Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Amanda Uhle (on hoarding)

Episode Date: August 27, 2025

Amanda Uhle (Destroy This House, McSweeney’s) is a journalist, publisher, and author. Amanda joins the Armchair Expert to discuss the east meets west hodgepodge decor cultivated by her ecce...ntric parents, her job as a child to not make her mother’s hoarding a problem, and her dad’s increasing involvement with a motivational tape MLM. Amanda and Dax talk about navigating the subculture of being a pastor’s kid, her mom obsession with death taking shape in a vocation as a hospice nurse, and her father’s pulpit mental breakdown and subsequent stroke. Amanda explains investigating her mysterious parents because she didn’t know what to make of them after their death, how we really have no idea what’s going on in people’s homes, and finding herself totally at peace with who her parents were.Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Watch new content on YouTube or listen to Armchair Expert early and ad-free by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/armchair-expert-with-dax-shepard/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Wondry Plus subscribers can listen to Armchair Expert early and ad free right now. Join Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or on Apple Podcasts. Or you can listen for free wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Expert, Experts on Expert. Today we have Amanda Yulean. Yes. Who's a journalist and a nonfiction writer. She is the executive director and publisher of McSweeney's.
Starting point is 00:00:25 She's been publishing all kinds of very reputable public. Fun stuff. She's a successful writer. Yes. But she has an incredible memoir called Destroy This House. For people who say it a different, some say correct way, memoir. Great. That's what I think I said, but clearly I didn't or you want to be correct.
Starting point is 00:00:46 But her story is an incredible one. Her mother was a hoarder, and her father was this incredibly charismatic guy who had fortunes won in law. and it's a riveting tale of dysfunction. Yeah. And it's wild. It's a wild ride. And we were really interested in the whole thing, but the hoarding is really... We're pretty horny for hoarding.
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Starting point is 00:02:06 wherever you get your podcasts. He's an object for. work with Dave, and I heard yesterday that you're a fan of what is the what. I don't know how I didn't know that. I know Dave Eggers, and we got this really cool magazine. See the lunchbox? It's a magazine. I brought you a copy of a McSweeney's issue. You know what McSweeney's is? So I know McSweeney's, but I don't, right? So I'm like, oh, I know McSweeney's. You hear McSweeney's. Do you know McSweeney? I didn't, but Amanda. But I know it, and then I was reading about it. And you and Dave co-founded that? Dave is the founder. Oh, he's the founder. He started it in 98. I started
Starting point is 00:02:56 working with Dave 20 years ago. I want to get to that chronologically speaking. But look how cool that is. Wait, I need to find out. Did you bring this? I brought it, and I brought you author baseball cards, too. Oh, my goodness. You can open it.
Starting point is 00:03:08 The 74th issue of McSweeney's, because you guys do a quarterly, it has a fun name, quarterly. Timothy McSweeney's Quarterly Concern. I love that. It's a journal. It's a journal, so everyone is different. I think about a year ago we published this one, our 74th. Oh, my gosh. Inside, there's some literature, right?
Starting point is 00:03:28 There's new fiction in a paperback, but we did author cards. And who designed this clever? That's Art Spiegelman on that one. We're going to learn a lot today. I know. Let's talk. Please remove this cardboard spacer. No, I don't do it on told.
Starting point is 00:03:43 Oh, my gosh. Please get rid of it. If you can. Ooh. Author trading cards. So cute. We got some more, too, over there. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:52 So we published this last year, and people loved the cards so much. that we started just printing more. So we can collect them all. Ah, I love collecting. Yeah. Have you done Tobias Wolf? Does he have a card? I love Tobias Wolf's books.
Starting point is 00:04:05 But thank you for reminding me that he does not have a card. Okay. That's on my list. And then the other one, you just got me. Raymond Carver. She got me an original. Gosh, I love Raymond Carver too. Signed original press, Raymond Carver.
Starting point is 00:04:19 Does he have a Carver? I'm so sorry. We have missed both. I'm going to assume for obvious reasons, Bukowski doesn't have a car. Don't have Vakaski either yet. I'm so sorry. No, I want to guess.
Starting point is 00:04:30 But wait, I don't necessarily have all of them memorized. So you will catch me at some point? I want to go through a few, can I? Yes. John Brandon, handsome, tall, literate. John is one of our favorites. We've published every one of his novels. I think we've published seven of John's books.
Starting point is 00:04:47 Oh, really? He's prolific. He's prolific and the greatest. What does it say about him? So author stats. Oh. How many pages they've published? This is so cool.
Starting point is 00:04:57 I love this idea. I want to steal it for something. Well, yeah, like we could do this. Miranda July. You love Miranda. Has she been in? No, we almost had her before all fours, but then it didn't work out. And then she got very busy.
Starting point is 00:05:12 She's a busy person. Yeah. So we published one of her books, possibly her first book at McSweeney's. We published like 10 books a year. We do this magazine and we have two other magazines. And then we have a humor site. Nice. So a lot of people know us.
Starting point is 00:05:25 that way through the humor site right yeah yeah so cool do you think that you guys could publish an armchair deck and it's all of our guests oh yes we're coming up on a thousand you're just kind of delegating logistical because you would have to like give her all the guests details well i'm going to let her find the details oh god you just let us do all the work yeah oh wow you guys do such a good job why why would i try to copy that well this is adorable it really is so cute you like I think you can throw away the spacer as well. You can keep it in there or whatever you want to do. It's a good exercise for me to follow directions, which I'm bad at.
Starting point is 00:06:03 We'll put it up here and we'll display it. I'm wondering if throughout this interview I'll remind you of your father at all. If you will remind me of my father? He was tall, right? He's very tall. He played college sports. He played football for the Florida Gators. Oh.
Starting point is 00:06:17 And in high school in Miami, he did basketball and football. He was a big athlete. He was charismatic. Very much. as are you. Obsessed with the dollar. As am I. Money is a big part of the book.
Starting point is 00:06:30 Yeah. Yeah, very big part of the book. You know, I couldn't help but think, yeah, if I don't choose this, I'm probably just also this figure that's wandering around Michigan with too big of a personality. Could have easily gone in this direction, I feel like. Yeah. In some ways, my dad could easily have gotten that big break and been someone else. He was trying things.
Starting point is 00:06:49 We're going to talk about your book, Destroy This House. Guess the headline description of your book that I read that got me in. interested in having you on was that your mother was a hoarder. And I think I have great interest in how that presents itself. How does it evolve? What is it like to live with it? What's the psychology behind it? That's all very interesting to me. Okay, your book starts with describe mom and dad when you're born. They've been together a few years when you're born, maybe? They were together a few years. They got together, I think, in 75 and I was born in 78. We're about the same age. Yeah, I'm three years older than you. So mom and dad have been together for three years.
Starting point is 00:07:23 What do mom and dad want to do at that point? That's such a great question I've never even asked myself. My mom really did want to have a family, but she had started out interested in fashion design, which itself was such an inspired and almost strange choice. She grew up in a very tiny town in rural Indiana, and in 1969 just decided fashion was her thing, applied and got into Pratt and Brooklyn.
Starting point is 00:07:46 And just like went to New York, kind of a badass thing to do. So she's really creative. By the time I was born, her interest in fashion and clothes was coming out, not as her designing and making her own things, but as her shopping kind of obsessively, accumulating, curating a collection. Having a lot of fabric that was one day going to be something. Gosh, I can so relate. It is relatable.
Starting point is 00:08:13 You're right. There's almost an angst that you're not a designer, and your next best thing is to appreciate it. Also just if you're shopping and you see something that you think is beautiful, I was at a store and they were these bandanas and they were so pretty. And I was like, I don't need this at all. I don't wear bandanas. You're not a bandana person. There's absolutely no reason for me to have this, but I have to check out with these two things in my hand. I have to have it. These are coming home with me. Yeah. And I did think what is going on that I absolutely have to have these things I know are useless to me. And then I didn't give them
Starting point is 00:08:49 to your kids, actually. Oh, okay. Because they're bandana girls. Okay. They are cowboys. So in that case. So I found a way. But it's a little rush, the shopping. It's like, oh, this is a thing. I can buy this and I can be different once I have it or once I buy it. So I think that that was going on with my mom.
Starting point is 00:09:06 But she was somehow an engineer at IBM? Oh, before then. Yes, she was. This is the most fascinating, I think, because she was quite a rare offering for a female IBM engineer? Only woman engineer in the state of Indiana. This is 1974-ish when she got this job. Didn't work out in fashion school in Brooklyn. So she came back to Indiana and got this job. And she was like, I don't want to be a secretary. I don't want to type. I want to fix typewriters. And she learned how to do it. And she was their person. There were a lot of men doing that job. People would stand around and watch her repair these things because it was such a novelty that this woman was
Starting point is 00:09:45 So mechanical. And she had a pager. I remember her describing this. And they would page her around Indianapolis, and she'd go to an office and fix their typewriters. Wow. She was doing so well that they moved everyone, right? IBM moved my mom with her job to West Virginia. I guess they needed more engineers, maybe more women engineers.
Starting point is 00:10:04 And at that point, mom was the breadwinner, obviously, because dad, he at that time was selling books door to door. He had at that time, and this is so wonderful because my book is published by Simon and Schuster. my dad sold Simon and Schuster paperbacks at gas stations. You know, like in the 70s, they had these spinning racks of books. Yes. My dad would go, and he was so good at talking to people.
Starting point is 00:10:24 He could sell you and me and everyone anything. And he kept doing that his whole life. But then you guys got to West Virginia, and this is no slight on West Virginians, those carousels at gas stations didn't really exist. Less so in West Virginia, fewer readers of fiction and novels. At least in 1970. Nine. So he was a football player before, you said. Yeah, he didn't finish college. So he did some football, did lots of things, dropped out of college. And at the time he was in Miami. He worked at a nightclub. He was booking bands. I haven't counted how many jobs my father had. My mom did too, but my dad had so many. I almost think there's a predictable pattern for people who are quite good at things really quickly. They never get great at anything. They don't master anything. But they get good enough to get the recognition of that. And then they get board release and they got to switch it up and go get some more recognition for some other thing.
Starting point is 00:11:18 He was never afraid to try things. So he would just jump in. And he was selling hotel rooms and then he was selling books. When he ended up in Indianapolis at first, he was totally homeless. When he and my mom met, he had nowhere to live. Everything he owned was in a Tom and Cannes shoebox. And they met at a party and he came home with his shoebox. And that was. Wow. Never left. He left one guy's couch to her. Whoa. Is your mom someone who, like, really wants to take care of people? Because that's a big thing to take in. A guy with a shoebox come live with, you know, that's a personality. Unless he's tall and gregarious and a blast. And it's literally not even until months later where you realize, oh, wow, he came over and never left.
Starting point is 00:12:00 And now he's still here. Yeah. I think it was more that too. Yeah. This guy's amazing. He's incredible. Wait, where was he living before? And where's the rest of his stuff? Maybe you're a little deep. Okay. Yeah, I think you're channeling my dad. I know it's here. Now, how does he get into janitorial supplies, liquid soap dispensers? Because he's also like an armchair inventor idea guy. Always inventing. Always starting new things. So they eventually moved.
Starting point is 00:12:28 They were in Philadelphia, which is where I was born. And then my dad got this job at Johnson Wax. And this is classic my parents' behavior. He gets the job in New Jersey. They start looking for houses. They don't like any houses near this town in New Jersey where the places. So they start looking further. and further and further out. And they go so far out, they're beyond New York City and they're into Long
Starting point is 00:12:47 Island. And so we buy a house that causes my dad to commute through New York City in the morning and then back out it in the evening. No one does that. No. It's almost like there's something wrong with this frontal lobe at that point. He's like, I like that. I want to sleep there and I want to work there. And I'm not going to do any of the math in between. I'm not going to let anything get in the way of that. And they wanted a bigger house. So I think that they were like, we don't like the houses right around here. And we don't want to live in an apartment. We want to live in house. So he got a job there at Johnson Wax. How does it evolve into his role in Sweden? Part of what he was doing there was selling to institutions selling soap and things. And he and
Starting point is 00:13:25 another partner, they invented some sort of valve for soap. So their whole thing was hand soap. This is the early 80s. And I don't know if you remember, I barely do. But sometimes you'd go into a public bathroom in the 80s and there'd be like a sliver of bar soap that everybody would have to share. The big tub of borax kind of powder, and then it had this really rudimentary little valve you would open and it would just dump powder on your hands. That was also in the mix. That's another old time thing. Yeah, yeah. My dad was part of thinking, there's a better way.
