okay.
C
You know. Yeah. I think as people, what we do is we break ourselves into parts. And whenever we meet people, we give them a part of ourselves. And some people, we give more than we give others, but we give everyone a different part of ourselves. No one in your life has the same part that another person has. They may seem similar, but they're not. Your mother and father hold different parts of you. Your uncles, your cousins, your brothers, sisters, your friends, whoever it is, they all hold a different part of you. And the same way Voldemort could use that to come back to life. I feel like we can use that to come back to life.
A
Wow.
C
Do you know what I mean?
A
Yeah. You watched a different movie?
C
I read the book, yeah.
A
You read the book?
C
I read the book, my friend.
A
That's what it is.
C
That's what you missed in the movie.
D
I read the book, yeah.
C
And so I always think that, as I. Man, sometimes I can be at my worst. I can be. Sometimes I can be lost. Really, Jay? There'll be times when I'll be like, what am I doing? I'm stressed. I'm tired. I'm burnt out. I feel lost. And I can call a friend, and no joke, they can say to me, well, the Trevor I know, you know And I love that they say that. They don't say, this is who you are or not. They go, the Trevor I know found his joy here.
A
Yeah.
C
Hey, you know, I've noticed that you're always happiest when you do it this way.
G
Hey.
C
I've noticed that, you know, you stress more when you're in this position.
A
Hey.
C
And I go, man, I didn't know that about myself, or I didn't hold myself that way, because I'm always experiencing all of me still through my lens. But thank you. You freed me, you encouraged me, you held me, you loved me. And what then happens is I start to find what I need to get back to my purpose, to my passion, to whatever drives me. And that's why my friends are a big part of that. That is the core of my world, you know? And it's funny, my mom even used to say that to me when I was growing up. You know, at a certain age, she said to me, she'd say to me, my friend, you know, and I'd be like, I'm not your friend. You're my mom. And my mom would say, just because I'm your mom doesn't mean I'm your friend. She said, there are many mothers out there that aren't friends with their child. And she said, I'm your mother and I will always love you as your mother, but you are becoming my friend.
B
Wow.
C
And that stuck with me. I realized that friendship is a choice. Every other relation we have isn't. And so even your relatives can become your friends or may not be your friends. And I think understanding that illuminates a lot of how you interact with people in the world.
A
Yeah, I really resonate with what I mean, everything you said. But one of the things that stood out was that kind of performers, loneliness. My work mainly started with coaching and working with people. And I work with a lot of musicians and people who tour and travel. Not comedians, but artists. And, you know, they're performing to, like 100,000 people, 80,000 people. And then they would always talk to me about this. And I didn't. I didn't really have a empathetic experience of it. I could understand it theoretically. And then because most of the events I used to speak at were, like, corporate events or like a business event or things like that. And then a few years ago, when I did my first ever event with my audience, and it was in la, people who came because they followed my work, not because of anything else. There's only about 2,000 people in the AUDIENCE and I finished the event and I got into the car and it hit me and I was like, oh, like, this is chemical. This is definitely chemical. Because you've just had thousands of people shouting your name and, like, loving everything you say and all this validation and everything else as what you were saying when you were coming. Like, the dopamine, the everything.
C
Yes.
A
And then all of a sudden, I was like, wait a minute, this feels weird. Like, why do I feel like, you know, a sense of loneliness? And it was really interesting because I felt like that pretty much the whole. And I felt like calling someone.
C
Yes.
A
And I couldn't because in London, it was too early. None of my friends would be awake. And so they're eight hours ahead because I'm in LA and I'm going. I can't wait another hour for my friend to wake up. Two hours. I'm not going to wake him up in the middle of the night. So I'm waiting there. And then all my friends in LA were just at the event, so I just saw them, and so they're probably, like, going home. And it was a weeknight and so maybe. And I'm like, I don't want to. And then I get home and my wife had organized this surprise party for me with all my best friends, like, closest friends in la. And it was like a relief. It wasn't even a celebration. I was like, there's a sense of relief. I was like, oh, thank God. Because I don't know what I would. I don't know what I would have done tonight, man. Like, you know, I understand why people turn to drugs. I understand why people tend to. I understand, like, it was the first time I was like.
