All About Change - Sophie Trudeau - Breaking Generational Cycles of Trauma

Episode Date: August 19, 2024

Sophie Gregoire Trudeau has spent much of her adult life in the public eye as a broadcaster and political leader. And, as someone who has been public about her own struggles with mental health, Sophie... believes that the key to restoring trust in our institutions lies in our leaders reckoning with emotional awareness and their own traumas.  Sophie joined host Jay Ruderman to discuss the complexities of mental health and the power of vulnerability and connection, topics she also explores in her new book, ‘Closer Together.’ Sophie opens up about her struggle with bulimia, the importance of breaking generational cycles of trauma, and the significance of asking for help. Jay and Sophie get into how self-awareness, love, and presence are needed to effectively address the global mental health crisis.    Episode Chapters (00:00) Intro to Sophie Trudeau (01:49) Understanding Early Childhood Development and Trauma (04:33) Sophie’s Personal Journey and Spirituality (05:45) The Challenges of Modern Parenting (09:07) Dealing with Hate and Bullying (09:37) Mental Health in Politics (14:27) Sophie Breaks the Silence on Her Struggle with Bulimia (27:16) Breaking Generational Cycles of Trauma (29:34) The Importance of Transparency and Connection (31:31) Conclusion and Final Thoughts   For video episodes, watch on www.youtube.com/@therudermanfamilyfoundation   Stay in touch: X: @JayRuderman | @RudermanFdn LinkedIn: Jay Ruderman | Ruderman Family Foundation Instagram: All About Change Podcast | Ruderman Family Foundation To learn more about the podcast, visit https://allaboutchangepodcast.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi, it's Jay. We've been working hard on All About Change, and now I'd really like to hear from you. Please rate and review All About Change on Apple Podcasts, and you'll have a chance to win an Apple Watch. In order to be considered, rate and review All About Change on Apple Podcasts, and then email a screenshot of your review to all about change at rudermanfoundation.org all before September 1st. That's all about change at rudermanfoundation.org. We will be randomly picking three lucky winners for Apple Watches. Thank you so much for listening and let's keep hope alive. The more we deal with our emotions and our traumas, whether big or small, the better chances we'll give ourselves of having this relationship with life and with others, and that's liberation.
Starting point is 00:00:59 Interacting with the natural world was foundational to Sophie Trudeau's mental health and sense of self. I kind of had this intimate relationship with nature. I felt safe with her. I felt listened to. I felt at ease in silence, which today is almost impossible with the chaotic lifestyles and very noisy lives that we lead when we pay attention to the noise more than the music. Today, a childhood and a life free of technological distractions is simply not possible. And Sophie sees these distractions greatly impact our relationships to others and ourselves. We're taught that slowing down is a sort of failure. We are impairing our brains the development of our race
Starting point is 00:01:46 We are impairing our relationships and therefore we are impairing our own capacity to understand ourselves better This is something that she addresses in her new book closer together Which aims to inspire us to see that there are more things that bring us together than separate us We need good people with a good heart, good values, and who believe in human goodness and who want the best for others without dividing or polarizing or hating. I think that is the core and the essential qualities of evolution and of peace. Sophie Gragar Trudeau, thank you so much for being my guest on All About Change. I'm really excited about this conversation.
Starting point is 00:02:24 So am I, and change is everything. A fixed mindset is a dangerous one. So I just love that title. It's a good way to start. Oh, thank you. Thank you. So Sophie, you've talked about our brain is a 200,000 year old brain. But it's impacted by our earliest childhood experiences. Can you talk a little bit about that? Talk about maybe growing up in a small town in Quebec and how your childhood you think affected your mental health?