Starting point is 00:13:55 He invented this thing, and it was like, what if we had liquid soap? He wasn't the inventor of liquid soap by any means, but he was part of that. Like, let's make it work for people. Worked on this valve. He never wanted to have a job. He never wanted to work for somebody and be accountable like that. He wanted to do his own thing. So he found these Swedish janitorial people that were interested
Starting point is 00:14:13 and he sold them the valve and then he sold some people in Hong Kong the valve. In the 80s, we were doing well on the valve. Oh, yeah. Yeah, so they had kind of like overnight riches. There's no numbers in here. What do we think your dad was bringing in? I do have some numbers. Oh, you do?
Starting point is 00:14:31 And I don't have all the numbers. One of the things about the book is my dad was such an exaggerator always. What I wanted to do is pin it down. I wanted to figure out the facts. I could. So I found out my dad in 1986, he made $265,000. Wow. In 86. That's a lot of money in 1988. Yeah. Oh, that's like a couple million dollars a year. Yeah. That's wild. Major. And based on that, which was the good year. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think other people would say, well, this is an unusually great year. I'll suck some of this away so that we can
Starting point is 00:15:02 live differently and I can keep experimenting and doing wild things. Okay, so you guys move at that point to Indiana and get a mansion. Yes, in 1986. And so you were like eight? I was eight. Okay. You were eight. Thank you. I'm not very good a mass. So I'm glad of myself for that. Really? This is right after I turned eight. And were you like, yes. I'm in a mansion. I never thought to think that. We lost all of our friends when you're a kid. Those are the important things. It was kind of cool. I was like, we'll try it. When my brother was three and I was eight, so we just sort of went along with it. It fulfilled for my mom, this great thing where she loved shopping. And so you have to fill. The house was 6,800 square feet.
Starting point is 00:15:44 Six and a half bathrooms. She got to decorate the whole house. And then some. She was buying furniture in North Carolina a lot, paging through these catalogs, dog earring, the circling things. Then she'd be on the phone ordering. She was in it. We had $265,000 to spend. We didn't really. So the house was purchased, all this stuff in it was purchased. My dad then was working in Hong Kong a lot, and he just orders an insane amount of Hong Kong furniture in 1986, 87, and it's shipped. What would that cost to ship? Oh, my God. It's got across the Pacific, then across the whole country. Oh, no.
Starting point is 00:16:20 So this mansion house, and many of our houses after that, was this mix of Asian influence, black lacquer, gold trim. We had little cork dioramas of scenes from agrarian China. You know, we had that kind of stuff. Sure, sure, sure. And it's mixed with, like, the Midwest, geese with bows on their necks, kind of, like, country, 80s. Kind of east meets west agrarian. Oh, sort of. I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:16:47 That's so chaotic. It was chaotic. There's a lot of confusing things happening. And if I were you, I'm sure I would accredit some things erroneously. But does mom's shopping raise a flag at this point? Does it seem odd, or do you need to go to a lot of other people's houses to realize that? Like, where's your own awareness of this? I would say it seems uncomfortable.
Starting point is 00:17:07 It became a harder and harder place to live and just relax at home because there's stuff everywhere, even in this huge house. There's, like, grocery bags of food that were never unpacked, bags of clothes, tucked. You're there and everywhere. It seemed odder and odder the more I went to other people's houses. Yeah. And when I noticed that we never had people in our house. They were aware enough to know.
Starting point is 00:17:33 Like, don't come over. It was shameful to my parents. But we would never speak of it. It was that kind of shameful where it was like, we're not going to discuss this. Would you have a sides with dad ever? Did dad ever explicitly say, like, just let your mom do this. Don't give her any grief about it. If I expressed that discomfort that I was feeling as a little kid, he would be like, we love your mother.
Starting point is 00:17:56 We had to tolerate it. That was our job was to be loving and to not make it a problem. What's your explanation for that? In my mind, a lot of times couples enter into this tit for tap for vice almost. Like, I'm going to overlook this thing because I have my own thing that I'd appreciate you overlooking. Was it that arrangement? A little bit of that.
Starting point is 00:18:18 I think he was straying here and there. Okay. In different ways. And I don't want to say too much about that because I actually don't have too much proof of that. Yes. And, you know, he was getting us into trouble all the time with money and he would never pay a bill. So obviously, he was like, okay, I'm going to look.
Starting point is 00:18:33 the other way on all this craziness in the house. Yeah, I'm making our life financially chaotic. And then I'll do the chaos over here. And so they were just Bonnie and Clyde of the Midwest. They did their stuff together and they tolerated each other. Now, another unique part of your father's personal is he was also obsessed with Martin Luther and Protestantism and the Lutheran church. So during this whole period where he's making a ton of money and going to Hong Kong and Sweden, you get to go to Sweden twice as a kid. Went to Sweden twice as a little kid. It's a party. Like it's on. But it's a party, but it's like. Like, a lot.
Starting point is 00:19:05 So I had a fun childhood in a lot of ways. It was challenging. It was uncomfortable. There were problems that I recognized more and more as I grew up, but we had fun. We were indulged. Took some trips. It also makes you think of like what modern young people's bar is for a partner. This is the reality of what marriage looked like all through my childhood.
Starting point is 00:19:28 The parents were pretty fucked up in their own ways. We're like, yeah, let's be fucked up together. No one's really got to be perfect. That also feels kind of era-specific. Yeah. Okay, so when do things start to fall apart on the liquid soap? Why does that go awry? My dad was just optimistic.
Starting point is 00:19:45 He was optimistic about everything he did. And so his math, later in his life, I would see him do this math. He'd literally get an envelope back of the envelope. He'd write figures that had no basis in reality. Like, here's how we're going to do the mortgage. I think he just thought those valves, which he was at one point using for ice cream. He invented kind of like a flurry-like ice cream drink. Same technology, but you would put a little flavored syrup in your ice cream.
Starting point is 00:20:08 Oh, wow. He could build out that valve in a bunch of different things. He thought so, and he didn't. He's also getting ensnared with pyramid schemes and stuff, or does that come after? Once we moved to the mansion in rural Indiana, it was really clear really quickly that that money that he thought came in really great in 1986 wouldn't be continuing. He started trying things. And one of the things he tried was he basically got wrapped up in a multi-level marketing scheme. What was it called SM?
Starting point is 00:20:38 SMI, Success Motivation Institute, sort of Christian business people, cassette tapes to motivate you. Oh, yeah. Cassette tapes. And he invested thousands into that. He lost some money. I tried to figure out exactly how much I have an estimate. And you found out people in that time that were investing in SMI were losing $10,000 to $20,000 on average. Lots of money.
Starting point is 00:21:01 We just had an MLM expert on. So interesting. It is interesting. MLMs are known to dupe the people that are part of it. But I think my dad, who was selling them, he was so all in. Stars in his eyes, I remember him telling us, this is going to help people have better marriages. But that's why it's so horrible. Your dad was preyed upon.
Starting point is 00:21:21 My dad was preyed upon. And so were all the people that he was. Exactly. It's just just like cascading. Nobody wins on that one. Well, that's the complex nature of the MLMs is for many people, it'll love. have been the best time of their life, even though they lost money. Because it gave them community, and made these parties, and so it's complicated.
Starting point is 00:21:38 I remember going with him, I was probably 10, and he would rent out this hotel conference room in our little town, and he'd put a sign up. We're going to talk, motivation. It was fun for him, you know, and people would come, and they would listen to him because he was so charismatic. Right. But they didn't end up buying the cassette tape. So, yeah, it was tough.
Starting point is 00:21:59 Oh, no. So we just went broke, basically. We couldn't afford the house. And the house started just crumbling around us. This is a big kind of estate with huge lawn in the back and in the front. And we never were able to afford the mowing. My dad never mowed the lawn. There were things they did.
Starting point is 00:22:15 That wasn't his specialty. It wasn't his thing. So the grass is like up to my waist and the front door is crumbling off. I don't know how this happened. Big hole in it. With plywood over it. It's really funny to think of a mansion neighborhood, but there is a white trash family living in it. That's not mowing their grass.
Starting point is 00:22:31 And the people going like, how did this happen? What are these people doing? So we were those people. And it was so funny because our house looked like hell. I mean, it was so bad toward the end of this time. But my dad would always pick on me for like leaving my bike in the yard. And it's like, but wait. Yeah, the Homeowner Association was yelling at him about mowing the grass.
Starting point is 00:22:48 Yep. So another thing, he was a visionary in a sense. He was. He rented out this chunk of a strip mall that was built. This was his next big breakthrough. And he realized, I'm going to subdivide this into different desks. and professionals that don't want the overhead of an office space can come in here, we'll have a common reception.
Starting point is 00:23:06 It's like a we work. It was like we work, but it was 1988. And he did it, but he couldn't get anyone to come in and rent these desks. So he gave the lawn service guys free desk, so they'd mowed this five-foot-tall grass in back. It's a little horse trading. He was a trader. My dad's most famous barter, and this is going ahead in time,
Starting point is 00:23:25 but he bartered for my dental surgery when I was 18. Please. May I tell you about it? Yes, please, yeah. Actually, no, I don't want you to tell it because we've got to learn something great about him. We're doing chronology. Okay, okay. We'll do it that way. We'll get there because that's wonderful.
Starting point is 00:23:38 So when you go broke, you then move again. You move to Fort Wayne? There was a Lutheran seminary there. And so at this point, my dad is like, I'm going to just try what has always been in my heart, which is to be a pastor. At 46 or something, right? Yeah. So do you feel like things are normal or are you like this chaotic? Are you mad at them?
Starting point is 00:23:59 What are you in this? The best word for it is uncomfortable. Like, I just didn't know. Because when you're a kid, you actually think that the way your household operates is kind of standard. I knew that our house was messy. And we never used the word hoarding. Never in my mom's life. She died 10 years ago.
Starting point is 00:24:15 That word was never used. It was messy. But it was like, what else is weird about our house? I didn't really know. And what about friendships and bringing people to the house or having to make up excuses? Were you dealing with all that kind of stuff? Yeah, we just never had people over. It was clear that my parents didn't want anybody over.
Starting point is 00:24:32 So I would go to other people's houses. I mean, we had elaborate systems where, like, if I was getting, say, picked up for something at school, like another family was picking up, and nobody had a cell phone, of course. It's still in the 80s. I'd have to, like, go outside and wait. The door closed behind me because you couldn't risk somebody coming to the door and the door opening and other people seeing what it was like inside. It was too much.
Starting point is 00:24:54 You know, so I knew that. But did any of your friends say, like, can I come over and you had to, like, lie? Yeah. I would say, well, let's do it at your house or let's do something else. It would have been so mortifying to me. When I talk about the hoarding, there were things that were like paper bags of canned goods, things like that. It's a little relatable. Didn't have time to put the groceries away. But it was so much and like our bathrooms had shampoo bottles. And you can imagine a normal house might have a few extra in the closet. We would have 48 bottles of shampoo and they'd be on the floor. It's embarrassing. It just takes over every space. It took over. And then there was like the gross aspect, which is that food was part of the thing that my mom was hoarding. And so it wasn't just canned goods. She would buy chicken and cottage cheese and things like that and leave them out.
Starting point is 00:25:45 And so there was like stinky. It was tough, you know? Yeah, yeah. You couldn't bring people over. Yeah, no. When you're 12. What would I do? I guess I'd be like, I'm putting these in the fridge.
