I went to Mel Robbins's Let Them tour to speak with fans — then one of them invited me in
Robbins, a former lawyer who hosts The Mel Robbins Podcast, was on tour promoting her uber bestselling book The Let Them Theory, which came out last December. I showed up an hour and 45 minutes before the start of the show without a ticket or any understanding of how to practice Robbins's teachings myself. My plan was to talk to her biggest fans to understand the frenzy behind Robbins's burgeoning media empire.
'It's like Taylor Swift basically,' a 27-year-old Long Islander named Kaitlin told me. She bought two tickets at face value back in January when they were first released as a gift for her mom, Karen, 56, for Mother's Day. 'We listen to her together and we share episodes back and forth,' Kaitlin added before the mother-daughter duo flashed their matching friendship bracelets that spell out 'let them' in beads.
They're toward the front of a crowd stretching three-quarters of a city block. Waiting on line, they made friends with Lisa Rosenblatt, a 70-year-old from Mineola, N.Y., who I also spoke with. 'I saw Mel Robbins when she had her CBS TV show about eight years ago. You felt like you were in her living room,' Rosenblatt said of Robbins's appeal. 'I read all her books, listen to the podcast daily and I feel like she's my friend.' She then pulled out her copy of The Let Them Theory with over a dozen Post-it flags hanging out from the pages she's marked up.
Kayla, a 24-year-old from Lehigh Valley, Pa., also feels that personal connection to Robbins. 'Mel has gotten me through a lot of hard days,' Kayla admits. 'She's really helped me value myself as a person more.' Her 23-year-old Long Island bestie Hannah agrees: 'She puts everything into perspective.' Like Karen and Kaitlin, the mother-daughter duo, they also share episodes back and forth. 'Mel Robbins is our love language,' said Hannah.
Another group of friends in their 60s hop into the back of the line at its longest. Their excitement to keep up with it as people start entering the venue means we're walking and talking.
'There's a lot of talking heads but when Mel speaks, it's plainspoken and I find it accessible and her delivery just makes sense. The 'let them' theory sounds so simple and yet, in our age group, damn we should have thought about this 30 years ago,' one of them said to me. Another agrees that Robbins makes a listener 'feel very comfortable,' although she's only been looped into the podcaster's content by the friend beside her. 'She's bringing me to Mel Robbins because she thinks I need a lot of help.'
The 'let them' theory is what inspired many members of the sold-out crowd that night. The phrase, popularized by Robbins, is a cornerstone of the book bearing the same name, which has sold 5 million copies in just five months. The two words have become a declaration of boundary setting that reminds individuals to prioritize their own dreams, happiness and goals over those of the people around them. The theory, she wrote, 'will set you free from the exhausting cycle of trying to manage everything and everyone around you.'
She's written two other books — The 5 Second Rule and The High 5 Habit — which have inspired her followers to rely on a 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 countdown to make a life-altering decision or give themselves a high-five in the mirror every morning to keep themselves going. She also has The Mel Robbins Podcast, which, according to SiriusXM, has more than 188 million streams and downloads globally and sits at the top of the charts week after week.
I am not one of Robbins's rabid fans. I've come across her videos on TikTok but have only listened to her as a guest on one podcast. My plan for the evening was to speak with attendees before they filed in because actually getting in the theater was out of my budget: Resale on Ticketmaster was up to $1,058, prices I've seen for the likes of Taylor Swift's Eras tour and Beyoncé's current Cowboy Carter tour.
But that all changed when I met Peggy Carroll, a 63-year-old from North Carolina. She approached me and asked if I needed a ticket, explaining that she had an extra she was trying to give away. 'I paid over $400 for it and it'd be a shame to go to waste,' she said.
Carroll flew into New York that day and was leaving the next morning. 'This was the closest show,' she said of Robbins's tour, which also appeared in Boston, Chicago and Toronto. 'My son was coming with me but then he couldn't because of work stuff,' so she ended up making the trip alone. But, she wasn't really alone because she found me. 'You were supposed to be here with me,' she said, like it was meant to be.
As we entered the venue, we were handed bright green tote bags with Robbins's tour logo on them and a book inside. I urged Carroll to take mine to bring back to her 31-year-old son who was 'bummed' to miss the event. 'No, no. You're going to need it,' she instructed. I looked in and saw a notebook that I thought I'd use only for my reporting notes once we were in our fifth-row seats.