Starting point is 00:02:53 This is such a fascinating topic because now I think we're understanding more and more how, you know, because our brains from a structure perspective are like a big hard, you know, hard disk, like a computer hard disk. And the structure hasn't changed in 200,000 years, but the programming has. And that programming on the hard drive is really what, how we were taken care of, how your parent or your caregiver, whether it was a mom or a dad, an uncle or a grandmother,
Starting point is 00:03:24 held you, looked at you, the amount of time they looked at you for, for example, when they fed you, when they played with you, the way they validated your reality and your sense of self. And that's something called epistemic trust. And it simply means that the person who took care of you from zero or three years old, did that person give you constant care, support, validation? And did they, for example, when you were sad or when you were angry, did they suit your nervous system by holding you, by touching you, by reassuring you until your whole nervous system calmed down?
Starting point is 00:04:01 Or were there six siblings in the background, you know, grabbing their attention and then they had to turn their head away and they had to go on to something else and say, okay, you'll be fine, my love. The one thing we have to understand here, Jay, is that trauma is not just something really bad that happened to you. And unfortunately, this is true for a lot of people, but it's also something that did not take place from an emotional perspective that should have taken place. So we all have in some way or another trauma in our brains and therefore in how we carry the zero to three childhood bond of attachment that we call into all of our adults relationships. Because if you think that your four year old is still not active, the way you react to conflict or criticism or in your own relationships, read closer together
Starting point is 00:04:48 because you'll be able to learn more in a very accessible way about science and how we're wired from early childhood and that wiring is carried throughout our whole lifetime. So most of us don't remember our early childhood. And I get what you're saying, it's vitally important. And you talk about that you were able to get in touch with little Sophie and love her. How did that happen? How were you able to connect with yourself as a very young girl? So I think I did part of that work
Starting point is 00:05:19 naturally because I grew up in a small town called Saint-Adèle in Quebec. And my parents, I'm an only child and my parents really let me play out in nature and they would spend time with me in nature as well. But I guess I developed a kind of trust in something greater than what my eye could see as a child. But because I was allowed to play outside by myself and to really form a sense of independence, I kind of had this intimate relationship with nature. I felt safe with her. I felt listened to. I felt at ease in silence, which today is almost impossible with the chaotic lifestyles
Starting point is 00:05:57 and very noisy lives that we lead when we pay attention to the noise more than the music. Right? So, yeah, I think early I caught on to a spiritual, it's not religious, to a spiritual component of life, to something that is greater than what the human eye can see that I trusted. And I think that helped me on my path later when I had my own path of suffering like every other human being does. RG You know, you talk about the way that you grew up in being in nature and without the distractions that we have today. And now you have your own children and I have my own children. And I've heard you talk about cell phones and electronics and the impact it has on our kids and us. You also quote Esther Perel and she said,
Starting point is 00:06:47 the quality of our relationships determines the quality of our lives. And what are relationships like these days and what is our mental health like these days when our interface and our children's interface is mainly through the telephone? This gives me chills because, well, you must have heard of all the work that's been coming out now and the research on the impact of social media and screens and, you know, not a lot of time in nature unless you're in connection on the development of our brains, but also on the quality of our relationships. So I guess the biggest drug, the numbing drug that is free-flowing these days is lust,
Starting point is 00:07:30 distraction, and rage. And when you look at movements of populations or groups that ignite that fear, ignite those places where we are threatened by the difference of others, I think if we add to that or maybe include that and better understand it, it really stems from like hate, for example, and I talk about this in closer together, hate stems from a deep need for human connection that never took place. This does not excuse abusive behavior or condemnable behavior or atrocities being committed throughout the planet, not at all. But it does better explain how the human brain is aware of its own conscious and unconscious patterns or not.
Starting point is 00:08:13 But when we live in a society where, yes, lust, rage, and destruction are the drugs of choice, and where we are not taught to reset, we are not taught that we are worthy of rest. We are not, we're taught that slowing down is a sort of failure. You're not the ultra performer. You're not the ultra competitor. We are impairing our brains, the development of our brains. We are impairing our relationships and therefore we are impairing our own capacity to understand ourselves better. So what's happening right now in the child's developmental brain is that when they're always on screens
Starting point is 00:08:51 and there's less human connection and less time spent in nature, when they take low risk, low costs, risk, let's say, and experiences in childhood, fall off your bike, get back on, fall off the branch of the tree, get back, and you'll know and experiences in childhood, like fall off your bike, get back on, fall off the branch of the tree, get back, and you'll know you'll be fine, right? You're taking those low risks, low costs that tell you that you're resilient.