Starting point is 00:25:54 Well, there's no place to put anything. You're nothing going to be put away because every inch of that. the house has been already occupied. This is really stressful. Isn't it so stressful? It was stressful. It came out for me in this dream that I started having around the time I was eight-ish. Around the time we moved to this big mansion, but I had this dream where I would just destroy my whole house.
Starting point is 00:26:15 And that's where the title comes from. This dream just came back to me over and over, and I would have it five or six nights a week. I had it all planned out. There's another house that's fine. And my parents cannot be mad at me because I haven't touched this house, but then here. Here's this replica, and I could just dump everything out and throw stuff out the window. Seems very twisted now. Do you see anything that was correlated for your mother emotionally that led to this?
Starting point is 00:26:44 Like why she did it? Yeah, like there was a period, obviously. Maybe you were too young to remember, but was she doing it back in Long Island? It picked up over the years. It got worse and worse and worse. And I think that that's true of most people that struggle with hoarding. But I remember my dad saying that when he came. into her apartment with the shoebox.
Starting point is 00:27:00 It looked like maybe she'd been robbed, is what he said, because it was a big mess. She was always kind of messy. But she knew where everything was. Oh, yeah. And you could never, like, clean it up because she knew. She wouldn't want you to move it. It was moved.
Starting point is 00:27:14 Oh, no, you would never. So there's this weird illusion of control. Like, I know where everything is, even though no one else does. It's a mess, but I have control over it. Maybe there's a real control element to it. Of all the isms, it's the one. I can't really get there mentally.
Starting point is 00:27:31 With the hoarding. Yeah, I can with like every other ism almost. I'm an addict. I understand that. I can easily imagine being addicted to any number of things because I know what's like to be addicted. I have stolen up and a criminal. There's a lot of things I can comprehend, but that whole mindset I can't even find purchase. I feel like it's the same because it's self-destructive.
Starting point is 00:27:51 You know you shouldn't, right? When you're talking about this behaviors, right? You're not supposed to do that and you shouldn't, but you still do it. And I feel like my mom, she knew every time she went to Coles, bought a bunch of stuff, or Joanne Fabrics, Sir Kroger. I mean, all the places that she would go and just amass all this stuff we didn't need. We had nowhere to store. She definitely knew. Stay tuned for more armchair expert, if you dare.
Starting point is 00:28:20 I'm Saruti, one of the hosts of RedHounded, a multi-award-winning weekly true crime podcast. And we have just taken a big old. deep dive into the case everyone is talking about. Erin Patterson and the Mushroom Mass murders. On the 29th of July 23 in the small town of Leon Gatha in Australia, five people sat down for lunch. Within a week, three of them would be dead, and one of them would be in a coma for two months. Whilst the host, Erin Patterson, the world's most unlucky cook, or a cold-blooded killer? To find out, join us over two episodes as we analyse all the gritty details including what happened at that fateful lunch, the aftermath, the investigation, the trial,
Starting point is 00:29:02 and of course, all the lies. Only on Red-Handed. Listen to Red-Handed wherever you get your podcasts, or listen early and ad-free on Amazon Music or Wondry Plus. The town of Agda in France is famous for sun, sand, sea and sex. But lately, life on the coast has taken a strange turn. The town's mayor, a respected pillar. of the community has been arrested for corruption.
Starting point is 00:29:31 His wife claims he's been bewitched by a beautiful clairvoyant. Then there's a mysterious phone calls that local people have been getting. I am the Archangel Michael. The whole town has been thrown into chaos. As the mayor is unable to carry out his duties, I would like to address you all. Legal proceedings have been initiated. Join me, Anna Richardson and journalist Leo Sheik
Starting point is 00:29:56 for The Mystic and the Mayor as we investigate a story of power, corruption, and magic. Binge all episodes of The Mystic and the Mayor exclusively and ad free right now on Wondry Plus. Start your free trial in Apple Podcasts, Spotify or the Wondry app. Hi, I'm Monica Lewinsky. Welcome to reclaiming. I would define reclaiming as to take back what was yours. Something you possess is lost or stolen. And ultimately, you triumph in finding it again.
Starting point is 00:30:26 Riley Cyrus. Welcome to reclaiming. My 2013 is your 1998. I lost everything during that time in my personal life because of the choices I was making professionally. Chelsea Handler. Welcome to reclaiming. Chelsea Handler. Welcome to reclaiming. I did have a teacher who instilled in me that I was going to do something special. And she was like, you're going to have an impact. Sophia Bush. Welcome to reclaiming. You went all the way. You committed. And if it wasn't for you, you had the courage to tell the truth and get out. And I had to say that to women in my life. And I had to learn how to say it in the mirror to myself. This last decade for me has really been what I consider my own reclaiming. My own journey, my own reclaiming story is in the bones of this show. Please listen to reclaiming on the Wondry app or wherever you get your podcasts. It's your man, Nick Cannon, and I'm here to bring you my new podcast, Nick Cannon at night. I've heard y'all been needing some advice in the love department. So who better to help than yours truly?
Starting point is 00:31:23 Now, I'm serious. Every week, I'm bringing out some of my celebrity friends and the best experts in the business to answer your most intimate relationship questions. Having problems with your man, we got you. Catching feelings for your sneaky link? Let's make sure it's the real deal first. Ready to bring toys into the bedroom? Let's talk about it. Consider this a non-judgment zone to ask your questions when it comes to sex and modern dating in relationships, friendships, friendships, situations, and everything in between.
Starting point is 00:31:51 It's going to be sexy, freaky, messy, and you know what? you'll just have to watch this show. So don't be shy. Join the conversation and head over to YouTube to watch Nick Cannon at night or subscribe on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcast. Want to watch episodes early and ad-free?
Starting point is 00:32:07 Join Wondery Plus right now. Was she sad? Does she have like a sadness around her? What was her personality? I think that sadness was at the core of this. I think she felt bad about herself in some way. This was a way to not feel so bad. But she didn't act sad.
Starting point is 00:32:30 Okay. Interesting. So she too, around this Fort Wayne time, she decides she wants to become a nurse. She does. Reinventing themselves constantly. Yes. So all of it to me is kind of eccentric and a bit charming and a colorful childhood. When they start both leaving to go to night school and you're 10 and your brother's five and they're driving into the city at night.
Starting point is 00:32:53 they're gone for a long time. I start to think, well, no, they're kind of neglectful. Yeah. You know, like they're both so consumed with their own thing. Again, I'm looking from the outside, just making judgments, I guess. But it also seems like they had some weird fun dance where, like, they were both living their own lives. Yeah, they did their own thing.
Starting point is 00:33:13 Don't you think a little bit this was the era? Parents did not dote on their kids the way I feel like I'm doting on mine. It was very different. And it was like, you're kind of on your own. My mom used to take me, I wonder if you think this is neglectful, but when I was maybe 11, she would take me to the library during summer days just because I didn't have anything else. So she just dropped me off with like four quarters because vending machine. I could get something.
Starting point is 00:33:38 I'd be there for like seven, eight hours. Yeah, just kind of unimaginable for us, right? It doesn't seem like something I would do. Right. But I mean, it was the library. I mean, you know, it wasn't the worst thing. But I think it might have felt standard or felt okay then. Okay.
Starting point is 00:33:52 No, just quick on Fort Wayne. Did you ever go to Sturgis, Michigan? Yeah, my husband's from Coldwater. Oh, he is. Yeah. Oh, I know Coldwater well. You do. My grandparents owned a little roadside motel in Sturgis,
Starting point is 00:34:04 and I spent a lot of summers there, and then I detassel with corn in the summer. Oh, detasseling corn. That's a, I know about it. Yeah, I've never done it, but it was a big deal. All the places I lived. All the boys kind of had to do it, right? Yeah. There were only a couple gales on our picking crew, and they were tough gales.
Starting point is 00:34:20 I bet they were. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, that's tough work. It's really hard work. It's brutal. I know that area really well. So we lived in Fort Wayne, and then my husband was growing up in Coldwater. Yeah, we're Dan Severn's from the UFC fighter.
Starting point is 00:34:31 Oh, really? There's some few famous people from Coldwater. Also, the actor you're now obsessed with from girls. Oh, Adam Driver. I think Adam Driver is from Coldwater. Is that? Right. One of the two.
Starting point is 00:34:41 Yeah. Love Kalamazoo. All right, so you were in Fort Wayne for five years. Yes. Okay, now what's interesting, too, is I want you to tell me a lot about this. because this feels very unique, which is, even though he wasn't yet a pastor, he would call you guys pastor kids and pastor wife. And then the teachers would even call you PK.
Starting point is 00:35:03 It's a subculture. P.K. Tell me about PK. P.K. is pastor's kids. So I'm, I guess, 11 when we moved. And, you know, we had a whole childhood where we were just like the kid of an entrepreneur, a business person, or whatever my mom was. PK is like this group.
Starting point is 00:35:19 When your parent, most cases, in this case, my father is going into the clergy, you're different. In Fort Wayne, there were many P-Ks because there was a seminary. So there were lots of Lutheran pastors and training. Lots of them were kind of mid-life or had kids. Did the teachers give you like preferential treatment? I would say a little preferential treatment and a little higher expectation. It was like, oh, you're a P-K. How could you?
Starting point is 00:35:41 You wouldn't be doing that at recess as a P-K. It was a little judgment. It felt like I suddenly was different. I got this label like, oh, you're part of these people. You know, we wear the gold cross around our necks. And it wasn't that we were not Lutheran before because we were. But it was like suddenly we were a clergy family. Yeah, you were handed an identity.
Starting point is 00:36:02 Yeah. And, you know, when you're in middle school, that's a big thing to figure out. And again, not to judge your father too harshly. But to me, it also looks like, okay, so he wanted status as a rich guy. That's a way to get status in this country, get money. When that was taken, it was like, he kind of figured out enough. way to have status but without that requirement. I agree. He was doing that for sure. And I will say this thing about my dad, he fumbled a lot. Like he tried things. He didn't quite work out all through his
Starting point is 00:36:28 career. And when he hit on this, I think it was the most genuine and the most real thing in his whole life. He really did love it. And there's a way you can sort of tell the story about this is that my parents went bankrupt in the late 80s. And then my dad was like, got nothing else to do. I'm going to be a Lutheran pastor. They'll take me in. Like that's a story. I believe it. It's It's true. There's also a story that this was in his heart, his whole life, and it was the best thing for him. I don't think there was anything fake about that part of his life and career. Really.
Starting point is 00:37:00 He was good at it. Okay, so this now takes you up to Michigan. Yes. And do you know that the rest of Michigan that we called Taylor, Taylor-Tuckie? Of course. Okay, great. That was one of the first terms that I learned when we moved to Taylor-Tucky. Yes.
Starting point is 00:37:16 Monica looks like she doesn't know. What that is. And it's kind of mean to Kentucky because Kentucky's a nice place. Absolutely. And my whole family is from there. And I love Kentucky. But alas, we were young and we did call Taylor, Taylor-Tucky. Does that make sense to you, Monica?
Starting point is 00:37:30 No. If you're in Michigan, you're calling something Kentucky. You're shitting on it. Oh, okay. So this area was called Taylor? The little town. And it was part of a group of little towns called Down River. Got it.
Starting point is 00:37:42 So you arrived there and dad gets a post as a pastor at a church. You get church housing. Nothing my dad loved more than a free house. And he was in a standoff with the church because he said they owned it, so I'm not doing any repairs. So again, this place, the window was broken in the kitchen. And you had no money. No. We lived in that house with a broken kitchen window, big hole in it.
Starting point is 00:38:04 I used to say it's a hole the size of a slice of pizza, like that big of a hole for like years. And with the AC blasting, didn't care because he wasn't paying the electric bill, I presume. No, he was paying the electric bill. Oh, he was. Or sometimes he was. Sometimes he wasn't. They didn't connect things and consequences. The fact that these two in their 40s completely changed courses and your mom becomes an RN and
Starting point is 00:38:25 your dad becomes a pastor. She's been so many things, an engineer, a fashion designer, yeah. And so she starts working around the clock. And now this is interesting because it doesn't seem like it was this way before. This is when they completely split their finances. Right. So mom has her own bank account at a different bank than dad. Yes.
