logo
How I stopped caring about what other people think (and you can too)

How I stopped caring about what other people think (and you can too)

Telegraph25-02-2025

'So sorry, I can't make it tonight. Hope to see you all another time soon,' I write and send to the school mum WhatsApp group before I can start overthinking it.
Before, I'd have felt the need to send a detailed explanation as to why I couldn't make it. I would have spent ages worrying about everyone thinking I was flaky and unreliable and feeling guilty for bailing at the last minute.
But that's all changed since I read The Let Them Theory by Mel Robbins. The self-help author, podcast host and former lawyer's latest book is based on two little words which help manage how you interact with people and day to day life. It's such a simple mantra but it seems to have a transformative effect.
Robbins, a New York Times bestselling author who has been endorsed by everyone from Oprah to author Jay Shetty, is a self-help guru in the US and also starting to make waves here in the UK. The 56-year-old motivational speaker, who was diagnosed with ADHD at 47 and has more than 22 million followers across her social media platforms, wrote her latest book with her daughter, Sawyer, and is bringing the accompanying tour to London in June.
The Let Them Theory, which was published in December 2024 and reportedly sold over 1.2 million copies in the first month, looks at how we can free ourselves from judgement, drama and the opinions of others. It addresses simple fears – failure, change, disappointment – and turns them on their head.
As someone who was raised in the 80s and 90s, at a time when girls were conditioned to be people pleasers who put others first (who could forget the cringeworthy Girl Guide pledge: 'I promise that I will do my best… to serve the Queen and my community, to help other people and to keep the (Brownie) Guide Law.') it helped me realise I have no control over what people say, do or think. And I don't have to try and please them.
The concept is painstakingly simple but taps into something deeply psychological and liberating. 'Let them' sums up the tension between control and acceptance.
As psychologist Dr Louise Goddard-Crawley explains: 'So many of us expend an exhausting amount of energy trying to influence other people's behaviour, worrying about how they perceive us, or hoping they'll act in a way that suits us. But the truth is, people will do what they do. The sooner we accept that, the more peaceful and in control of ourselves we feel.'
That is the real power of Let Them. 'It's not about disengagement or passivity – it's about freeing up emotional bandwidth for the things that actually matter, and things that you actually have some control over.'
Such as how we respond and react to things and spend our time.
Before reading the book, I would often make the journalist faux pas of reading the 'below the line' comments on articles I had written, which would leave me feeling deflated at best and upset at worst. I would lie awake wondering what my friends and family might think. I have, over the years, had comments on everything from my appearance to my parenting to my grammar. Sometimes, I could spend hours stewing on it but now I don't even bother to read them because 'let them'.
Before, as someone who works from home and spends too much time on social media, I would have checked Instagram repeatedly to see who had and had not liked my posts. In the absence of real life colleagues, I would have sought external validation online. I would have wasted energy overthinking why people who look at every story I post, especially friends and other journalists, never 'like' any of my posts. As someone who is a prolific 'liker' and engager, I have always found this to be bewildering and confusing.
I have realised, however, that it's actually really liberating to realise that you have zero control of other people's opinions of you. It frees you up to, in the words of Robbins, to 'be your authentic self'.
Source: Psychologist Dr Louise Goddard-Crawley
There is also a very helpful chapter in the book about the ebb and flow of adult friendships, something which I very much relate to. Robbins says that adult friendships are based primarily on three things – promixity (being in the same place, workplace, neighbourhood or social circle as someone), timing (being at a similar stage of life) and energy (the level of connection and affinity you feel with someone).
I have in the past been someone who has invested a great deal of time into my friendships but applying the Let Them theory and realising that friendships can largely depend on such things as proximity and timing, things which are essentially beyond my control, has helped me reassess my expectations. Accepting and realising that some friendships have naturally faded and that it's fine to just let that happen has been a game changer.
It's also laid open the gauntlet that some people, like the ones I let go of during a particularly difficult time in my life when my autistic son was put on a reduced timetable at school and I became something of a hermit, may come back into my life. Let Them has helped taken the onus and pressure off myself to make that happen.
I've also tried to remind myself about the Let Me part of the book where you let yourself get irritated by something or someone (like one of my children refusing to tidy their room) but then let it go and move on.
The Let Me rule has given me permission to take ownership of my feelings. The other day someone honked at me for overtaking the car in front and I felt a fleeting surge of road rage. I didn't wave at them to apologise. I allowed myself to feel irritated and allowed them to let out their frustration and then I moved quickly on.
As Robbins says, 'by letting other people live their lives, you finally get to live yours'.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Inside New York's 'Pigeon Fest' where impersonators battle for title
Inside New York's 'Pigeon Fest' where impersonators battle for title