Starting point is 00:09:14 You can go through anything. So when that is being impaired and that's not being pushed in our own children, what happens when they get to the teenage years and the adult years when it's high risk, high cost life, because it's real life. It's not child-rearing anymore. And then, you know, criticism and big emotion and failure is felt like these waves that we can't control when in fact human emotions are not dangerous. Fear is not dangerous. Human emotions are not dangerous. Fear is not dangerous. Panic and lack of awareness that can be dangerous.
Starting point is 00:09:49 And suffering in silence, obviously. So what about what our kids, and what we are getting bombarded with all the time, which is, and you, more than most people in the world, and your family have been barred with hate. There's so much hate out there, so much divisiveness. How do you deal with that? How do you, for your own mental health, for your family's mental health, I mean they've been subjected to some really, you know,
Starting point is 00:10:15 terrible attacks and and and how do you deal with that? So there's a couple of things here. First of all, I am very aware that politics is not being played the same way that it was five, 10, 15, 20 years ago, or more for that matter. But still, it changed a lot in the past, I would say, six, seven, eight years. And yes, there's a lot of bullying online, intimidation, a lot of female MPs are being threatened. It's a very toxic environment in which to grow daily. And this we have to discuss because there is a mental health crisis in that industry as well. And also, the other thing that with time I've studied as a mental health advocate, because I'm just an eternal student of life and I just want to deepen my knowledge of human behavior, what I've noticed are two things. First of all, and the experts are telling I just want to deepen my knowledge of human behavior.
Starting point is 00:11:05 What I've noticed are two things. First of all, and the experts are telling us this and I really went deeper into it and closer together in my book, is that hate stems from a deep need for human connection that didn't happen. It's very often the same minority of people who are themselves in a very insecure mode, who are still threatened by the difference of others, and who need to blame or shame or bully in order to lift themselves. And that's a that's a obviously not the right way to do it. But sometimes when people
Starting point is 00:11:35 feel helpless and powerless, they will go there. And when they have very low self awareness and capacity for self regulation, fear can take over and then panic and take over and then you have to survive. So you have to blame because it's almost impossible for you to continue on with your day because you're constantly in your alert mode, in your sympathetic nervous system, like bells are ringing like there's a saber-toothed tiger that's going to attack you every minute of the day.
Starting point is 00:12:00 So it's understandable from a psychological, neurobiological point of view. Is it acceptable? No. Is it real? It's not that person. It's very sad. It breaks my heart because it shows a very low level of emotional awareness and emotional leadership. And I think that our society, our peace in our democracies, our institutions, our communities and our schools depends on our capacity for self-awareness, self-regulation and emotional leadership. So, are you able as a woman who's a leader, and you mentioned other ministers, women in positions of power who are attacked in very personal ways on their appearance, are you able to say, this isn't about me,
Starting point is 00:12:47 this is hurtful, but this isn't about me? Absolutely. We can all take criticism to become better at our work, become better at our relationships, become better with our friends and life in general. But the level of accusations of hatred and of blame lacks serious common sense, and it lacks serious self-awareness.
Starting point is 00:13:14 So I think we have to look at the root causes of that, and that's a mental health crisis. We pathologize a lot of mental health things. Mental health is not just the absence of mental illness. And by the way, I think that the people who are insecure and threatened and bullying and intimidating, they're not in a secure place. And therefore they are threatened by the difference of others.