Starting point is 00:38:44 They've divvied up who's paying. for what? In their own chaotic way. The line is very interesting about who pays for what. Who is paying for what? Anything that was like a shopping thing, my mom did. Clothes, food. That was all my mom. But anything that was a bill, the electric bill or anything like that, the car insurance, my father was paying. And why did they decide to do this? Just because they were like fighting about money? I think it's because my mom got a job. Being a nurse is a fairly well-paid job, especially compared to the other jobs that they had had. And so I think my mom was kind of protective of her money and wanted to be able to spend her money.
Starting point is 00:39:20 And she was at this point making more than dad. Yeah. Oh, no. She told me the pin for her bank account. And I was never to tell anyone especially dad. That's a weird dynamic. Yeah, it is. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:31 You were making money you were working and dad was like borrowing money off you for pizza sometimes. Oh, he was always borrowing money. Because I worked at the coffee house. It was very 90s. I worked at Java Joe's and Wyandat. I was making money and I was saving it up because I wanted a car. I got a big Chevy Impala around that time.
Starting point is 00:39:47 And, you know, I had to pay for my gas. And I had to pay for all my shows I was going to at St. Andrews and wherever. So that was my money. But, yeah, my dad needed it sometimes. Last thing I want to flag about high school is that we share this in common. We both outwardly hated friends. Oh, my God. Friends, the show?
Starting point is 00:40:06 Yeah. And we had never. Both of you get out of here. And we had never seen it. Yeah. Yeah. It just wasn't for me. It was very clear in the night.
Starting point is 00:40:14 90s. It wasn't for me. I know of Monica's favorite show ever. It, like, defined my life. However, you watched it in reruns, right? No. By the time I caught up, it was probably, because it started in 94, so I would have been... Oh, it ran forever. I forgot about that part of it. Yeah, 10 years. So by the end, I was definitely watching it as it aired. Okay. The happiness. Yeah. She got to school and everyone was talking about it. Of course. It was the best show. And it was like the next. next day because everyone watched it.
Starting point is 00:40:46 I think it was like Wednesday night. Yeah, so Fridays, it was everybody had to talk about it. And just for fun, I found this funny. Your mother's saying stuff to you pretty regularly like, listen, hand jobs are crucial. You cannot leave a boy with blue balls. I didn't know you were going to get into this. Wow. I love this.
Starting point is 00:41:02 Yeah, this is interesting. I think it's very telling of. She also was cool, I guess. She's not afraid to talk to you. No. Cool is an interesting. Well, when you have a dad that's a pastor and you think about growing up as a Pee. I'm thinking of very sheltered, afraid of sex, puritanical.
Starting point is 00:41:18 Mom's saying, no, you've got to give hand jobs. That's interesting. But again, that's, like, what to me feels chaotic. That's a through line here. Everything's chaotic. Like, there's this and then there's this, and it's all meshed together. That's complicated for a kid to grow up in. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:33 There were rules, but they were so weird that I had to figure them out all the time because remaining a virgin was a big deal. You had to do that in my house. Like, that was the non-negotiable. But unlimited hand jobs is fine. In that front, all the post can be fine. And, you know, but it was like, there was this thing in my mom about pleasing men. It's of her era.
Starting point is 00:41:54 You can't be unpopular. You can't risk getting turned down. She was very concerned you weren't dating. Wasn't dating really in high school. Not to say anything about the boys I went to high school with, but I wasn't seeing quite what I wanted. And I felt like I was, you know, into books and I was into music and super into weird clothes. Like, I loved the value. was my place where I was buying vintage things.
Starting point is 00:42:17 I'm still wearing vintage things into my 40s, but I was like wearing kind of old man clothes. Hence was the look for gals in the punk rock scene in Detroit. Yeah, I liked my look. You were also trying to like get through high school so I can leave this house. I did just want to leave. I couldn't bring boys over.
Starting point is 00:42:34 Yeah. Although the mom brought a boy over blindly from church for a date for her. I was dropped off at his house. Oh, you're dropped off at his house. Because of the thing about you can't go in our house. Right. And he took me for root beer, I didn't like then and don't like now.
Starting point is 00:42:47 It was tough, yeah. I liked A&W. I wasn't dating that much, and it was really stressful, for my mom especially. Oh, no. Was anyone going to like her? They thought I was a feminist, and that was really weird. I mean, it was a feminist. It wasn't really weird, but that's what I was.
Starting point is 00:43:01 My dad was into Rush Limbaugh. He was worried I was a Feminazi, you know. Wow. It was just troubling for them. They were always seeking to be conventional, normal Americans, like on TV kind of family. That's just what they wanted. And I was not doing that. What did they want for you?
Starting point is 00:43:18 They wanted me to be a little more prim and wear a little nicer clothes and maybe watch friends and maybe be a little bit more of a conventional teenage girl and have like a boyfriend that I held hands with and hopefully he was on a team of some kind. But how could you possibly be that? Coming from that environment. Yes. Yeah. There's literally no way.
Starting point is 00:43:37 There's no way you could have been any of those things. I was definitely not that. It was really clear. You know, I felt like it was disappointing my parents. Did they say what they wanted you to do professionally? This sounds so mean, but I think they wanted me to get married and have some kids. I think that they wouldn't have felt really good just saying that. They would have said, you can do whatever you want for four years.
Starting point is 00:43:58 Right. Two and a half or three years until you find a man. That was very clear. She also got you a vibrator for Christmas. She did. This is so confusing. It was very confusing. This is so, I know.
Starting point is 00:44:10 And then come chat with me if you need to know how to use it. I was in high school. And I think I was 17, I barely knew what it was, to be honest with you. Yeah, yeah. And my brother is 12 and my dad. And they open this thing and I'm like, oh. I mean, it was just horrifying. They were just inappropriate.
Starting point is 00:44:30 Yeah. They really were. They didn't have, I don't know why, because they were so obsessed with being conventional, but they didn't catch on to boundaries and some of the normal things that you would hope in your parents. It's almost like their aliens try to be human. trying to act. Yeah, American. And they couldn't do it, but they were trying. And growing up and that sounds so hard. Yes, it was hard. It was also kind of fun. I hope that it feels to readers, not oppressive. It feels fun and colorful. Dad's likable as hell, right? We're kind of listing this stuff, but he's not fulfilling these roles because he's not really fun and probably charismatic and likable.
Starting point is 00:45:07 Weirdly, I have many good memories of my parents, both of them, individually and together. I, you know, have some other ones, too. And it got harder as they, got older and as some of their financial problems got worse, their health problems, they took care of their health about the way they took care of their money, which is they didn't. Yeah, so you go away to college. Yeah. When you get out of that house, is that like a Rumshringer for you? Do you remember just being so delighted? So I went to a Lutheran college in Chicago because that was a path. It was easy for them to see where I was going. And Chicago was far enough from our Detroit suburbs home that it just felt new. And I really say to this moment, my college was the city of Chicago. I just was out. I felt like school was pretty easy. And I just did whatever I had to for school. You know,
Starting point is 00:45:53 a lot of the Lutheran kids at the school were doing pretty boring weekend stuff. They'd take their sleeping bags and watch a movie in the gym kind of a thing. And I was out in the city and I just was only there to sleep. It was great. I learned so much from the art museums, from all the cafes in Chicago. Wicker Park was where I went most of the time. It was beautiful. Time in my life. It's very independent. I just felt so different. Are you very neat? I'm pretty neat, but I'm not extreme, actually. People often have been asking me if I've gone to like a Marie condo sort of situation. Minimalist. No. I have a lot of stuff. I have a lot of books at home. I love vintage clothes. I have my stuff. My husband's a big record collector. We have a lot of records at home. Way more maybe than I'm even comfortable with.
Starting point is 00:46:39 But I don't live in a Spartan way. But that comfort thing is what I'm focused on. I was so uncomfortable at home as a kid. You couldn't sit on a couch because it was full of stuff. Oh, you described trying to eat like Thanksgiving dinner in the house and it's like almost impossible. There's food on the floor. Oh, under the dining room table,
Starting point is 00:46:58 it's like stacked with plastic bags full of things. My mom bought at Target. So you don't even have room for your legs. So I do not live like that at all. Anything approaching that kind of like unput-away stuff. That's pretty uncomfortable for me. Yeah. I just got the idea for a retail store if you guys want to be partners on it.
Starting point is 00:47:14 Here's how it works. It's like a target. You go and you do all your shopping. You pay for it. And then on the way out, they say, would you like this to ship this to your house so you don't have to carry it home? And you go, yes. And you hand it all to them.
Starting point is 00:47:25 Okay. And then they refund 95% of it. Oh. And then it just goes back on the shelves. Thank you. And then that person gets that delight of picking the things out, paying for it. Because it doesn't sound like she wants any of it.
Starting point is 00:47:37 Oh, the hoarder. Yeah. She's getting home and not. even pulling it out of the bag just shoving the bag under the table it's like clearly the thing the event she was after was the purchasing of it why don't we build a little center for people so it's a lie when they say we'll ship it to your house yeah but they say it's so politely and invitingly and you're excited to not deal with it going to your car you go for it and people just can shop all day long i don't know if that's going to work i think they like knowing it's there maybe not unpacking it
Starting point is 00:48:05 or whatever, but the stuff I got is here, I think so much of it, because I have a little bit of this, where if I'm starting to feel anxious or my life is feeling out of control, I will look around my space and figure out how to buy something or arrange something. So I have control over my life. I have control over my space. So I think it's like, I have it here. I feel safe that this is here. I don't need to unpack it, but it's here. I do need it here. Yeah. So I don't know by your store. Okay. You're not going to invest. Angel investor? Those pay off the biggest, usually. I need a no percentage of borders in America before I get an angel invest. I think it's actually common, not maybe to the level that my mom was doing it, but I think a number of people have this
Starting point is 00:48:48 sort of tendency to accumulate. Okay, so you get out of college and you become a writer. Kind of. I was interested in writing always, but I kind of wasn't sure that it was a career. How do you make money as a writer? Like, I didn't know about that. And I went into art. I went into other things. I worked at a women's college in Milwaukee, where I moved, lots of Midwest cities. And I did a number of other things and kind of nonprofits. But I was interested in books and writing forever. How did you meet Dave Eggers?
Starting point is 00:49:16 So in about 2005, I started at 826 Michigan. 826 is this network of youth writing centers that Dave founded with Nineveh, Calgary. It started at 826 Valencia Street in San Francisco. And that's why it has the name 826. By the time I got involved, there were probably eight youth writing centers, free programs, tutoring, and writing, open to all kids. That's awesome. And it really relies on this model of adult volunteers being involved. So that's really what the organization is.
Starting point is 00:49:48 Adults in the community want to give back. 826 kind of finds a spot for them and runs these programs. And it's beautiful. That program publishes youth writing, too. So you can come in and have your writing in a book. So I got involved in that, and that's how I met Dave. Okay, so who got sick first, your mom or your dad? Well, they were both ill in different ways, but my dad was sicker first.
Starting point is 00:50:11 He had two terrible events. He had a nervous breakdown, basically, when he was in the pulpit preaching. In the middle of preaching? In the middle of a Sunday service. He just said, I can't do this anymore, and he turned around, and he left. And my mom picked him up, and they drove around, and he basically had a real mental health event. looking back on it, just if I were to analyze it at all, I think it was all the years of the exaggerations and the not quite doing things on the level.
Starting point is 00:50:42 And it just kind of caught up with him in some way, just all that stress. You can imagine all the stress that he must have been under. Yeah, do you think it was like a bottom for an alcoholic where he kind of maybe admitted, oh my God, I'm full of shit? And here I am standing in front of all these people who are looking at me. Everyone's looking at me for the answers. I don't have the answers. Did he ever return?
Starting point is 00:51:04 In a way. So he did other things. He took on a little church in the Pontiac area. So we moved around a little bit more. I was out of the house by then, but they moved to Pontiac. And he had a small church that was just starting there. That also was kind of tough. He was different then.