C
Because you. Yeah, you need to numb it.
A
Yeah, you need to numb it. You just don't know what to do with that feeling. And that was the first time I'd felt that way. And I can't imagine, as you were saying, for someone who's on tour and traveling every night, my drug, as I
C
said to you, my drug was chocolate.
A
Oh, I love chocolate, too.
C
That was like my. I couldn't. It's like my team knew, my people knew. It's like I'd do the show and immediately. And you probably relate to this more because, you know, coming from the uk, in America, they don't really do it in South Africa. Our petrol stations, our gas stations. Yeah, right. They have amazing stores attached to them. Like here, every gas station looks like it's already been robbed. You don't want to pour gas. I don't like it looks terrible. They all look abandoned.
A
Yes. Yeah. They all look like a ghost town.
D
They really do.
C
Whereas where we're from it's like, oh, you go and you buy a pie, you buy some, you buy a few drinks.
A
Yeah. There's like cooked. Exactly.
C
It's like, oh, this is life. You can get some groceries on the. It's a very normal concept. And that would be me. After every show. I would drive, there would be the silence. I couldn't listen to music. I couldn't. My mind would just be. It's like I could hear everybody but they were gone. And then I would go in and then I would buy chocolate would be my thing it immediately. And then I, you know, over the years I would read and I'd started learning that, you know, chocolate, the dopamine, the sugar, all of these things. I was, I was correcting a chemical thing without realizing it because it is a, it is a shock on your body.
A
Yeah. Everyone.
C
Nothing.
A
Yeah, it's, it's so fascinating that, that, that experience and, and I'm sure people have that in different ways in their life. Like you don't have to be a performer to thousands of people to experience that. I think people experience that in lots of different ways. It's beautiful that you've been able to continue this 10 year WhatsApp chat. Like that's, you know, that's like a brilliant achievement. Having the right people in your corner to support you is a great form of self care. Just like the friend who shows up to your housewarming party. When you get that dream home, celebrates your big promotion or goes with you on a walk to clear your mind, State Farm is there to help you feel supported. They have different coverage options. Whether it be for your home, car, motorcycle, boat or even RV with estate farm agent, you know someone is there to help protect what's important. And with so many coverage options, it's nice knowing you have help finding what fits for you so you can continue to celebrate all of life's biggest milestones. Go online@statefarm.com or use the award winning app to get help from one of their local agents. Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there. If you're a parent of a teen or have teens in your life, it can be hard to figure out the right way to approach social media and technology. Ultimately, if you feel like your teens are ready, there are tools to help. Instagram teen accounts have automatic protections for what your teens see and who can contact them. Plus time management tools like daily time limits and Sleep mode. And Instagram will continue adding built in safety features to help create age appropriate experiences. Learn more about teen accounts and Instagram's ongoing work to protect teens online@instagram.com teenaccounts that's instagram.com teenaccounts Sometimes leadership isn't about putting out fires. It's about building the right team so the fires don't start in the first place. And when you're stretched in, you realize this is a job for Sponsored Jobs. Indeed Sponsored Jobs helps you connect with quality candidates exactly when you need them most. Instead of struggling just to get your posts seen, you can focus on finding the right people and hiring the ones who can truly drive results. In fact, Sponsored Jobs posted directly on indeed are 95% more likely to report a hire than non Sponsored Jobs. Spend less time searching and more time actually interviewing candidates who check all your boxes. Less stress, less time, more results when you need the right person to cut through the chaos. This is a job for Indeed Sponsored Jobs and listeners of this show will get a $75 sponsored job credit to help get your job the premium status it deserves@ Indeed.com podcast just go to Indeed.com podcast right now and support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast. Indeed.com podcast terms and conditions apply. Need to hire. This is a job for Indeed Sponsored Jobs. One of the biggest shifts we experience as we get older is realizing that not everyone needs to be in our inner circle. And that's okay. As we grow, we start to see that when it comes to friendships, quality matters more than quantity. Mariana Hewitt, content creator, entrepreneur, and co founder of Summer Fridays, knows this firsthand. She's built a successful brand while also redefining what meaningful connections look like in both her personal and and professional life. Let's hear her take on it. We've talked about energy drainers and energy givers before. Walk us through that. Because I think everyone feels that, whether it's people, places, projects, we all feel that certain people drain us. Certain projects give us energy. Walk us through your version of that.