Starting point is 00:13:37 Because I'll always remember a great psychologist, 40 years of experience or so, telling me in the book, her name is Rosemary Shahe, saying, Sophie, the most unhappy human beings I've ever met in my life are the ones who cannot trust in others. So think about the movements right now that are happening on planet earth. A lot of people have become distrustful of institutions, of people, of governments. And this is dangerous, not to say that there's not bad people everywhere. There are bad people that, you know, like that the bad apple that makes the whole group of apples look really bad. And that's really unfortunate because it's not the case.
Starting point is 00:14:13 And Jay, what I can tell you is that 10 years on the copolitical path, what I've noticed is that most humans and most people who are public servants are amazing human beings who are sacrificing their family life daily, yearly for, for years, you know, in front of them in order to serve their citizens. So the fact that we are kind of, you know, painting a picture that is not the actual picture of what real service is about, I think that's dangerous because who's going to want to do it in this toxic environment? We need good people with good, you know, good heart, good values, and who believe in human goodness and who want the best for others without dividing or polarizing or hating. I think that is the core and the essential qualities of evolution and of peace.
Starting point is 00:15:05 We're talking about the state of the world when we talk about mental health. That's not just a call us here. You know, Sophie, you've been very transparent about your own mental health, and you've talked publicly years ago about struggling with bulimia as a teen and into your 20s. Can you talk about that, realizing when that was an issue
Starting point is 00:15:27 and how did you take the steps to get the help that you needed? You know, when you asked me that, I still feel the sadness of what it means to be lonely, of what it means to suffer in silence and to be ashamed or feel guilty, feeling never good enough, feeling why am I suffering from this? I'm such a loser. Why can't I stop this now? Well, one, because it's probably because you haven't examined your trauma completely.
Starting point is 00:15:58 Two, because an addiction always stems from a lack of connection that you needed and that you never that you didn't get. Three, we're all one trauma away from each other. It takes one traumatic life event to change your brain, to change your mind, to change the way you interact with yourself and with other people or a series of traumas that are just there chronically that you don't really notice. And at some point your body's like, I can't do this anymore. And by the way, when your body is in your sympathetic mode, your fight, fight freeze for too long.
Starting point is 00:16:31 What it does is that you can become chronically sick, physically or mentally, but also it can go into what we call vagal dorsal mode, which means it's kind of like the spawn. It's everything shuts down, which is depression, low energy, darkness, slow feeling you can't cope with anything, no way you can get out of bed. That's when all other systems in your brain have been tried and in your nervous system and they didn't feel safe enough and you fall there. So when we understand this, we understand better that in a fast-paced, stressful, competitive success about recognition instead of contribution, not sleeping well enough, and that whole wheel of elements affecting our sleep, because insomnia and sleep disturbances are an epidemic in themselves, we understand how our stress mode, who's actually there to protect us, right? Because positive stress is important, it leads us to action.
Starting point is 00:17:33 Stress can tell us that there's a danger passing in front of you on the street, and you stop to protect yourself. And stress can be good. But when we overuse that system chronically, then we can really fall. And that's when the system shuts down. But you were able to reach out, you were able to ask for help. And I want before you go, I would just want to say, it's very personal to me. I mean, I have a son who has ADHD, he needs help, we're trying to get him the help that he needs, but he's very resistant to getting help. So on a personal level, I'm very curious, how do you make that first step
Starting point is 00:18:12 happen to someone that, you know, with someone that you love or for yourself? So first of all, thank you for your vulnerability. I think this is very useful. I think we need to talk more about our own vulnerabilities because people are probably going, yes, me too. Yeah, my son, oh yes, my cousin or whatever, right? It's a universal story that we're sharing here. And it's hard. It's hard as parents to be able to go towards our child and discuss this.
Starting point is 00:18:39 But a couple of things. First of all is after having suffered for so many years from bulimia myself and having suffered in silence, the moment I asked for help, now that I look back, it was a tiny leap that looked enormous, monstrous to me to be able to say, I'm hurting, I need help. And the moment I did that, my whole life changed. It didn't change in enrollment, but it gave a new direction to my inner life and to my life out in the world.