Metro

time15 hours ago

  • Metro

Inside New York's 'Pigeon Fest' where impersonators battle for title

A famous New York landmark was overrun with pigeons this week. The Big Apple is known for a lot of great things – the Empire State Building, world-class entertainment and famous faces. But one crucial piece of New York is often overlooked: the humble pigeon. The bird has gotten a lot more attention in recent months, thanks to a new statue installed at New York's High Line. The sculpture, a 17-foot-tall pigeon dubbed 'Dinosaur' by Ivan Argote, has brought pigeon lovers around the world to 30th Street and 10th Avenue. Cashing in on this pigeon-mania, the High Line decided to hold a pigeon pageant on National Pigeon Appreciation Day. Dozens of New Yorkers showed up in full costume, feathers and all, to compete for the crown prize. 13-year-old Athena told the New York Times pigeons were beautiful and fun to learn about: 'What's not to love?' A small pigeon in a red bow tie, along with dozens of participants and eager onlookers, took part in Pigeon Fest last Saturday. Contestants were judged by ornithologists on their impressions of pigeons – some even threw bread and attempted to peck at it. Categories included 'plumage', 'strut' and 'coo'. One contestant, dubbed 'Carrie Beakshaw' (a play on Sex And The City's Carrie Bradshaw) performed a monologue. But the crown was given to Miriam Abrahams, a volunteer at the Wild Bird Fund, which has thousands of pigeons they take care of. Her costume was incredibly lifelike, and she said she took a month to make it, even laying an egg during her performance. The bizarre festival is said to be a one-off, as the statue which brought everyone together will only be on display until next spring. But artist Argote said: 'The pigeon is an icon, somehow, of the margins, so it attracts a lot of people who are either involved with pigeons literally or feel represented by its complexity. 'It goes way beyond the work. As a sculptor and as an artist, you try to create something, but as soon as it gets into the community, it becomes more meaningful.' More Trending The love for pigeons isn't contained to just New York – in Cardiff, a dad who saved a pigeon from drowning welcomed the bird into his family and takes him for walks on a leash. Philip Weston-Thomas was on a walk around Roath Park Lake in Cardiff with his wife Rebecca and 14-year-old daughter one January when his daughter spotted the bird struggling in the freezing water. Philip jumped into action and scooped up the pigeon, which was freezing, shaking and 'on its last legs'. The family took the bird, whom they named Bobbi, home with them and nursed him back to health. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Netflix star Sara Burack, 40, killed in hit-and-run as police hunt driver MORE: Teen struck by lightning at famed park as freak thunderstorm hit New York City MORE: Donald Trump's hand mark and 'cover up' raises concerns again

Ryan Reynolds drops awkward reference to Blake Lively's legal battle as her Taylor Swift texts set for release
Ryan Reynolds drops awkward reference to Blake Lively's legal battle as her Taylor Swift texts set for release

Daily Mail​

time2 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Ryan Reynolds drops awkward reference to Blake Lively's legal battle as her Taylor Swift texts set for release