E
Yeah, my energy drainers are saying yes to too many things. So saying no to me is what gives me energy. And I know that saying no might, say, seem difficult at first, especially when you have opportunities that come to you and you want to say yes to everything. But saying yes to things I absolutely want to do has been so helpful. I am in a place now where I can say no because I feel like I worked hard in my 20s to get to where I am Today that I have the ability to say no to things. But those nos also are important because it's gotten me to the jobs I want to do, the brands I want to work with. I think if you say yes to too many things, you might dilute yourself doing too many things. So saying yes to the things that are in alignment with the content you want to create, the brands you want to work with, the long term goals you have for yourself personally and professionally. Other energy drainers that I have are not doing my morning routine and my evening routine. So really setting myself up for the day sets me up for success. I get up in the morning, I usually meditate, I gratitude journal, I do like a little stretch, I drink my water and even just a few things in the morning set me up. Because if I wake up and I just instantly start doing things, there's no time for me just like in myself to turn off and then I'm kind of just thinking all day long. Other energy drainers, sometimes it's work and people. And I know that that one's a really difficult one to have boundaries around because you maybe cannot control who you have to be around with work or people that you have to spend your time with. So it's creating boundaries around those people and things to make you feel your best. So maybe it's at work you don't sit next to that person or you, you know, focus on working on yourself when you're at work so you don't have to be near much. Because I know we can't always like eliminate energy drainers in our life. And if it's someone in our life, personally it's difficult. But as I've gotten older, I realize, okay, this person and this friend is draining my energy. When I'm around them, I don't feel great. I don't feel better after I left them. I almost feel more drained just being around them. And so I can love you from a distance. I still love you, I still like you. But I don't have to spend a lot of time with you and that's okay. I can support you from afar. But I know that if I'm around you, I don't feel my best. And I want more of those energy givers in my life. Like, who do I hang out with? And I feel better after I leave them. Like, who makes me feel happier and whole, motivated, energized. And I always love being around you because whenever I see you, you make us feel so great. You're such a great friend. Our friend Audrey is Another one of
A
them, I was going to say Audrey.
E
Yeah.
A
The person that came to my mind was Audrey. I was like, audrey, she's amazing. We love you.
E
We love you, Audrey. And she really is one of those people where you want to be around people who are good like that. You want people, people who make you feel your best. And so as I've gotten older, it's less about quantity of friends, it's quality of friends. And I choose to spend time with the people in my life who give me energy and make me feel my best. Because if you notice that after you leave a friend and maybe you're a little bit tired or drained or you're just like, whoa, when you left them, like, it's okay to start, like, phasing out people and love them from afar.
A
Yeah, I couldn't agree more with that. I saw this tweet that said, my circle is shrunk in size but increased in value. And I think that that's the mindset that you're sharing then. I think that's something people struggle with. I think we feel guilty because we feel like we're leaving friends behind, or we feel bad because we feel people are going to think we're better than them. Like, when you move on from a group, you're often worried about the perception that those group of people are going to think, or Jay or Mariana think that they're better. And it's like, well, you're not leaving because you think you're better. You're leaving because you want to be better and you want to grow. I. How. How have you kind of outgrown groups, or do you feel you've generally had a group that's grown with you but. Or have you had to let go of friendships, relationships, and things?
E
I have a core, like, five people who have been with me for, like, over a decade. So these are, like.
A
That's impressive.