Starting point is 00:19:11 So I would say that don't be afraid of the awkward conversations. Don't be afraid if sometimes it's upsetting. It's okay, it's okay. Let's not hold back because we are afraid to upset each other. Being upset is part of life. So I would say that I would say as well if as a parent you need support from a friend of the family or somebody that you know your child trusts, then you could bring that voice as well. So first of all, it's not be a shame of it. Second of all, let's understand that it's a reaction to the way we live. And it's not just, oh, you know, it's a you inherited this and this is how it's going to
Starting point is 00:19:48 be. Okay. And I think that it is not as difficult to adapt with that to life with more awareness and more calm. Schools and communities are more and more inclined and open to, you know, giving support to teens and to children who are struggling. And finally, I think that it can be a gift. It can be a gift. So I think that the more we read on these conditions and the more we actually know more about the source root causes of these different learning differences and neurodiversity, we understand that in there there is a way of perceiving the
Starting point is 00:20:30 world, a way of thinking that can actually be quite useful to solve problems, to think outside the box and to actually have more discernment and realization of the actual society that we live in and the culture and the values that are being shared that can be quite unhealthy. I think it's important for a child to realize that as well that you are reacting, my love, to something that is not healthy for you. And what we bring our attention to, we become. We become that.
Starting point is 00:21:00 So no surprise. Look at how we live. It can be explained. But now we have to take it seriously and to think of new ways to adapt to knowledge and learning. Because as you know, I'm sure that maybe some of your kids are already doing their homework with ChatGTP. Right. Right. It's a different world. It is. I want to ask you, in 2006, you came out publicly and talked about your struggles with bulimia. And I know that you've also talked about,
Starting point is 00:21:28 well, is this going to affect my career? Are people going to offer me contracts? What made you come out at that time and talk about it? So a friend of mine who I studied with at college when I was about, I don't know, 16, for some reason, I didn't talk a lot about my eating disorder to other people, but she knew. And she came to me years later when we were at CJEP,
Starting point is 00:21:51 which is kind of like a pre-university for Americans. And she said, listen, Soph, I'm starting a foundation. She had issues as well. She said, I wanna help people. There were too many people suffering from eating disorders. Nobody talks about this. We have to do said, I want to help people. There were too many people suffering from eating disorders. Nobody talks about this. We have to do something.
Starting point is 00:22:07 I'm starting this foundation. Do you want to get involved? I'm like, absolutely. And then she said, but you understand that if we do a press conference and you get involved, I was a newcomer, right? In the TV and radio industry. So it could have been disastrous. People could have gone just, oh my God, that's the girl who
Starting point is 00:22:23 vomits and boom, you know, stigma taboo, absolutely no education or comprehension of what it is. So I said yes. And I said, okay. And then I had to think about how am I going to share this? Like, this is insane. How are people going to react? And I think that the same voice that I had access to, when I was a little girl surrounded by adults who internalized all of her parents tensions and who was in nature a lot and who could go in to listen a little bit deeper at some point I felt so it's the right thing to do. Ess it. Go for it. Do the right thing and the rest will come into place and I think that's been my mantra for many, many years.
Starting point is 00:23:05 Sometimes it's clear to me, sometimes it's not at all. And I just, I mess it up and I don't have it figured out. But the more I try it, the more I see that it comes from a place of integrity, of congruence and of connection and of honesty. And human beings were only thirsty for that. Your transparency is very apparent and it's very refreshing because what you're talking about everyone is dealing with,
Starting point is 00:23:34 either themselves or in their family, or someone has a connection to mental health. So you wrote, Closer Together, Knowing Ourselves, Loving Each Other. Why at this time? Like what prompted each other. Why at this time? Like what prompted you to write it at this time? You're gonna laugh, but my answer lies in a quote that I have heard from Michael J. Fox.