Ryan Reynolds stirred buzz at the Cannes Lions 2025 festival on Thursday after making a remark that many interpreted as a nod to the ongoing legal firestorm surrounding his wife Blake Lively, and her former co-star Justin Baldoni. The legal saga began in December 2024 when Blake Lively accused Justin Baldoni of sexually harassing her on set — claims he denied — prompting Baldoni and Wayfarer Studios to sue Lively, her publicist Leslie Sloane, and Ryan Reynolds for defamation. Baldoni later escalated the fight with a $250 million lawsuit against The New York Times over its explosive New Year's Eve exposé detailing Lively's allegations. Earlier this month, a judge dismissed Baldoni's defamation case in a major blow to the actor, though his legal team will still gain access to Lively's private text messages with Taylor Swift — whom Blake infamously referred to as 'my dragon' in an exchange allegedly meant to intimidate Baldoni — after withdrawing a subpoena aimed at the singer directly. Now, at Cannes Lions, Reynolds took the stage at Stagwell's Sport Beach to promote his soccer team, Wrexham AFC — and raised eyebrows with an unexpected quip. While handing a water bottle to someone in the crowd, the Deadpool star joked, 'I'm not throwing this. I've been around lawyers. You can walk up here and grab it,' according to Page Six. Earlier this month, a judge dismissed Baldoni's defamation case in a major blow to the actor, though his legal team will still gain access to Lively's private text messages with Taylor Swift — whom Blake infamously referred to as 'my dragon' in an exchange allegedly meant to intimidate Baldoni — after withdrawing a subpoena aimed at the singer directly; (Lively seen on June 9) He also took a moment to reflect on how sports can bring people together in a world fractured by division, per the outlet. 'We live in a world right now that is so… identity politics… almost a religion,' Reynolds said. 'For that to be checked at the door in sports, in theatrical film, and in music, concerts, we all walk in, we go together.' Reynolds added, 'We're all feeling the same thing at the same time and the same moment. 'You have this bonding mechanism — and I don't mean to over romanticize it, but it's romantic. 'It's a beautiful thing to watch people come together, especially when we feel so divided in every other aspect of our life.' The panel comes after exclusively learned that Baldoni's lawyers will be allowed to peruse a tranche of messages exchanged by Blake and Taylor, with all communications related to It Ends With Us now set for scrutiny. Swift and Lively's relationship has cratered in recent months, with the singer left furious at being dragged into the case. And she is not the only Swift to be dragged in: last week the Daily Mail revealed the subpoena against her had been withdrawn because Baldoni's team had managed to acquire the information they were seeking – from none other than her dad Scott, 73. 'Scott Swift did not want his daughter to be dragged into this any further and he voluntarily gave up this information as part of a deal that would include [Baldoni's team] withdrawing their subpoena for Taylor,' the source explained. The pop star's doting dad - who has played a key role in building Swift's billion-dollar empire as her financial advisor - came to his daughter's rescue after she was allegedly blackmailed by Lively's lawyers. That 'blackmail' revelation appeared in a legal letter filed last month by Baldoni's lawyers, who alleged that Lively's team had attempted to 'coerce' Swift to issue a public statement in support of her. The filing claimed Lively's lawyer, Michael Gottlieb, had contacted Swift's team and demanded she 'release a statement of support for Ms. Lively, intimating that, if Ms. Swift refused to do so, private text messages of a personal nature in Ms. Lively's possession would be released.' Swift's team allegedly responded to Gossip Girl star Lively's 'inappropriate and apparently extortionate threats in at least one written communication' sent to Gottlieb, according to the letter. 'It is those communications that [Baldoni's team] seeks to obtain by way of subpoena, as they would evidence an attempt to intimidate and coerce a percipient witness in this litigation,' the letter stated. Scott seemingly didn't take this alleged attempt to extort his 35-year-old daughter lightly, and decided to take matters into his own hands by cooperating with Baldoni and Bryan Freedman in order to protect Swift from any further legal involvement. 