E
These are constants in my life. Like, Audrey, we met in 2006, so that's like, 16 years ago. So we've been friends for a very long time. So it's like I had this core group of people who are very core to who I am. They know me in my personal life, this who I want to spend my time with. Like, it's not about content or online or anything. It's just, like, who do I want to sit on my couch with, like, scroll on my phone or watch TV or just hang out with? And those people are really important to me. I have a lot of acquaintances and people that we know just from Work and being around people. And I just know, like, I don't have to be overly close with a lot of people and that's okay. And I think a lesson that I learned now in my 30s was that a smaller circle is fine. In my 20s, I think you moved to Los Angeles. You want to make all these friends, you want to be around all these people. And then I'm like, wait, I don't feel great when I'm around them. I don't feel like myself. I feel like I'm trying to have to be someone I'm not or prove to them that I'm something and I don't want to do those things. Like, I want to be truly who I am authentically. And as I got into my 30s, I realized it's okay that my circle is smaller. Like, it's okay to have these people who I know love me and are there for me no matter what. And then everyone else is a bonus.
A
Yeah, absolutely. And I love that you did that. Like, I think if we started seeing our relationships as degrees of connection as opposed to like friends and not friends, it becomes a lot easier to know how much time and how much energy to give someone. We all know that staying active and eating well are key to a long, healthy life. But what if the real secret isn't just personal discipline, but the people we surround ourselves with? Research shows our social circles shape our habits more than we think. Dan Buettner, National Geographic fellow best selling author and founder of the Blue Zones, has spent years studying the world's longest living communities. He's here to share how connection, competition and collaboration can shape our well being. Let's listen in.
G
I actually have one of my little social groups from Los Angeles here. I used to live here. I still have four people and I hardly know. I've seen them once in my life. But every day we email each other our weight and it kind of keeps us doing it. We're accountable to somebody and every one of us. Our weight has gone down a little bit over the last decade or so. And for the average American male, in 10 years, you can expect to gain an extra 10 years. So even among my little focus group we've been, it's worked really quite well.
A
Competition and collaboration together are really fascinating.
G
Really?
A
Yeah. Yeah. Powerful. Yeah. It's why pickleball works for me. It's. It's also why I think I have so many people I know do 10,000 step challenges within their family. And most of those people are walking way over 10,000 steps simply because they're trying to beat someone in their family, and then everyone's average is growing up. And so I think that making something competitive and collaborative is the genius of the social network. The fitness, the fun in life, like so much of it comes from that. And I think we've lost that.
G
One of the strategies we deploy in our cities, it's an idea we took from Okinawa, the notion of a moai, a committed social circle. And we'll get four or five hundred people to show up to a gym. We'll have them circle up according to what neighborhood they live in. We ask them a bunch of questions about, you know, are they religious, what their favorite food is, what they listen for music, and have them look at each other as these questions are being answered. And then we have them self select in groups of five people. And a lot of these people are completely lonely. And once they self select in these clusters, we call them moais. We have them give themselves a name and then we organize them around walking together. Everybody can walk together. And then we offer a little prize at the end of 10 weeks. What happens during that 10 weeks is not only are these people walking a lot more than they normally would, they're creating a social network or a social circle around walking that in many cases we know about 60% are still around four years later. So as you were starting to latch onto, it's the power of collaboration. But creating a social circle around a healthy behavior, that's what's going to last and that's what's going to matter over time.
A
Absolutely. I wanted to quickly jump back to diet and food because there's this great technique that you have, and you mentioned, and this was popular in parts of India, that we're teaching it from this perspective as well, that the method you spoke about was being 8 out of 10 full when you're eating. And when we were trained about that, when we'd hear about it from a. From an Eastern or Vedic perspective, the idea of how breath is part of feeling full and so food is not the only thing that your stomach is full on, was how I was introduced to that idea of being 710 full or 810 full, and the rest would be covered by breath. Of course, there's water as well. Walk us through that idea of how we can all stop eating at 8/10 full, because I think most of us wait till 10:10 or 12:10 ACE. Yeah, exactly.