Carroll paid $499 per ticket on the day they were released but would have paid almost anything. She's disappointed to have skipped out on buying merchandise on site — like $45 T-shirts and $100 sweatshirts — because the line was wrapped around the entirety of the theater's main floor. As I headed into the women's bathroom, I saw that another attendee had already changed into her 'Let Them' shirt. Carroll would order something online later.
We spent nearly an hour chatting in our seats before the show began (Robbins appeared at 8 p.m.). Carroll told me about converting her family and friends into fans of Robbins and showed me her Instagram explore page, which exclusively suggested Robbins's content to her. She shared photos of her daughter's wedding one year ago and her granddaughter's second birthday party happening that same day. She asked me about my life, my career and my relationship, exuding joy over it all as if she were an aunt relishing in my success and happiness.
The energy in the room around us began to swell as the 2,894 seats of the venue filled up, and only intensified as an opening video played. I was ready to experience the magic of Mel Robbins — or so I thought. Nothing could have prepared me for the screams of thousands of women, from 20-somethings to 70-somethings, who were all up on their feet for Robbins's entrance, which included bright lights, loud music and lots of jumping from Robbins onstage. Over the next hour and 50-something minutes, she was meant to change my life.
Robbins put on one hell of a show. She started by telling the crowd a bit about her upbringing, her marriage and starting a family — all context that was necessary for me but seemed to be known by most others. She shared her rock-bottom moments and how they became the spark for the practices that have ultimately made her famous — the 5 Second Rule and, of course, the 'let them' theory — sprinkling humor and humility throughout. Her 26-year-old daughter Sawyer was brought onstage to discuss her own journey to becoming her mother's coauthor for the latest and most notable book. They reenacted the ways that the 'let them' theory changed their relationship in an effort to assure that it works in practice.
Her other daughter, Kendall, popped in toward the end to share her own experience with imposter syndrome and comparison, before singing an original song (a performance I wasn't expecting but loved). The grand finale was something out of America's Got Talent, mimicking the golden buzzer with a great splash of gold confetti as Robbins delivered her final line. 'I believe in your ability to create a better life. Now, go do it!'
Before the confetti settled onto the ground, a line of VIP ticket holders appeared in the aisle beside us, waiting for their chance to take a photo with Robbins. Carroll joked that she was sorry she didn't pay for the VIP perks and I wouldn't have the chance to meet Robbins that evening. But truthfully, I didn't care too much about that — I felt like I had already met the people that impacted me most that night.
The women I met in line who welcomed an outsider with open arms, the best friends sitting beside me tearing up and supporting one another through the show, the person who threw up their hand to show off a 'Let Them' tattoo, and the husband who sat with his wife just in front of me watching her experience what was sure to be her bucket list moment. And, of course, Carroll.
We walked out onto the Upper West Side streets together with our green tote bags in hand — mine carrying a notebook that had just two pages filled, one with notes for this story and another with thoughts inspired by Robbins's presentation — discussing the magic of the show for just a moment before reflecting on the real magic of the night, which was encountering each other.
'Kerry, it was GREAT to meet you and I know it was meant to be! THANK YOU for joining me and for making the night even more special!' Carroll texted me later that evening. 'A gift to have met you tonight!! And remember..... 'Let Them.''
Days later and I have yet to tune in to Robbins's podcast, I haven't run to purchase her book (although I'm interested in reading it) and I don't think I've even shared much of the show with friends. What I have talked about is the woman who approached me, took me under her wing and shared something so personal to her with a complete stranger. And maybe that was the whole point of the evening — to let things unfold, let people surprise me and maybe even let them change me too. I wasn't going to pay over $1,000 for the ticket myself, but my 'let them' experience was unexpectedly priceless.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Chet Holmgren meets Oklahoma legend Adrian Peterson
Enjoying his downtime, Chet Holmgren went on another side quest that involved a cross-sport interaction every Oklahoma sports fan loved. The calendar has flipped to August, which means the NBA is in its driest part of the year. Everybody around the league is on vacation for the next couple of months before the 2025-26 season starts. Holmgren traveled to the 2025 Panini VIP Party over the weekend. Panini America hosted the event. The company is known for selling sports trading cards, memorabilia and autographed merchandise. It includes about every collegiate and pro sports league you can imagine. At the event, athletes from across the globe attended. Holmgren took to social media to post some of the photos he had taken of players he grew up watching. One included Oklahoma and NFL legend Adrian Peterson. The future Hall-of-Famer is one of the greatest running backs ever. Peterson attended Oklahoma for three college seasons from 2004-06. He then spent nearly a decade with the Minnesota Vikings, where he carved out one of the greatest careers. He was a perennial Pro Bowl player and won the 2012 MVP award. Considering Holmgren grew up in Minnesota, it was a moment where the 23-year-old was likely starstruck. Both also have obvious ties to Oklahoma. In the seven-footer's case, he helped the Thunder win their first NBA championship this past June. Always fun to see the type of adventures NBA players go through when they have free time. So much of their lives is fixated on basketball. For Holmgren, his free time includes linking up with several other all-time athletes from various sports at a trading card company event.