'Plain and simple – they tried to extort Taylor by threatening to release private information about her so that she would support a narrative that she was not a part of,' our source added. In a statement to People magazine, Gottlieb described the suggestion that Lively's lawyers had threatened Swift as 'categorically false.' Lively's lawyers later filed a motion asking the court to strike the accusations from its docket as 'baseless, unnecessary, improper and abusive.' The motion to dismiss the letter was granted. However, the drama sheds further light on the collapse of the pair's close friendship, which has gone cold amid the actress's high-stakes lawsuit. The drama began last December when Lively, 37, accused Baldoni, her It Ends With Us co-star and director, of sexual harassment and coordinating a smear campaign against her. Baldoni, 41, hit back in January, with a $400 million countersuit accusing Lively and her husband Ryan Reynolds, 48, of defamation. All parties have denied the allegations. Last week, the defamation element of Baldoni's lawsuit was scrapped by a judge, although he is still suing for civil extortion and invasion of privacy among other claims. But contained in Baldoni's filing were screenshots of alleged text messages, in which Lively regularly mentioned Swift by name. And she is not the only Swift to be dragged in: last week the Daily Mail revealed the subpoena against her had been withdrawn because Baldoni's team had managed to acquire the information they were seeking – from none other than her dad Scott, 73; The pair pictured May 18 in NYC In one now infamous and toe-curling exchange, Lively appeared to refer to herself as the character Khaleesi – from Game of Thrones – and to Swift as one of her 'dragons.' Elsewhere in Baldoni's filing is the claim that Swift was present at a meeting convened by Lively at her New York penthouse to discuss It Ends With Us script changes. Sources close to Swift insisted the singer had no knowledge of the meeting and simply turned up to find it underway. Nonetheless, the whole furor reportedly left Swift - who is godmother to Lively's three daughters – feeling 'exploited' by her pal of ten years. Scott, a former stockbroker and financial advisor for Merrill Lynch, has long been credited as smoothing his daughter's path to financial success. A disclosure with the Securities and Exchange Commission lists him as linked to 10 companies affiliated with his daughter, according to Bloomberg. Last year, he was accused of assaulting a photographer who was 'waiting' for Swift's arrival off a luxury yacht in Sydney following the Australian leg of her Eras Tour. In a statement to Daily Mail Australia at the time, a rep for Swift described the photographers as 'aggressive' and her father later avoided charges. Scott isn't the only member of Swift's inner circle to defend the pop star amid the legal drama. Her boyfriend, NFL star Travis Kelce, recently unfollowed Ryan Reynolds on Instagram while supermodel Gigi Hadid, another of Swift's closest friends, has reportedly 'iced out' Lively in solidarity. In a statement released to the Daily Mail, a spokesman for Lively accused Baldoni's lawyers of repeatedly attempting to drag Swift into the case and attempting to 'exploit' her popularity. It continued: 'The Court outright denied the Wayfarer Parties' motion to compel documents from Ms. Lively, who has produced far more documents in this case than the Wayfarer Parties combined. 'Further, the Court's protective order ruling rests on the Wayfarer Parties' admission that they received nothing from Taylor Swift, which is exactly the opposite of what their 'insider' claimed two weeks ago. As for the rest, Justin Baldoni and the Wayfarer parties demanded access to Taylor Swift's private communications—despite having already subpoenaed and then withdrawn that subpoena. Baldoni's desire to drag Taylor Swift into this has been constant dating back to August 2024, when the crisis PR firm led by Melissa Nathan included her in their 'Scenario Planning' document (Lively Amended Complaint, Exhibit D), referred to her as a bully, and called for a strategy to influence the 'TS fan base '. We will continue to call out Baldoni's relentless efforts to exploit Ms Swift's popularity, which from day one has been nothing more than a distraction from the serious sexual harassment and retaliation accusations he and the Wayfarer parties are facing.