G
Yeah. So it has its roots in Confucius. The Okinawans have this saying, hara hachi boo, which is a reminder to stop eating when their stomachs are 80% full. And they'll say that like a prayer before a meal. So instead of saying grace or whatever, it's a reminder. I believe, though much of it is actually done at the table. They tend to pre plate their foods and put the leftovers away at the beginning of the meal instead of the end, when you might be mindlessly eating. They don't have a tv, so they're not mindlessly eating to their favorite television show. They're sitting around with friends, slowing the meal down. It takes about 20 minutes from the full feeling to travel from your belly to your brain. And if you're wolfing your food down, if you're not breathing, like you say, not drinking water, there's a pretty good chance you're going to overeat before you know it.
A
Building a business with your friends sounds like a dream, right? But as success grows, so do the challenges. How do you protect those relationships while navigating the pressures of making tough decisions, leading with clarity, and scaling a company? To shed light on this, we have Brian Chesky, co founder and CEO of Airbnb. He's built one of the most recognizable brands in the world while staying grounded in the relationships that started it all. Let's hear his insights. I'm intrigued. You said something there that really stood out to me. You said that the happiest thing and the best thing about being successful is that you get to choose the people you worked with. You obviously built this with friends.
H
Yeah.
A
And that's how it started. It started in a place of being around people you love with. What was the biggest point of challenge in building something with people you love as you grow it? And what is it that you experienced and what was the biggest lesson that you took away that actually kept it going? Because I can imagine, as you're describing highs and lows, all of this changed for 16 years, but here you are still building it together.
H
Think about how many stories you heard of founders. It's like a band. They come together and then eventually the band breaks up. And people don't stay together. They resent each other. Maybe things end very ugly. It's like a band, except, like, it becomes so much bigger than a band because it's not just the three of you. Imagine a band that starts three people and ends as 3,000 people. And that amount of pressure, the amount of spotlight, the money, the changes in, like, people's status and positioning, it can do a lot to break people up. But also unlike a band where maybe not to say you just have to agree on, like, where you perform and what you sing with a company, you have to agree on, like, who we're going to hire, what we're going to call, what markets we're going to go into, what's the prioritization, who we're going to raise money for. I can go down the list of the thousands of things you have to agree to. And with Joe, Nate, and I, I often say it's really good to start a company with friends. Not everyone has friends to start a company with. But you want that reservoir of goodwill. And we made a decision. The decision was that no one decision is going to supersede our friendship and our relationship that we're never going to have. We'll debate, we'll argue, but we'll never allow a situation where winning an argument is the most important thing. Because you think about a company as 100,000 decisions, it could also be 100,000 arguments. And if you get stuck on the first debate or you, like somebody won the debate, okay, great. You have 99,999 more things to discuss. And so the lesson I learned is, I mean, first of all, Jay, I was lucky. And a lot of people, when I say I was lucky, they think, oh, you were at the right place at the right time with the right idea. And I said, well, maybe. But there's something I was much luckier about. And what I was most lucky about, what made me most fortunate was I met Joe and Nate that we have this unbelievable chemistry. One time we had to do like, some personality test. It was like one of those core wheels. And we took this personality test to see about our chemistry, and they plotted our personalities, and they formed a perfect equilateral triangle. Not always you're going to find people that are perfect. Compliments to you. I'd say a couple things. Number one, you want to have a team with people that you are friends with or could see yourself becoming friends with. That you have a deep love and respect for that you're going to probably spend more time with your co founders than your spouse or your family if it goes well. If it doesn't go well, then maybe not. But that's the best case scenario, that people that have shared values. Because you can debate anything so long as you're trying to climb the same mountain and the same belief system. If you have different values, eventually those are going to become irreconcilable conflicts. But you probably also want complementary skills. The worst case is people with different values and same skills. Right? We do the same job. We step in each other's tolls, and we're trying to go in a different direction. And so I think. And then I think the final thing is just this mutual love and respect and never losing sight. You know, one of the things I tried to make sure of is, like, even as CEO, I wanted to try to make sure that, like, Joe and Nate were included in things. And I wanted to always make sure that people referred to us together. We thought of us as a unit. When I went public, you write a founder's letter, and a lot of people write letter, and they just sign the name of the CEO. I made sure that it was from all of us and was representing all of us. I feel like they are the heart and the soul of the company. And it's like parents. Not every child has the fortune to have multiple parents. Not every company has the fortune to have multiple founders. But if they're together, they're not fighting. They have a mutual love and respect for one another that's going to permeate the company just like it permeates the health of a child. And Joanna and I kind of thought ourselves as parents of the company. As a child, I'd never have had kids, but, you know, there's something about that, and I think who you are, and that relationship permeates every single thing. If the founders fight, the employees fight. If they have respect for one another, that is going to be a role, a model that other people throughout the organization are going to copy. And that's what I've learned from that.