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
Former NBA Star's Pregnant Wife Bitten By Shark In Puerto Rico: 'Worst Day Of My Life'
Eleonora Boi, the wife of former NBA star Danilo Gallinari, revealed she survived a shark attack while pregnant. The Italy native, who is currently expecting her third child with the athlete, was bitten by a shark while swimming at a beach in Puerto Rico, where her husband currently plays. "It was the worst day of my life, maybe my grandmother Nella was right when she said 'on the seas you traitors,'" she wrote in a translated Instagram post on Aug. 1 alongside a photo of herself wearing a hospital gown. "I never thought I could get attacked by a shark and I was near the shore and on a super crowded beach. Thankfully me and my baby are fine, I was rushed to the rescue and the surgery to fix my poor bruised leg, [it] went well," she added. Eleonora's post comes one day after the Department of Natural and Environmental Resources in Puerto Rico announced the incident to the public, although it didn't disclose the identity of the woman at the time. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
Nikola Jokic Amuses NBA Fans With Horse-Racing Victory Celebrations In Offseason Viral Video
Nikola Jokic Amuses NBA Fans With Horse-Racing Victory Celebrations In Offseason Viral Video originally appeared on Fadeaway World. Denver Nuggets star Nikola Jokic is known for his eccentric personality, both on and off the court. This was perfectly captured in a recent viral video when the star was seen celebrating after his horse won a race at an event in Serbia. The offseason is often a time when NBA players rest, recover, and unwind from the stresses of the regular season and playoffs. Given the sheer range of personalities in the league, it is obvious that everyone has their own method of decompressing. For Jokic, his passion for horse racing has become his go-to outlet. Considering that the Serbian superstar talked about his horses even after winning the NBA title in 2023, it is evident how much the events matter to him. This year's offseason has been no different, as Jokic spends time in Serbia. In a recent video, Jokic's horse of choice achieved a victory in a race, and NBA fans found his celebrations to be hilarious. Fans on X had a lot to say about Jokic's reaction to the win. "He's just one of us having a tailgate party," said one fan. "Notice as his horse looks in their direction as the horse goes by," added another, while making a keen observation. "GOAT does what makes him happy," said another fan after observing Jokic's celebration. One fan acknowledged the Nuggets star's priorities and added, "The job is done, we can go home now." Meanwhile, another added, "Man of the people." Fans on Instagram also shared their reactions to the post by NBA on ESPN. A fan responded to the post and said, "Jokic just happy not to be playing basketball." "Happier his horse won than his whole career," added another. Another fan noted the same sentiment and said, "Bro happier than winning a ring." Another fan noted the resemblance between Jokic's reaction and an iconic TV show and said, "This is so The Sopranos." "I guess you could call that hype. In Jokic standards, definitely," added another, acknowledging the star's otherwise muted demeanor. The offseason seems to be treating Jokic well, who will be in need of it considering the team's outlook for the next season. Having made some significant upgrades to the roster, the Denver Nuggets look primed to contend for the championship next season. The arrival of Cam Johnson will significantly boost the team's wing depth, especially while considering Johnson's contributions on the defensive end. Bruce Brown's return will also be viewed positively. Brown's unrelenting effort on both ends of the floor earned him a place in the hearts of the fanbase. His contributions to the team were vital in helping them secure the title. The most significant acquisition has undoubtedly been Jonas Valanciunas, who was acquired via trade with the Sacramento Kings. While the presence of Valanciunas would be a huge asset as a backup big man, there appears to be some intent from the Lithuanian's side to play overseas with the Greek team Panathinaikos. It has been reported that the Nuggets don't intend to release Valanciunas from his contract obligations. But in the case that the big man doesn't appear for the team, Denver will look to make some upgrades to their story was originally reported by Fadeaway World on Jul 7, 2025, where it first appeared.