Starting point is 00:51:19 And then started being a Lutheran counselor. So he went back to school again when he was in his 60s. This is so much like the New York City commute story, he decided to get his. other degree in counseling in Windsor, Ontario, which you know you just go right across the bridge, no big deal. But it was, you know, an international commute. Oh, my God. He was always doing the same things. Yes, the patterns.
Starting point is 00:51:44 So all of that was transpiring. And then, unfortunately, he had a terrible stroke a few years after that. So those last years of his life were really hard. He was pretty much in a wheelchair at that point. And they were financially pretty rough. Oh, yeah. They weren't paying their bills. in the 70s and they just like kept doing that so by 2007 big trouble i sometimes marvel at the amount
Starting point is 00:52:06 of stress people who live like that with debt nonstop what it's like or are they able to compartmentalize it in a way that doesn't affect them but yeah my dad too he owed everyone money and file bankruptcy a few times and he was in this house that he couldn't afford and it was like how long could he stay there before they kicked them out and i just thought like how are you enjoying any of this this would just be so stressful for me so stressful it affected their health a lot just their physical and their mental health And explain how your mom was always ready to die. I mean, she would never stop talking about it. And I don't think she was suicidal, but she became a hospice nurse eventually in her nursing career.
Starting point is 00:52:40 And really, I mean, what a noble thing, right? Being a hospice nurse is an incredible service to everyone. So she got into it. If I can just be so crass, she just felt like it was such a special thing, being able to shepherd people into their next life and care for people and care for families that way. So she just thought it was a very noble thing. She, like, looked up to people who were in this death and dying business. It's about comfort, which is such a beautiful thing, right? It's really, I mean, I'm a fan of hospice, too.
Starting point is 00:53:13 But, yeah, for my mom, I think she was so stressed and tired, herself, exhausted from these lives that they lived, that she was kind of looking forward to the moment where her whole life would be about that kind of comfort. So she had cancer? My mom had kidney disease. My dad ended up having cancer too. So my dad had the stroke and then lots of other problems and developed skin cancer because he grew up in Miami, no sunblock in those 40s and 50s when he was growing up. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:42 When she was getting towards the end, you were now consumed with the bigger issue was having to deal with everything that she was leaving behind than the actual death. Since I was eight, I was worried about the stuff in our house, right? Like this dream I had and this incredible kind of oppressive force of all that stuff, I thought about it when I was a kid. Oh my God, who's going to deal with all this? And even when like when I moved to Chicago, some part of me, I remember thinking, oh, I'll live in another state.
Starting point is 00:54:14 And then whatever happens to them and their stuff, like maybe it's not my problem. Like that was always in my life. I was worried about whose responsibility it might be when they passed. And you have a younger brother. He's five years younger. Yeah. So what happened when she passed? What was that process like?
Starting point is 00:54:31 I wasn't eager for her to pass, exactly, but I was so stressed about all the stuff to do. And all the undoing of all these things that they had. They had this apartment in Milford, actually. Oh, that's where I grew up. I think it's not named in the book. And that's where these storage units were of theirs, which is at the end of the book.
Starting point is 00:54:50 So they had this stuffed apartment, and they had two full storage units of stuff. When I knew it was the very end of her life, I had to hire some people to help me clean out the apartment. It was not in any way something that I could physically or mentally handle. It was so much and it was so gross. And you kind of like, I just want to fucking light this thing on fire. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:13 I feel guilty now, but not terribly guilty. So, yeah, my dad, he was not a hoarder. And yet he hoarded some stuff. And as he got more broke, his obsession with that kind of intensified. But he had the downstairs of this house, and the woman who owned it, her house was getting foreclosed on, and she just left to another state. When he died, I was like, I'm just going to leave everything. I'm just going to pretend it's not my issue and the house itself's going to get repossessed.
Starting point is 00:55:38 I don't know. So I just didn't deal with it. You didn't do anything? I went in there and I was like, do I want anything? I took his sobriety coins and that was it. And then my brother came a few days later. Maybe he took some stuff. But all in all, I was really overwhelmed.
Starting point is 00:55:50 It's so overwhelming. It's so overwhelming and it's dirty and it's. Gross. I have this moment where I'm like, oh, yeah, stuff. No one's here to care about this anymore. So it's now has zero value. And just the realization, like, oh, you add the value to these objects. Yeah. I don't know. It's a very profound moment. I think the stand in someone's house who's died and you realize all this crap they cared about. Oh, it's incredible. And what does it mean at the end? It means so little. Yeah. In my mom's case, she had been hinting for a while that she had hidden money in her stuff. So it was a little treasure hunt that I went on. And I did find quite a bit of cash. Oh, you did? This was like her savings card because all of her accounts were always over-drawn.
Starting point is 00:56:33 But I did find about $4,000. And she just had it hidden around. Yeah, she'd been hiding it for a long time. Oh, my God. So I hired some folks. And they usually do crime scenes. The crime scene people came to clean up. When the whole episode, because they die within a year and a half of each other?
Starting point is 00:56:51 But a year and a half, yeah. so when that whole chapter's closed then you have a child how does it reframe how you looked at them processed that whole experience what is it done i will say their whole lives i was 37 when my mom died and she died second that whole time i didn't know what to make of them i knew certain things i knew they were just exceptional people like really unusual in some really good ways and some really troubling ones you know i didn't know what to make of it they said and did some things that were really hurtful to me, both really actively and passively just by who they were. But I did love them.
Starting point is 00:57:28 And I know they loved me. I mean, that's absolutely the clearest thing to me ever. But I didn't really know what to make of them. And so for me, some time passed, they've been gone 10 years now, my dad longer than that. I kind of wanted to know what really happened with my parents. My dad was lying about everything, always. And they were so mysterious. So I, years later, decided to kind of investigate them and just look at them like a journalist would.
Starting point is 00:57:58 Yeah. It makes me think of like when you're in elementary school and there's a kid next to you, you just have no clue what environment he or she's in. We don't know anything about how people have grown up, their experience on Earth could be so different from ours. What about their parents? We were estranged from them. You were both. Yeah. We had a brief period in Indiana where we were connected with my mom's mom and her stepdad.
Starting point is 00:58:27 We lived there for three years, our three rich years. We were only really rich for one of those three years, but we were pretending to be rich for the last two. So her mom, my grandma, was kind of around. She was older. She was beginning to fail at that point. And actually my mom, I always find this so devastating, but my mom found out that her mom died because she got a news clipping in the mail. maybe two months after her mom died. That's how she found out.
Starting point is 00:58:53 That's how she found out, which is a really stark difference between the end of my mom's life. And I mean, I was in it. And that's the whole end of the book is this process of figuring out what to do with her stuff and what to do with my life
Starting point is 00:59:07 and how things end for her. So they were just really estranged from their families. Yeah, it also makes you think people are way weirder than you know. Well, my parents say that all the time. I'd be like, why can't we have something like
Starting point is 00:59:19 this. They'd always just be like, you have no idea what's going on in people's homes. You see this thing, but you have no idea. Well, especially in this case where he was certainly a trusted pastor who you would go to for advice and now your wisdom teeth. You didn't have any insurance. You need to get your wisdom teeth out. My dad, in our Detroit suburbs days, he made friends with a dentist who he would like play golf with. I think the dentist needed some like counseling help or something popped into my dad's church. They strike up a friendship. The dentist offers to pay my dad for the counseling, and my dad says, well, I'll trade you. How about I come get my teeth cleaned and we'll just do it that way. So this was this kind of goofy dentist that my dad was friends with,
Starting point is 01:00:00 and it was unusual. My dad really didn't have friends that much. So many people looked up to him, but he was never a peer socially with people. This guy, he was, and it was a couple years. My dad and my brother were getting their teeth cleaned, basic dental stuff. And then when I was 18, I was about to go to college and I needed my wisdom teeth out and my dad arranged it for free with this guy and long story he messed up he wasn't an oral surgeon he was just a regular old dentist oh god he sewed her cheek to her gum oh that sort of happened to me not my cheek but the back too were kind of connected oh no it could only open my mouth oh like sewed your gums together like yeah the top gum to the bottom. Yeah. Did that hurt? I remember being like, why can't I open my mouth yet? It's been a lot of days.
Starting point is 01:00:53 And so I went back in and they cut it. Maybe my parents also bartered. Yeah, no, it hurt a lot. I was like, I've never had my wisdom teeth out. Maybe it just like hurts a lot. And my dad was so sweet. I have these memories because I was taking quite a bit of Vicodin because it kept hurting and it couldn't eat. It was problematic. And my dad was just sitting with me. He kept offering to make me cream of wheat. He was so nice. I was a mess. And we went in and The nurses were like, oh, my God. Your whole mouse sewn, Pierre. We have a problem. I'm impressed that you don't hate them.
Starting point is 01:01:26 You know, hate isn't the word. I know that's like a really mean, hard thing to say. But people are mad at their parents for a lot less. I know that. I have been very unhappy with them many times in many ways. Time has passed. Well, this is when I was wondering when I asked how having a kid impacted this. So my dad died 13.
Starting point is 01:01:47 years ago. And I feel like over those 13 years, I've, A, come to fully accept who he was in a way that I never did. I see him as a human. He ceased being this role of my dad and I see him as a human. And then I start to see, like, all these wonderful things about him. Now I just have this kind of deep sadness that I can't just be around him in full acceptance of him, no expectations of what he's supposed to be, and just maybe enjoy him. And then I can't. So that's been my interesting kind of journey with it. I'm totally a piece with my parents, although I'm not really interested in hanging with them.
Starting point is 01:02:23 I was trying to think about, how do I say this? I spent my time with them, and it was the time that it was, but I'm totally a piece. I'm not angry. The word hate, it's just not there. I just don't feel that. They did what they did. I think they did their best. I think their best is wild.
Starting point is 01:02:40 It's very few others best. Well, it's just beautifully written, destroy this house in the 26. It'll be out. So I hope everyone checks it out. Thank you. It's a very, very honest and beautiful story. I think you should feel quite proud of it. Thanks for letting me talk about it with you too.
Starting point is 01:02:55 Absolutely. Thanks for coming. Stay tuned for more armchair expert, if you dare. Stay tuned for the fact check. It's where the parties at. Um, you have... Powder? Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 01:03:20 Yeah, right around. Cocaine. I just did a ton of cocaine. About three grams. $180. You forgot how to do it. It's been a while. It's been 21 years in the next week.
Starting point is 01:03:36 And, uh, yeah, I've forgotten how. 21 years, wow. 21 years. That's a long time. That's too long. Ironically, that's when people. People can start drinking. That is ironic.
Starting point is 01:03:50 So, yeah, 21 years since I've done Coke, and I just got it all over my face because I don't know what I'm doing. Yeah, exactly. For the listener and viewer, I put powder on my face before these now that we're on video. It's shocking. And I came in and I was pretty much covered in powder. Yeah, white powder. But I wasn't scared. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:08 Yeah. I wasn't scared at all. Have you been crying? No, does it also look like I was crying? Yeah. Wow, I'm a real mess. I thought it was doing great. I worked out.
Starting point is 01:04:20 I had a fun chat on the phone. Oh, maybe your workout caused you to cry a little. So do I look puffy or my eyes look irritated? They just look a little rat. But in a sad way, like you cried. Oh, no, no. No, I didn't cry today. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:37 Although I could have cried this morning. Oh, maybe you didn't. You forgot? They're doing an insane construction construction project in front. of the house, like a city. It's so annoying. Tearing up sidewalks and drilling into the pavement, and the house is shaking. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 01:04:55 Starting at about 6.307 a.m. and start shaking. To the degree, I'm shocked it hasn't shut off the gas yet because the gas has an earthquake emergency shut off valve on it. It's gone off before. Whiskey's going berserk. He does not understand. It's a construction project. He thinks the house is going to fall down.