A
We all crave a sense of security, not just physically, but emotionally. One of the greatest forms of protection comes from knowing that the people around us truly see us, understand us, and have our backs. But as life gets busier, careers grow and challenges arise, friendships often take a backseat. How do we make sure we don't lose those connections along the way? Actress and entrepreneur Lala Anthony has built an incredible career while staying deeply connected to her inner circle. She shares her perspective on maintaining meaningful friendships through every season of life. Let's hear her perspective. Last time you came, we were tracking your whole career journey like you've done. You've hustled, you've worked hard, you've done so much to get to where you are today, and I want to get to that. But for me, as I've been on this journey, I've been reflecting on what's changed over time as my external situations changed and what makes me feel protected. And you use that word, protection. And I've realized that of course, we have to have our internal protection, right? How we feel about ourselves, our confidence, our own practices. But I found that the thing that makes me feel the most protected is knowing the people around me who really know me and how much closer we get through that process. Like, I have to take so much strength in the fact that the people around me, not only do they have my back, but they actually know me and understand me at a core. And I kind of take a lot of energy from that. Do you do the same?
I
I take so much energy from that. I'm like, the people who know, they know. The people that I need to depend on, they're always there. I'm blessed to have an amazing family, amazing group of friends that are like, ride or die that I know are there no matter what. And it's something that I don't take lightly. So it's not about proving to the world anything. Like, if my core group gets it, knows me inside and out, knows my ups, knows my downs, and are there for me. That's the energy I pull from as well.
A
I want to talk to you about friendship. I think a lot of people feel quite. Even when you're close friends, and I'm sure you felt this. It's hard to open up about things that are going wrong in your life. And I think a lot of people are listening or watching. That's something that they can relate to. Where it's like, I have my friends, but I don't know how to tell them, right, that I'm going through this, or I know they'd care about me, but I don't want them to feel sorry for me.
I
Yeah, that's it too.
A
Or maybe they're going through so much stuff that I don't want to put my stuff on them.
I
Right.
A
How have you managed to keep strong relationships as you've grown in life, as you've built your career? How have you managed to keep that core instead of losing it as you get more busy?
I
I think that my friendships have gotten even stronger because of those moments. I don't base my friendships off of, you know, this person has only been around when everything's been great, or we only talk about sunshine and flowers and cupcakes. Like, friends have to be there through everything, and you have to be able to be okay with being raw and real with people that you consider your friend. And don't throw that word around lightly. If you're saying, this is my friend, this is my go to, you should be able to share whatever's happening in your Life, whether it's good or bad. And those are the things that bond you, you know, through those. I remember the friends that were there for me when I was going through my divorce, when I was publicly, you know, going through what I was going through as a result of what happened in my marriage. Like, I remember my friends that were there. I remember when my son was really young and had to have surgery, and who was there in that moment. Like, I remember all of that. And those were the strengthening moments of our friendship. Now, the fun stuff is great, too. I remember my friends who've been on vacation with me and got drunk and had a great time. But it's a balance. You know, the real friendships had a mix of all of that stuff because that's what life is. Life is not always just fun and games. Life is up and down and up and down. That's what life is.
