Don't take it too seriously.
The saying is actually "Take is with a grain of salt". And it means kind of like grin and bear it.
To take something with a grain of salt is American English colloquial from 1647, from Modern Latin 'cum grano salis', implying disbelief, requiring eventual conclusion.
And Take It with a Grain of Salt was created in 2002.
To take something that someone says with a grain of salt means that you should not necessarily believe everything he/she tells you.
What she says with a grain of salt
Generally the term is to "take it with a grain of salt" which means you don't generally have to put much emphasis on the importance of the suggestion. For example a person who is not educated in the medical field but is sure about something and offers advice, you take that "with a grain of salt".
With a Grain of SaltYou should take what you hear and evaluate it on your own, don't take it for being the truth or correct. The phrase is usually used when a person it giving you the 'low down' on what another person has told you. It is a warning that what that person has said, or may say, is not necessarily correct and accurate. AnswerMy grandmother used to say this to me all the time. Basically, it means to be skeptical or to question something that someone has told you. For example, if someone has a tendency to exaggerate, you'll want to take what they have said with a grain or pinch of salt. Answers.com says that the expression is a translation of the Latin cum grano salis, which Pliny used in describing Pompey's discovery of an antidote for poison (to be taken with a grain of salt). AnswerTo take 'with a grain of salt' means to take with a heavy dose of skepticism, caution and suspicion. The saying came from the old cure for poison - a pinch of salt. Salt was said to have healing properties, so to eat a meal 'with a pinch of salt' meant that you suspected the meal of being poisoned.
To take something with a "grain of salt" is to not take something too seriously. For example, I take everything that politicians say with a grain of salt, because history shows us that politicians aren't that reliable for the most part. That's my opinion.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Above is wrongTo take a statement with 'a grain of salt' or 'a pinch of salt' means to accept it but to maintain a degree of skepticism about its truth.The origin derives from "Pliny's Naturalis Historia, 77 A.D".
Take them with a grain of salt, but don't ignore/dismiss them.
It's originally a Latin expression, cum grano salis.
The first entry is:"The most AMAZING person alive.Brandon makes me feel special."But that was probably written by a Brandon or Brandon's girlfriend, so take it with a grain of salt.
Presuming the internet is accurate, take it with a grain of salt, he is worth from 310 to 400 million dollars.