Starting point is 01:05:16 that whiskey the dog with three legs whiskey the dog with three eggs so he you know he already he's got his a whole routine I'm trying to meditate and trying to journal and he he barks so I put him on the bed that's normally okay and then I put him on the bed and then he chills but now his move is I put him on the bed he's on there for 20 seconds there's an earthquake he jumps off he runs in a circle then he comes back to the bed and starts barking I pick him up I put him back on he stays for 12 seconds and this was going on i mean this was this was madness it was madness and you wanted to cry i well you know what i thought and it's a testament to pause when agitated as they say in the program yeah p w a actually i'm still i'm not sure where this i'm like i'm i'm moving downstairs
Starting point is 01:06:01 it's time forever because the girls are also coming in and out of the bedroom to do they they love using our bathroom i don't know why they have a beautiful bathroom they will they will not use it oh boy okay time so at some point i had to put whiskey in the hallway i couldn't do anything yeah and then every time they come in i'm trying to shut the door they don't shut the door whiskey's back you do the whole circle and then i at some point i was like i'm going to i'm moving downstairs into the downstairs bedroom okay that's we're going to be where i live now okay tvd we'll see if i still it's still you haven't the pause when agitated was i was going to announce that which is i'm glad i didn't announce that Because also now, a couple hours later, I don't feel as resolute about moving downstairs.
Starting point is 01:06:45 Okay. And I was like, good thing I didn't announce that. They could have caused everyone to, you know. Okay, so actually. Both girls were mad at me, you know, because I'm like. Sounds like I really nailed it. That I was crying. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:06:59 Yeah. And then I did cocaine in response. Yeah. I think I am very intuitive. I know I am very intuitive. What if I tried to call, like obviously I would have no clue where to get that drug anymore. What if I called the dealer from 21 years ago? I was like, hey, hey, remember? Oh, my God. And then that person was like, hey, obviously I don't still do this. I would have been in
Starting point is 01:07:25 prison or quit. Or dead. You're supposed to delete that from your phone, right? Yeah, I don't even know. Yeah, it was also like 25 phones ago. Yeah, that's true. um please don't do cocaine this weekend because it's my birthday weekend has started yeah i'm not and i never going to do cocaine again okay um but just like especially not this weekend maybe on my deathbed no no you won't even have you won't even be able to no i'll have to have my family put it in my nose is that how you want to spend it no you want to spend it touching touching everyone and holding everyone saying oh i'll still be doing it that you won't be present it will be ultra present no no fine I can't tell you what to do on
Starting point is 01:08:15 your deathbed I'm just asking you not to do it this week oh I'm not gonna no won't do it um my birthday luck has started why's your hair looks so nice wow that was a great setup okay I wasn't you know you were nervous to brag about well sometimes we talk about products sometimes we don't, whatever. But I use Rose hair products. They're incredible hair products. R-O-Z. Okay. Okay. They really are. Shampoo conditioner. There's a oil and a lubricant. I use it, too. You do? As a conditioner. Great conditioner. I have to use a save your hair shampoo. Right. Of course. But then with the conditioner, I do R-O-Z. Yeah. It's a great brand. owned by Mara Rozak, who is a celebrity hairstylist.
Starting point is 01:09:03 She does Emma Stone and lots of amazing people. And she's the sweetest lady. Oh, perfect. Anyway, I love that hairline. And then they sent me, they did a collab with the great, an incredible clothing company. But they did this collab where they made a hair, a towel, a hair towel. A hair towel. That, you know, you know why you like, yeah, turn your head down, you wrap your hair and you pull it up.
Starting point is 01:09:33 Yeah. But it's a mix. It's like terry cloth mixed with like, um, sweatshirt material. Oh, okay. And, and it like sticks itself in this little strap and whatever. It's, it's comfortable. And when I use that thing, my hair looks so good the next day. Wow.
Starting point is 01:09:51 So do you sleep in it? No, I just keep it on for. Post shower for an hour. Uh-huh. for as long until bed and then and then I go to bed and then you wake up and you're back in their herbal essence commercial. And I'm mermaid. Yeah. Yeah. It looks great. Thank you. So shout out to all those products. Yeah. And folks. I sure hope you're getting paid on the side. I'm not. I am really not. I would love to if they're going to do a campaign. I think I'd be a great candidate. I have experience with
Starting point is 01:10:20 herbal essence. How I got my start. And they're they're thriving. You know, I was at Mahjong. With, I guess I'll throw them under the bus. Anthony and Rachel and I forget who else was there. My mahjong set is beautiful as we can. Yeah, yeah. I would have guessed that. People who play mahjong will understand this. The winds have mermaids on them, which is why I was drawn to this in the first way.
Starting point is 01:10:43 I'm very drawn to mermaids, even though I don't like the sea. This part, that part we don't talk about. So I was... You like when they come to shore? Yeah, when they're sitting on their rock. Mm-hmm. Um, but I said that I, the herbal essence commercial, God, how did I phrase it? I should check with Anthony, but I think I said like, that's the best thing that's ever happened to me.
Starting point is 01:11:12 And he could not. He was like, no. Why did you, why do you say claimant? Because. Do you get your sag card or something from it? Um, I don't remember. I might have already had it. I don't remember about that, but I got paid double scale.
Starting point is 01:11:27 Okay. At that time, that is, so for people who don't know, scale is the lowest amount you can get paid on a project. Negotiated by the union. SAG, yes. It's the lowest you can get paid. And most commercials, you get paid scale. Yep. And this commercial was double scale.
Starting point is 01:11:50 It was unheard of us. Because you were in swimwear? Why was it double? I don't know why. Oh, wow. But, I mean, it was a really grueling shoot, so maybe. But it was double-scale. Partial nudity.
Starting point is 01:12:02 It was partial nude. And you had to swim, and I, like, lied. So stunt pain, maybe. I lied. Uh-huh. Well, you didn't lie. And then it was really bad when I had to do it. Like, I couldn't really do it.
Starting point is 01:12:15 Really? Yeah. Like, I could. But you didn't look elegant. I didn't look good. You didn't look like a mermaid. Yeah. And I couldn't get.
Starting point is 01:12:21 under deep enough so anyway look more like a chimpanzee trying to swim yeah yeah or like dog you know the dog well they can swim pretty good yeah but that's how i kind of am like i'm like a half above water doggy paddle yeah so anyway um it was a huge commercial to get every girl audition for that commercial yeah confidence builder it was a huge confidence builder and i um like i can be in a pretty I could be in a commercial with pretty people, being a mermaid. It wasn't even about pretty people. It was just like I just got validation that I can be here. Yes.
Starting point is 01:13:00 It was my first real commercial. National commercial. Yeah. And everyone auditioned. So, of course, when I first got there, it was like, oh, my God, I'm never getting this. Yeah. And then when I did, it was just like beautiful confirmation that I belonged. Yes.
Starting point is 01:13:17 And it was enough. It was enough to keep. Keep me in the game. Yep. So I think that's the best thing that ever happened to me. But Anthony did not like that. He didn't like that. And I thought he would like it because that's like.
Starting point is 01:13:29 I mean, and similarly, punk's the best thing that ever happened to me. Right. It started the entire thing without that show. I know, but he would say that's a bigger deal than my commercial. Like he just. But I couldn't book commercials. So punked was my herbal essence. I booked two commercials in eight years.
Starting point is 01:13:45 I know. But for him, he'd be like, punked is you're showing your. Real talent. Okay. So are you. Now I'm doing, now I'm having to be him. Yeah. And this is the commercial that I got my ring.
Starting point is 01:13:58 Right. My special ring that did lose us the election, but that's okay. But now it's back. It's back. So, yeah, he didn't like that at all. But I stand by it. Yeah, I'll co-sign on that. I might not be here if it wasn't for that.
Starting point is 01:14:11 Yeah. So I have to. Went to move back to. I might have. I might have been like, I, this, I can't. Yeah. It's so grueling. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:14:19 Um, so thank you herbal essences. Herbalessence. I think, but sometimes people say, that's the confusion. Uh. Anyway, my birthday look has started. I was able to turn left out of my apartment today. Okay. Can you not always do that?
Starting point is 01:14:36 Very rare. Really? Yeah, because it's, I live off of a very, um, uh, populace. Why don't you just wait for the light to turn on? No, because I get stressed. I get stressed. That's what I do when I have to turn left. Everything is wait for that light to turn.
Starting point is 01:14:53 And then I turn into the left turn lane, which is always open. And then I go to the thing and I bang a left and then I bang a ride on, frankly. Yeah, I know. But I, I. It's a good route. Think about it. At this time, there's, it's pretty heavy traffic. Okay.
Starting point is 01:15:08 There's a buildup. And even when, even, listen, I do this every day. So sometimes I'm able to turn left because I'm catching it at the exact right moment. Right. And mostly I don't. I can't. But today I did. And it was a good sign.
Starting point is 01:15:24 Yeah. Good birthday, juju. Yeah. And you got a present. Do you want to dare open it? Yeah. So somebody sent a present. To Titi.
Starting point is 01:15:35 Yes. To me via Carly. Yeah. And I haven't opened yet, so I have no idea what it is. But Carly opens the things first, and she texted and said, It's not a bomb. Yeah. Yeah, she said someone sent you a really cool gift and I think you'll want it.
Starting point is 01:15:53 Oh, yeah. So I'm going to open it. Put it on that, that, there we go. And now you can open it presentation style. Now, it has a phone. You know when I would see people at CPK, I was required to say, would you like to sit in front of our exhibition style kitchen? You said that. I had to say, are you familiar with the menu?
Starting point is 01:16:13 I had to say what my favorite app was. You know, there was a whole playbook. What was your favorite app? Um, the spinach artichoke dip, duh. Yeah. It was before I was calorie conscious. Yeah. Oh, spinach artichoked up because there's nothing better.
Starting point is 01:16:30 Okay. Hi, Monica. We're big fans of the pod at Heritage Gear and thought you like one of our UGA bags. Go Bulldogs. Oh, my Lord. All our best Dan and Brian. Oh, my. Dan.
Starting point is 01:16:47 Brian. Brian! Whoa. Whoa, this feels couture. It does. Is this an itilliers? Oh, wow. Oh, what a good beach bag for you. This is beautiful. You're always at the beach. I love the beach. Can't keep you away from the beach. Well, mermaids. Yeah, yeah. Okay, this is beautiful. Wow. Thank you, Dan and Brian. Oh, my goodness. Lovely bag, really well-constructed leather. We've got like a nice soft front. You might be able to wrap your hair in that at night. It looks like it's kind of the material you were describing. Wow, how cool.
Starting point is 01:17:23 This is great. That is wonderful. Thank you. How sweet. Yes, that's really a nice gift. And now every time someone says like roll tied or whatever. You can hit them with that bag. You should fill that bag with bars of soap in marbles.
Starting point is 01:17:40 So it really packs a wall up when you connect. Wow. Oh, my God. This is the row. Wow. Oh, great. Right, segue. Okay.
Starting point is 01:17:50 I read in comment, someone wanted me to tell you that the row has a playlist. Did you already know this? Of course. How did you know this? But how'd you know what I was going to say? Because so many people have been telling you. Yes, and I don't mean to be this girl. Don't go any further.
Starting point is 01:18:04 I'm going to. I'm going to. You guys, you think I don't know. I mean, I also like that people are looking out for me. That's so sweet. But I got multiple texts about it. You get offended that people think you're not in the no. No, but I feel, I feel.
Starting point is 01:18:18 conflicted because I want to just be like, oh my gosh, thanks. But also the truth is, I'm known about these playlists for years. What kind of music's on the playlist? All kinds. It is vibey. It's a good playlist. But I've known about this for quite a long time because I get emails. From the row.
Starting point is 01:18:39 Yeah. Okay, because you're all dialed in with their circulars. For some reason, this did like hit all of a sudden. I don't know if it was on TikTok or something. Yeah. Where everyone was texting me about this on the same day. So they must have made up their marketing on this. Right.
Starting point is 01:18:56 Yeah, that makes sense. Which is interesting. It's in the zeitgeist. Speaking of The Row, let's talk about Halloween. Oh, okay. So you, we were at the Richardson's for Eric's birthday. You and the boys, happy birthday. It's my birthday now.