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Adult friendships aren't just about who's been around the longest. They're about trust and the people who truly show up, who understand you and grow with you. If there's one thing these conversations make clear, it's that strong friendships don't just happen. They take honesty, effort, and the courage to be vulnerable. And in a world that often pulls us in so many different directions, prioritizing connection isn't just important, it's essential. I hope this episode gave you a fresh perspective on what it takes to build and maintain meaningful connections. If something resonated with you, share it with a friend who needs to hear it.
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I'll see you next time on On Purpose. Remember, I'm forever in your corner and always rooting for you. Hey, everyone. If you love that conversation, go and check out my episode with the world's leading therapist, Lori Gottlieb, where she answers the biggest questions that people ask in therapy. When it comes to love, relationships, heartbreak, and dating. If you're trying to figure out that space right now, you won't wanna miss this conversation.
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If it's a romantic relationship, hold hands. It's really hard to argue. It actually calms your nervous systems. Just hold hands as you're having the conversation. It's so lovely.
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We spend so much time managing stress and wellness. But sometimes it's the unseen things around us that throw us off, like allergens hiding in the air we breathe at home. That's where Clorox Pure Allergen Neutralizer Daily Air Spray comes in. Skin developed with allergists, it neutralizes common household allergens like pollen, dust mite matter, and pet dander. Right where they can linger most in the air. There's also Clorox Pure Allergen neutralizer fabric and carpet spray for carpets, couches, and bedding where allergens can lurk. Add Clorox Pure to your daily routine to stop allergens before they become allergies. Find it in the Air Care aisle at a retailer near here. You food has a quiet way of reminding people to slow down and stay present. At Whole Foods Market, even a quick trip can feel like a small journey, guided by flavors from around the world and those yellow signs that highlight great value without sacrificing quality. One aisle might inspire a Mediterranean style dinner with pasta and sauce. Another makes it easy to say yes to prepared empanadas or burritos when time feels tight, right? It's not about doing more, it's about choosing well, simply and intentionally. Save on regional flavors at Whole Foods Market. Push it, BEND It, Flex it Introducing the latest rule bending innovation from Brooks Running the new Glycerin Flex. Feel the freedom with a cushioned shoe made to move with you so that you can bend or flex the rules. Brooks new strategically segmented midsole works as an extension of your body, putting you in control of the run like never before. Want to feel the best parts of your run? Flex the rules in the new Glycerin Flex. Let's run there. Shop now at BrooksRunning. Com.
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This is an iHeart podcast.
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Guaranteed human.
Date: March 18, 2026
Guests: Mel Robbins, Andrew Huberman, Robin Sharma, Trevor Noah, Mariana Hewitt, Dan Buettner, Brian Chesky, Lala Anthony
This special episode tackles the universal struggle of building and maintaining friendships as adults. Jay Shetty curates insights from leading voices—including Mel Robbins, Trevor Noah, Mel Robbins, Andrew Huberman, Robin Sharma, Brian Chesky, Lala Anthony, Mariana Hewitt, and Dan Buettner—to explore why friendship changes with age, how to nurture meaningful connections, and what practical steps we can take to strengthen our support systems. The show is lively, honest, and full of actionable ideas interlaced with memorable, personal stories.
(00:30–11:57) Guest: Mel Robbins
Group to Individual Sport:
Mel explains that up to our early 20s, friendship is “a group sport,” facilitated by constant proximity, shared experiences, and synchronized life stages. After that, “the great scattering” occurs:
“Everybody moves in different directions, and friendship goes from group sport to individual sport. You can no longer expect friendship. You are no longer part of a group.” — Mel Robbins [04:15]
The Three Pillars of Adult Friendship:
“To have as an adult a kind of casual friend, you need to spend approximately 70 hours with somebody. To have a close friend, 200 hours.” — Mel Robbins [06:55]
Loss is Often Not Personal:
When a friendship fades, it’s often due to a missing pillar, not a personal failing.
“Let Them” Theory:
Practice letting people drift in and out of your life and be the initiator when reconnecting feels right.