Starting point is 00:23:54 Are you ready? Sure. Okay. We are only as sick as our secrets. Powerful. Okay, so if you're listening right now, just think about this in your own life. You might react not so well to it at first.
Starting point is 00:24:08 It's fine. I was also like, what, what does he mean? The secrets that we keep from ourselves, from our own traumatic experiences, our own lack of self-knowledge, the secrets that we keep from our friends, our lovers, our parents, are coming from an incapacity to really express our true desires and emotional needs. So if we work on our capacity to dig deeper to know what we truly need and how to express it without attacking, without criticizing or dramatizing,
Starting point is 00:24:41 the maturity that stems from all of this could serve us to, I would say, not save relationships because we have to be very careful because we've been brought up in a system where, you know, success is marriage, divorce is failure, but really life happens in between and then we give all this drama to the kids and the parents don't get along and that is heartbreaking. And it's not emotionally mature and it's not relationally mature because it's not the truth, right? We need more models of relationships that evolve through life and Esther Perel again can be quoted here because she told me last time I saw her, she said, longevity is not the direct sign of a successful relationship. But we've been taught that and and kids have been taught that.
Starting point is 00:25:27 Therefore, when parents restructure a relationship or change a love, love changes through time. It doesn't have to stay the same. And our feeling of, and our fear of being rejected, of growing old alone, of, you know, being non-validated and being left by the tribe really triggers us in ways that is actually it's in our primitive brain. It's normal. We don't want to be left alone. We don't want to be rejected by the tribe because that means death. So we're competing with a primal nervous system in brain that tells us, be careful of the cues of danger out there and seek comfort. What does this remind you of?
Starting point is 00:26:14 It's kind of like an addiction process, right? Don't let the negative come to you because it hurts too much, so numb it and seek comfort, incentive reward kind of thing, okay? It's a big generalization, but you'll understand where I'm going with this is that if we don't learn to sit with the pain without feeling overwhelmed by it, we're not training our brains, our bodies, our minds and our whole system to face a diversity in conflict in our everyday life with less drama. So here's the thing, stress is a dysfunctional relationship with the present moment.
Starting point is 00:26:52 Stress is a dysfunctional relationship with the present moment because we're constantly projecting, constantly planning, constantly taking ourselves out of the present moment. But love, what is love to you? You tell me, Jay, what is love to you? You tell me, Jay, what is love to you? Acceptance, comfort, belonging. Acceptance, comfort, belonging. Can that happen if presence is not there? No. So, again, I have chills because I think that as we talk about this man to woman, you know,
Starting point is 00:27:26 we've never really, we've never met, there's a home between us right there. There's a home. That home is in your heart and it's in my heart. That's where we meet because that's what we need. And it makes us non-strangers on the path. So in this world where we divide, where we want to conquer, to succeed and to possess, whether it's in love or in business, we are making ourselves sick and we are dramatizing our human existence. That's taking away our capacity to examine our brains, our minds and our hearts.
Starting point is 00:28:00 Yeah, I'm fascinated by something that you've talked about, that there are generational cycles to emotional health. And why do you think it's important for ourselves to try to break those cycles, and not only for ourselves, but for people that will come after us? Right. The people who came after us maybe in our own lifetime and sometimes that's apparent and that leaves scars, deep scars. In my book Closer Together, I talk with one great psychologist named Terry Real who was abused as a child by a very tall father. And when he's in conflict with his wife, she says sometimes it's that four-year-old child or seven-year-old child that's triggered, feeling that there's a six, you know, six foot tall man towering over me. He was going to hurt me.
Starting point is 00:28:49 My wife doesn't want to hurt me, but it triggers that alarm system in my nervous system, in my brain. And we all have this in some ways or another, it doesn't have to do with, with family abuse, obviously. And I hope not, but it means that it takes one person from one generation to wake up. And I could have put in a little swear word in between because sometimes it's not as difficult as we think.