Starting point is 01:19:11 So, okay. And so you were in the sauna. What do we say for girls? Like, boys have sausage party. I know. I think it's clam bake? Ew, no. That's disgusting.
Starting point is 01:19:25 Is that a thing or did we just make that up? That's pretty funny. I feel like I saw it on a TV show recently or they were talking about that. A clam bake. Oh, my God, that's disgusting. Was it a sausage party or a clam bake? Oh, I really like clam bake. I think I'm going to try to incorporate that more often.
Starting point is 01:19:40 Okay, great. So the girls, we're talking about Halloween. Yeah. And as you said, I think you brought. brought this up the other day, but I think we are kind of moving forward. I'm pretty sure. With the pun costumes? Yeah, which puns isn't, it's like, it's a mashup. Okay. Yeah, that's a better description. So you have a linking word. Exactly. Like. A linked concept. Burt Reynolds rap. Yeah. Which is great. So I've decided I'm going to be the row, row, row, row your boat.
Starting point is 01:20:14 Okay. So I'll be. It's an opportunity. to shop, and then I'll carry some sort of ore or have a boat around me. Okay. That sounds very cumbersome. Why? Like, are you going to take this on the hay ride and then for trick-or-treating or just at the house for the pre-party? I mean, I'll probably need to carry the ore.
Starting point is 01:20:34 Like, if you have a kayak around you or something. Maybe I'll just go ore. Okay, great. Yeah. That's great. But I'm excited. Yeah. I'm excited to go shopping.
Starting point is 01:20:44 What are you going to be? I was trying to make up one with Ferrari so that I had a lot. an excuse to buy a Ferrari. You can. Ferrari Lee. Ferrari. Harriana. Ariana.
Starting point is 01:20:55 Ferrariana. Or Ferrari on Grande. Oh my God. Ferrari on a Grande. Now I'm into the concept. See? Because I like Ariana Grande. Of course.
Starting point is 01:21:05 It doesn't. And I like Ferraris even more. I understand. But I would never own one. You need a big one, a grande one. Oh. Well. That's right.
Starting point is 01:21:15 So the SUVs that they've, I mean, well, then I see the F, I'm not going to bore you with the bigger Ferraris. Okay, thank you. This is my birthday. Yeah, yeah. Oh, you could even do, there's a lot because you could do a grande coffee cup. Ferrarianna. Oh, but you leave Ferrari out of it.
Starting point is 01:21:34 Just stick with Ariana Grande Latte. No, you do need. Ferrari on a grande latte is like, you'd have to wear a blonde wig. And three things going? Yeah. blonde wig of like some Ferrari. You're in like a Ferrari F1 costume or whatever. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:21:51 Costume, you know, uniform. What do they call it? Race suit. Okay. Yeah, blonde hair and then you're holding a grande coffee cup. That's great. That's real. How do I do Ariana?
Starting point is 01:22:03 It's the blonde hair or I'll be singing Wicked the whole night maybe. Both. Yeah, both of that. Okay. I guess we found mine. So that's great. Rob. Got one off the top of year.
Starting point is 01:22:13 Who do you want to be? I don't have. What do you want to buy? Yours would be so easy because you have so many bands you like. Yeah. That's true. I mean, no one will know what his is. Because he refuses to like a band that anyone knows.
Starting point is 01:22:26 I think people are not going to know a lot of them. We're going to have to wear tags. Oh, okay. Okay. But isn't the fun of it staring at someone trying to figure out what it is? Sure. But what I'm saying is Rob won't, he's going to pick a band like the month flappers. Phoebe Bridgers.
Starting point is 01:22:42 I love, everyone knows Phoebe Bridgers. That's a great one. Phoebe Bridges over Madison County. But it's Bridgers. Phoebe Bridgerton? Oh, I have another update. Okay, great. You're on fire.
Starting point is 01:22:56 Because yesterday, well, I guess it was two days ago. You were struggling. I know. And I actually have an update on that too. Okay. I think I am wrong. I think I was wrong. I think I was further along in my PMS than I anticipated.
Starting point is 01:23:14 I think I am about to start my period, which you, you did. I mansplained to you. You mansplained. Unfortunately, sometimes us men are right. No, no. Sometimes we are. We're going to get it right every now and then. This is what happened.
Starting point is 01:23:30 Okay. I actually was some days late last month. Oh, and then you reset your thing, but it's, it adhered to the previous rhythm. I think so. I think so. I mean, the backward shirt, the, hurting back the every i won't add some of the other symptoms you shared with me my stomach hurt you thought you had that honest well i i i felt like i should have it but i wasn't right
Starting point is 01:23:55 which is cramps which is pretty telltale signs straightforward cramps yeah so i think um it's coming which i am worried on your birthday i've got this pool party yeah but you go to a pool party on your no one wants to have a pool party on their period they don't No, it sucks because you're like bloated and you have to wear a tampon or period underwear, but I'll probably wear a tampon. Well, at a pool party. There's a lot of things going my way right now. No, they're not. There are.
Starting point is 01:24:31 You're making everything so glad. You had a fight that you swear you don't ever wear a tampon. At the pool, I do. Just hold on. So you never had a tampon. And now you're on a tampon. Now your period's actually here. Stop using the word never.
Starting point is 01:24:49 That's not fair or accurate. You recently told me there's a community no longer like that. I didn't like. Things are really going my way this week. And I'm not even pushing. I'm just like gently hanging out. And I do admire your integrity for reporting these. It's admirable.
Starting point is 01:25:08 But you were incentivized to just keep this period thing a secret. Yeah, I was. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So I admire you. I brought that to you. I, and I agree you were right about it. But maybe. We'll see when the period goes.
Starting point is 01:25:21 We'll see. Okay. But also you're not right about the tampon. TBP. You are not right about that. I have, if I am in a pool situation and I'm on my period, I have to wear a tampon. Okay. I've never said otherwise.
Starting point is 01:25:34 You were right about another person too, but I'm going to leave it at that. Okay, we'll leave it. Okay. Now, now. I'm just getting a humble. now take i'm not going to glow and i'm going to just say thank you for your integrity and it's really it's really brave and admirable yeah thank you you're welcome you guys are talking about ike baronholz yeah rob i ike baronholtz is the greatest i was just on the phone
Starting point is 01:25:59 talking about ike baronholz he's the best that ever was seconds before i walked in here we just love him so much i was talking to joy joy is going to burning man oh yes and she was talking all about a second time. Okay. She's a burner. I would not. Yes. And she was breaking it down for me. I'm like, yeah, fuck. I think you got to experience that thing before you leave land earth for sure. I'm good. You're good. Yeah. But I'm happy for Joy. Joy's, you know me. I want to dance and watch a fire and the art and the people. Maybe get an electric bicycle. Oh, man, maybe I'll paint myself. Oh, wow. Yeah. That's fun. You should go with her. I'm putting it on my, I said it's my 2026 New Year's Resolution.
Starting point is 01:26:42 Because we have... It's Labor Day is the problem. Oh. Like, I got half on mine to just go now, but we're going to Nashville for Labor Day. Yeah, you can't go. So it's going to have to be a 2026 resolution. Speaking of Nashville. I'm all over the place.
Starting point is 01:26:58 Yeah. I was at Kara. Uh-huh. The other day. And a very nice man came up to me. He's in a band that plays there sometimes. He's introduced himself before. he's very, very nice, and he's an arm cherry.
Starting point is 01:27:13 Okay. Oh, this was on Wednesday because it was the day that Nancy Siegel, the twin expert, came out. Yeah, this is when you were struggling, too. I was two Wednesdays ago. No, this was, yeah. And he came up and he was like, twin expert. Oh, my God. Like, he loved it.
Starting point is 01:27:31 Yeah, yeah. And he was talking about that. And then he said, this is not, I don't want you to get defensive. Okay. Okay. Probably got a bit now. I know it's a negative. coming. No, it was like, no one's ever said like, I don't want you to get defensive. She said
Starting point is 01:27:46 you're hot. A compliment's never following. I hope you don't get defensive. I know. I'm just, you're right. It's not, it wasn't a negative towards you. It was a positive towards me. Oh, how that's not negative towards me? Well, you're involved. Um, so he, he, he said, I want to thank you for defending Los Angeles so much. Oh, yeah. And I was like, oh, that's nice. Yeah. I wonder if people start throwing eggs at me in Los Angeles now that I've been vocally. Yeah, you've been really hard on it for no reason whatsoever. Yeah. And he was like, look, I get it, but he's from Texas.
Starting point is 01:28:21 Uh-huh. And he's a musician, so he's like spent a lot of time in Nashville. Yeah, yeah. And he's like, it's great. He's like, but I, like, this place is special. Yeah. And. Oh, this is hugely special.
Starting point is 01:28:35 Yeah. My issues with it, this is a very special, wonderful city. I'd argue it's in the top five cities in America. But we're very densely populated. We are. Driving around as a beat down. The place is burning down. It has its challenges.
Starting point is 01:28:50 And I've just enjoyed kind of us. It's just when we say the place is burning down, like that unfortunately feels like you weren't saying that when that was happening. But now you're saying it because you spent time somewhere else. Like you were actually, you hated when people were. saying that. You were like, people are overreacting and saying like the air or the this. Oh, yeah. But that, no, no, no, no. No, yes. I wasn't like all spun out about it. Right. But I'm saying we have fires every year. Bel Air catches on fire every year. It's a stressful
Starting point is 01:29:22 place. You know, that's also a reality. I love it here. I mean, the same can be said about anyone in the hurricane zones. That's what I mean. There's just things happening everywhere. No, you're not going to live anywhere without when i was in georgia last there was an earthquake i know you do i already talked about yeah you told me yeah anyway so um yeah i love los angeles okay i'm just he was he was happy to have his city defended yeah and i was happy to do it yeah good for the both of you yeah and i love it here good i'm glad to hear that yeah now back to my kenyon it's not a bad place It's far preferable to so many places. Yeah, lots of dreams here.
Starting point is 01:30:05 And also, I really like being in nature with less people and less traffic and people more concerned about their families than their careers. That was fun. I enjoyed that. Yeah, I understand. Okay. Now, my story, I feel like maybe my cleaner, who is my CEO, who I love deeply, lady. She might think I'm like a drug addict Because of your GLP1
Starting point is 01:30:35 Yeah I have the same thought with I have the same thought Because the needle I collect the needles in a water bottle Yes, yes And then she has to see this collection of needles Yeah
Starting point is 01:30:47 She probably thinks you're diabetic Oh Yeah No I think she thinks The percentage of diabetics is much higher Than the percentage of junkies But now they have things for diabetes You can like hook on to yourself
Starting point is 01:30:58 and stuff. The pump, yeah. Yeah, the pump. And she is probably in a moral dilemma because she's like, I care about Monica. And she's falling into this like very dark place, this drug addled place. And she's sick. But she pays me well. And if I address this, she might stop.
Starting point is 01:31:24 Now you find yourself at the crossroads a lot of representatives do in this town. which is they have a client who is a cash cow and they're killing themselves. Yeah. Well, you don't find yourself. Lady finds herself in a situation. Yeah. And she'll probably not bring it up like most representatives.
Starting point is 01:31:43 Don't bring it up. I don't blame her. I have a funny, I won't name any names, so I don't think I'm throwing anyone in the bus. But my business manager, who is like really my favorite person. Yeah, yeah. I've just been with him for 30 or whatever. It's been 23 years or something.
Starting point is 01:31:57 I love him. But he was a part of an intervention a long time ago. He was? Yes, with a client that he shared with a lot of different people. Oh, not on you? No, no, no. Oh, okay. No, I came to him about to be sober for good.
Starting point is 01:32:12 Yeah. Anyways, it was an intervention with like the manager, the lawyer, the agent, and the business manager. And they all said, like, you got to go to treatment or we're all going to fire you. and then the actor didn't go to treatment and he was the only one. Oh, he did. Yes, yes, yes. I love him so much. It's just so funny.