“People come and go, and it’s a beautiful thing. If a friendship starts to dissipate, ask yourself which pillar is missing before blaming yourself or them.” — Mel Robbins [09:13]
(11:57–21:06) Host: Jay Shetty & Andrew Huberman
Diversify Your Connections:
“No matter how phenomenal anyone is… they just can’t be that. Which emotions do you help other people create?” — Jay Shetty [12:20]
Depth Over Frequency:
“I realized that I felt close to them before, but just the notion that they would ask… ‘What’s in your heart?’… I’m quite moved by the fact they would ask that.” — Andrew Huberman [18:50]
Safety & Acceptance:
Huberman connects emotional safety with the brain’s ability to be creative and open.
(24:41–31:31) Guest: Robin Sharma
Quality Over Quantity:
Focus on nurturing a few deep, meaningful connections rather than spreading energy thin across many.
“A great friend is someone you can be yourself with and they still love you… who accepts you, helps you be seen. When you’re with them, you feel joyful versus depleted. Focus on three great friends.” — Robin Sharma [28:16]
Minimalism in Friendship:
As in life, mastering a few strong friendships, like mastering a few great books, brings greater fulfillment.
Kindness vs. Being a Doormat:
Be kind but don’t let others take advantage; set boundaries with compassion.
(36:22–46:17) Guest: Trevor Noah
Friends as “Vaults” of Self:
True friends know who you are “in most situations,” becoming a mirror and anchor for your identity.
“For me, [a friend] is that I know how you are in most situations… I can say for a fact, if Jay was here, this would bother him. That’s how I think of my friends.” — Trevor Noah [37:27]
Loneliness & the Performer's Dilemma:
Touring comedians and performers face acute loneliness post-show. Continuous connection (his 15-year WhatsApp group) acts as an emotional safety net.
“I always think… your friends in life are your Horcruxes. You break yourself up into parts. People hold different pieces of you, and when you need to find yourself, you use those parts to come back to life.” — Trevor Noah [40:15]
Friendship Is a Choice:
Even familial relationships only transform into friendship through intentional mutual choice.
(50:30–55:12) Guest: Mariana Hewitt
“It’s less about quantity of friends, it’s quality… If you’re around someone and don’t feel your best, love them from a distance.” — Mariana Hewitt [52:52]
(55:12–59:58) Guest: Dan Buettner
Social Accountability for Health:
Small groups (or “moais,” as in Okinawa) mutually reinforce healthy habits, from walking to weight management.
“Creating a social circle around a healthy behavior—that’s what’s going to last.” — Dan Buettner [57:04]
Competition & Collaboration:
Making movement and healthy eating social adds sustainability and joy.
(59:58–65:04) Guest: Brian Chesky (Airbnb co-founder)
Building with Friends:
Success was possible because of mutual respect, complementary skills, and consciously choosing that “no one decision is going to supersede our friendship.”
“What I was most lucky about was I met Joe and Nate… We made a decision that no one decision is going to supersede our friendship and our relationship.” — Brian Chesky [61:05]
Shared Values:
Alignment of values is more critical than having identical skillsets or opinions.
(65:04–68:52) Guest: Lala Anthony
True Friends Stick Through All Seasons:
Lala values friends who show up in adversity, not just in celebrations:
“Friends have to be there through everything… those were the strengthening moments of our friendship.” — Lala Anthony [67:40]
Vulnerability is Essential:
Real friendship requires the courage to be raw and honest, even when it’s uncomfortable.
This episode of “On Purpose” is a masterclass in adult friendship—blending science, story, and practical wisdom. Jay and his remarkable guests reveal that while friendship changes, with intention and courage, everyone can build a support system that lasts. Strong connections are never accidental; they require investment, honesty, boundaries, and openness to change. If you struggle with friendship as an adult, this episode is full of both comfort and actionable tools.
Best summarizing quote from Jay:
“Adult friendships aren’t just about who’s been around the longest. They’re about trust and the people who truly show up, who understand you and grow with you.” [68:52]