Starting point is 00:29:15 It's possible. We have the capacity to wake up and say, enough. Enough is enough of people suffering like this. We don't have to continue on this path. But in order to do that, you have to accept what you went through, and you have to understand that hurt people hurt people, and that you have the power to be able to stop it.
Starting point is 00:29:37 So I think the hopeful message here, the most positive message that we can share today is that in that home that separates you and I right now in this interview where we want to be validated, where we want to feel compassion from other people and we want to be loved and we want each other's presence, it's possible to offer this to yourself and to offer it to every relationship that you'll sustain in your lifetime. And if you're a leader somewhere, if you're an influencer somewhere, whether it's your own household, as a teacher, as a, you know, a leader or corporate
Starting point is 00:30:10 leader or whatever, wherever you are in your life, you have the capacity to change your own environment. That's how it works. Right. You know, what I love about your book is that it's so open and there's so much stigma surrounding the issue of mental health and people are afraid to talk about it. What is your advice in terms of like how we should talk about our experiences and traumas? Always remember that once you tell your story, you will hear someone along the path say same, similar, my mom, my dad, my family member, my friend, my friend's cousin. It's everywhere.
Starting point is 00:30:52 Our stories are universal. Our need for connection is universal. And our need to comprehend our own suffering is universal as well. And it brings us closer together. And that's no pun intended because that's why I chose the title to this book. And that's why I daydream the cover where we're all holding each other around the book. Because there's no way that we can face the crises that are facing us as humanity. And whether it's in our homes or in the streets, without having more awareness of how we work and how we react to life. So the message is quite hopeful in a very chaotic world.
Starting point is 00:31:28 Sometimes we can feel overwhelmed by, yeah, okay, fine, all this is possible, but there's a sense of urgency. There's a mental health emergency on this planet. But if we stop, if we reset as much as we can, Sometimes it's five minutes between two leadings. Instead of trying to resolve those 10 emails, slowing down in our nervous system, there is a way. There really is a way. And presence in the way is the way. Love is the way. Compassion is the way. And it doesn't come from being a monk, which is great, or from being the perfect human, and for figuring it all out. That's not what we're talking about here. But it's the willingness to start and begin again, and again, and again.
Starting point is 00:32:16 Sophie, I wanted, first of all, to thank you for your time. I wanna thank you for writing this book. Closer Together, Knowing Ourselves, Loving Each Other. I want everyone who's listening here to go out and buy a copy because it's a phenomenal book and not only do you talk about your own experiences, but you bring in the Expertise that is needed to really understand mental health. It's so needed in our society I'm so happy that you wrote this book and I'm proud that you were my guest and all about change So thank you so much for being here.
Starting point is 00:32:45 Why are you bringing tears to my eyes? Because if I can be honest, when I wrote it, I put my whole heart and soul into it. And I was thinking at some point, who's going to read this? Are they even ready? Are you going to think I'm right? And in doubt, I think we choose to trust. And that's the big lesson here. So thank you for shining light on it. And thank you for for having an open heart and an open mind to this and for receiving it this way. I really appreciate it. Thank you. It was a pleasure meeting you. Same here. Thank you. Choosing trust is a powerful message that I took from my conversation with Sophie. And to earn that trust, one shouldn't be afraid of change. It's never
Starting point is 00:33:25 too late to change. That's it for today's episode. Join us two weeks from today for my talk with Academy Award-winning actress and education advocate Octavia Spencer. Today's episode was produced by Rebecca Shasson with story editing by Yochai Meytal and Mijan Zulu. To check out more episodes or to learn more about the show, you can visit our website allaboutchangepodcast.com. If you like our show, spread the word, tell a friend or family member, or leave us a review on your favorite podcasting app.
Starting point is 00:34:01 We'd really appreciate it. All About Change is produced by the Ruderman Family Foundation in partnership with PodPeople. That's all for now. I'm Jay Ruderman and we'll see you next time on All About Change.

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