EXCLUSIVE Why Michelle Phillips is OK with neighbor who rummages through her trash and takes her mail
EXCLUSIVE Why Michelle Phillips is OK with neighbor who rummages through her trash and takes her mail

Daily Mail​

time3 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Why Michelle Phillips is OK with neighbor who rummages through her trash and takes her mail

It looked like every homeowner's worst nightmare: a man rummaging through trash cans and swiping a packet of papers. And for Mamas and Papas legend Michelle Phillips, 81, that was briefly the reality when the man swooped in shortly after she wheeled her garbage to the curb outside her Los Angeles home. But can reveal the seemingly sinister situation was actually nothing of the sort with Phillips saying the man is a neighbor on the hunt for discarded copies of the New York Times. 'He's perfectly harmless,' the singer told a Daily Mail reporter who showed her a photo of the man outside her home. 'It's nothing to worry about and I've known him since he was a teenager. He's very nice, and he was going through my trash to find my newspapers because he wants to read the New York Times. Thank you for checking – that's what neighbors are for,' Michelle added. But there may be more to the man's trash run than Michelle knows. He was clearly seen stuffing letters from her garbage into his back pockets before walking away. Shortly after her neighbor took off, Phillips clad in black pants, a black sweater layered under a Japanese-inspired red and blue kimono and oversized black sunglasses, was seen heading out to run errands. The incident marked Phillips's first public sighting since the death of Beach Boys icon Brian Wilson - a longtime acquaintance. Her daughter Chynna, 57, formed the successful 90s pop trio Wilson Phillips with Brian's daughters, Carnie and Wendy. Phillips gave birth to Chynna during her tumultuous marriage to The Mamas & The Papas' founder and chief songwriter, John Phillips. Their union – riddled with infidelity, substance abuse and the crushing weight of fame – lasted past the band's three-year career before ending in divorce in 1969. She is also the stepmother to actress Mackenzie Phillips, 66, and model Bijou Phillips, 45, through her late ex-husband's other relationships. When he was done looking through the last surviving member of The Mamas & The Papas's trash, he tucked a few envelopes in his back pocket before walking off Phillips wore black pants, a black sweater layered under a Japanese-inspired red and blue kimono and oversized black sunglasses John, who died in 2001 at age 65, notoriously had an affair with Cass Elliot, the group's other female vocalist, fueling deep tensions within the band. Phillips, meanwhile, had her own controversial affairs - including with bandmate Denny Doherty and director Roman Polanski, the latter while his partner Sharon Tate was pregnant with his child. But although their relationship was marred with controversy, she still defended her late ex-husband's character in 2009 when allegations emerged of incest made by her stepdaughter Mackenzie. At the time, her other stepdaughter Bijou said she knew her half-sister Mackenzie had a consensual sexual relationship with their father. Bijou, who was married to convicted rapist Danny Masterton till she filed for divorce in 2023, claimed she was 13 years old when Mackenzie told her about the relationship, calling the news 'confusing and scary'. Bijou added that it was 'heartbreaking' to think her family knew about the incest and still left her alone with her father. The band, which shot to stardom with hits 'California Dreamin',' 'Monday, Monday,' and 'Dedicated to the One I Love,' split in 1968 just three years after achieving mainstream success and winning a Grammy in 1967 for Best Contemporary (R&R) Group Performance, Vocal or Instrumental. Phillips still found success after the band split through acting where she starred alongside celebrities such as Martin Sheen, Audrey Hepburn and Sharon Stone. The singer-turned-actress was later cast in a biographical gangster film Dillinger in 1973 - which garnered her a Golden Globe nomination for Most Promising Newcomer. She also took on roles in films including Valentino (1977), The Covenant (1985) and Scissors (1991). Phillips additionally branched out to the world of television and starred in the series titled Knots Landing (1987-1993). Later in her career, she had guest roles in beloved shows such as Beverly Hills, 90210 and The Love Boat. At the height of her fame, Phillips had a whirlwind marriage to actor Dennis Hopper that lasted just eight days, as well as high-profile romances with Jack Nicholson and Warren Beatty. She divorced her third husband, radio producer John Burch, in 1979 after one year.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store