Starting point is 01:32:41 I wish that person had gone back. Yes. After sobriety. Yeah, if they got so over. Because the business manager deserves that. He did the right thing. Yeah, he did the right thing. He's I love him
Starting point is 01:32:56 Yeah, me too Okay, so I'm not doing heroin No And if she doesn't listen She doesn't listen But I hope it gets back to her Okay Do you have any stories
Starting point is 01:33:08 Just want to bounce back I just am happy to be here Let's do some facts Okay Stay tuned for more armchair expert, if you dare. Facts. What a story. What a story.
Starting point is 01:33:41 Sometimes we have people on who just have incredible stories. They've just lived lives that are, that seem extreme, but I think a lot of people can actually relate to them. Yeah, I think as we discussed in the episode, everyone's got a lot more going on than you think. Mm-hmm. Yeah, it kind of reminded me a tiny bit of Jeanette McCurdy's memoir. Oh, my God. Great book. Great interview.
Starting point is 01:34:07 Kill my mom? I want to kill my mom? No, I wish my mom was dead. I think is what it's called. I think they're doing a show. Oh, they are? Mm-hmm. And I think Jennifer Aniston is producing it, if I'm correct. Okay.
Starting point is 01:34:19 Yep, really cool. I'm glad my mom died. I'm glad my mom died. Anyway, this is sort of similar to that. So she gave us a really cool present. It was a lunch box, which is a version of the magazine. They put out a quarterly magazine, but it always, like, is a little different and cool. And one of them was a lunch box.
Starting point is 01:34:40 Yes. And then it had author cards in it. Yes. Like playing cards, collectible playing cards. I wanted to go through some. Now, you pick which one. Do you want? I want one of those Chrome ones.
Starting point is 01:34:52 Okay. Chrome. Yeah, chrome. It says collect them all, and I'm inclined to. Of course. You love collecting. I love collecting. You're...
Starting point is 01:35:01 Ding, ding. Yeah. I was going to say in the episode, the only thing that prevents you from being a hoarder is you are good at throwing stuff away or giving stuff. I am very good at throwing stuff. But, man, at the rate you collect things, you could get buried really quick. I also have a great design aesthetic, and I think that inhibits my... Did you have five bureaus? What do you call?
Starting point is 01:35:23 Armwars. That's because I live in a tiny apartment and have needs storage. It's a lot of armoires for a one-bedroom apartment. Actually, when I posted the pictures of my apartment, not architectural digest. Monica was in Architectural Digest. Oh, my God. Her apartment's so cute, it made it to Architectural Digest. That's not what happened.
Starting point is 01:35:42 But there are some really beautiful pictures of my apartment that are on my Instagram if you want to check it out. Yeah. You want to see how Monica lives. And some people said, like, I expected. more armor. So, oh, okay. Looks like it could take even a couple more. I guess so. I wouldn't mind seeing that. Okay, let's see who we have. Oh, W.E.B. Dubois. I know him. Yeah. Famous black writer. Yep. Exactly. This is so cute. It has the awards. It has the titles in the years. It has page average. Wow. There's a Joan Didian. I like this one.
Starting point is 01:36:22 Joan Didion, page average, 236.3. Cool. Dennis Johnson. I'm going to read 100. Oh, boy. Kurt Vonnegut. Slaughterhouse. Who did we have on?
Starting point is 01:36:43 Chuck, Chuck Palinac. Yeah. I wonder if he's in here. We should, okay, we should go through these who we've had on. And have a little board where we. pin those on exactly yeah that's a good idea okay so far we haven't had any no okay great anyway those are cool kurt vonnegut you know i get we both get asked this a bunch and i never have a good answer for it which is like who would you want to interview alive or dead and kurt vonnegut is
Starting point is 01:37:10 he's definitely one of them he's one the funkiest motherfuckers to ever live wow that's surprising i've never heard you speak of him did you read slaughterhouse five uh i think in school or he's He's 84. He's still with us. Oh, he is? Yeah. No, he died in 2007. Oh, I'm sorry. Okay. He was 84. He was 84. He's been 84 for 18 years. You want to have him over J.D. Salinger? Probably, I mean, I have such reverie for S. Salinger and Catcher in the Rye. But Vonnegut is like almost like a Hunter S. Thompson figure. He's like, he has this ultra-ego, alter-ego, Kilgore Trout, who's in all these books. There's all these weird, it's very trippy. He's just so creative.
Starting point is 01:37:58 He's like, like, he is on acid as his homeostasis is like an acid trip. But what would you ask him? I just think he'd be so colorful as a character and interesting and playful. Yeah. He's a rascal. Great. Yeah. Well, he'd be in that list.
Starting point is 01:38:15 Once we do the ghost podcast, we can try to get him. Oh, we have a medium come in and try to communicate with. Yeah. Okay. Who is the inventor of liquid soap? William Shepard. My uncle William? No, because it's spelled S-H-E-P-P-H-A-R-D.
Starting point is 01:38:35 That's before we dropped the P-N-the-H-N-H because so many people would come over and ask us for liquid soap. They thought we had an unlimited supply being related to Matthew. William. William. His full name's William Matthew Shepard. It's actually Matthew William-Shepard, but he was. went by William anyways that's you don't need to look further into that okay um oh that's a ding ding ding so we're watching um Friday night lights last night we're really getting close to the end
Starting point is 01:39:05 we're in season five I'm a little panic I am and coach Taylor Eric Taylor is the character's name played by Kyle Kyle Chandler Kyle Chandler yeah and boy Lincoln was quick on the draw man he was wearing a hat in a scene he took his hat off and then they're talking then he goes and puts his baseball hat back on. She's like, go back. His real initials are in the, in the baseball cap. Oh, cool. So we went frame by frame and sure enough you look inside here.
Starting point is 01:39:31 Casey. KMC. That's what made me think is Michael's. We're assuming his middle name's Michael. Wow. It was a good get. Yeah, that's great. Okay.
Starting point is 01:39:41 That was in 1865, liquid soap. Liquid soap, 1865. Mm-hmm. Okay. It says, Walla's invention was a significant. significant step. It wasn't until later that liquid soap became a widely used product for domestic purposes. Until Mr. Yuley invented a valve that could dispense the liquid soap. It helped. I'm split on liquid soap. Like when I'm in a bathroom at a hotel, I want the bar of soap. I want to
Starting point is 01:40:08 wash my hands with a bar of soap. And when I get in the thing, I don't like shower gel. I feel like it's so wasteful. Like I put like three ounces to clean my asshole. Because I'm thinking about how much I, I always put so much on my hand before. clean my asshole. So I'm like, yeah, we need a lot. And then afterwards, I'm like, I just used like a tenth of a bottle. For shower gel? Yeah. Or for bar? No. The bar, you can't take a tenth of it off. You got to rub your. Do you rub? Do you put the bar on? We've already talked about it. Whatever. You want to keep shaming me for this? No. You think it's disgusting. Listen to me. Do you use a washcloth? Listen me. Do you put it directly on the butt? Here's what I do.
Starting point is 01:40:50 And this is true. I take a bunch of sudsy lather on your hands. I take the bar of soap and I get so much soap on it and put it back on the holder. Yes. Then I wash my butthole. Yeah. Then I rinse it. Right.
Starting point is 01:41:05 Then I take the bar. Yeah. Now I've gotten like. I do that. Oh, you do? Yeah. Yeah. I do that.
Starting point is 01:41:10 Okay. Great. I thought you were very judgmental that I put the bar on my anus. No. No. No. Okay. Okay.
Starting point is 01:41:17 But yes, there is one round for. with just the hands yeah uh in the suds and then the bar goes in the liquid shower gel i agree is not for me if i forget my bar soap if i'm like at a hotel or something i'm pissed because they normally have a shower gel yeah option and i don't it's like it's also slimy like it's not coming off it doesn't suds as much as a bar yeah yeah but for hand washing unless we get a sponsor that's a liquid then i'll say it's great no for hand washing i'm liquid oh even though actually currently at my house it's a bar but it's because the bar is really cute it's in a circle shape okay so that's why you're using it yeah it's a cute shape yeah yeah i like a thing that i'm rubbing
Starting point is 01:42:04 you know a a solid chunk but what you don't like is something that you guys that you guys have in your bat in your downstairs bathroom, but I also have it too. Hate it. You shouldn't say you hate it, because what if they sponsor it? And we both have it. And like, I think it's cool. Okay. I almost give it as a white elephant.
Starting point is 01:42:24 It's a soap that's like a bar soap, but it has these like mountains. It looks like a candle that has been carved out on top to have a bunch of dish shapes in it. Right. And no wicks, obviously. And no wick, right. But it's like it looks. It's a big base of soap. with these weird shapes cut into the top.
Starting point is 01:42:47 Yeah. And you're supposed to just rub your hands on it. Yeah. And wash your hands. And I hate it because, A, you're dripping the stuff over as you do it. Then it gets wet. If you go in there and someone just did it, it feels gross to touch that wet thing. It's a path.
Starting point is 01:43:00 If you live by yourself, maybe, it's fine. Right. I agree that, okay, so I like it. I think it's cool and cool looking. But I do have skepticism that it's clean. Right. Like, I don't, I worry, even though soap is self-cleaning. Yeah, also you just, you get this big trail between the sink and that thing.
Starting point is 01:43:23 I've never noticed that. Well, if you, like, when we have company over and I go in there, I'm like, look at this fucking, there's like soap drizzles all over. This thing sucks and that's what I say. Okay. Then I go, I hate it. But what's the difference between the bar being wet, though? The same, if it's a bar soap, if it's wet because somebody just used it, it's wet because somebody just used it. But here's what I tell myself.
Starting point is 01:43:45 Like, when I use the soap, I also then rinse the bar of soap off so it doesn't have a bunch of suds all over it when I put it there. Oh, I don't. But there's no way to, you're not going to grab that whole base and rinse off everyone's gunk that was just touching it. Whereas the bar of soap, I do think people naturally just rinse it off when they're done to put it back on that. Really? I do. No, okay. So I'm pulling it. And you put a big sudsy bar on the thing.
Starting point is 01:44:08 You know that it would make a mess. Oh, yeah. I put it back. And then I rinse my hands. You rinse your hands with the soap? Yeah, like before I put it back. I would never put a big bubbly bar of soap down on the rack. Oh, it dries just fine.
Starting point is 01:44:22 Yeah. I can see that the bubbles popped in. Yeah, I want it smooth. Okay. Okay. How much is $200, so $265,000 in 1986 is what today? I said $2 million. It's $776,000, $487.
Starting point is 01:44:40 It's less than I thought. Yeah. Yeah. So there's that. Does hoarding get worse over time? Mm. Yeah. It does.
Starting point is 01:44:50 It does. Hoarding disorder is an ongoing difficulty throwing away or parting with possessions because you believe that you need to save them. Obviously, we already know that. You may experience distress at the thought of getting rid of the items. You gradually keep or gather a huge number of items regardless of their actual value. Ranges from mild to severe. Okay.
Starting point is 01:45:09 First symptoms of hoarding disorder often appear during the teenage to early adults. adult years. You may get and save too many items, gradually build up clutter in living spaces and have difficulty getting rid of things. As you grow older, you may continue getting and holding on to things that you may never use and don't have space for. By middle age, the clutter can become overwhelming as symptoms become more severe and increasingly difficult to treat. I just wonder for someone who suffers from this, when they leave their completely packed house and there's like no room for you have bags all over the floor do you say as you're walking on the door where am i going to put this stuff or you don't you've blocked that completely out you compartmentalize do you
Starting point is 01:45:51 i'm just i need to go get the thing that's all i'm thinking about i guess that's me and drugs like right i just got to go get those drugs and then everything else will sort itself out yeah so this is you feel emotionally connected to items that remind you of happier times or represent beloved people or pets. That's sad. I know. You feel safe and comforted when surrounded by things.
Starting point is 01:46:13 You don't want to waste anything. That's a way I'm not a hoarder. I'm fine with waste. You believe these items are unique or that you'll need them at some point in the future. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 01:46:24 It's a hard disease. Yeah, it is. I have a lot of sympathy. It's funny, too, how all these diseases do bring everyone to the same place, interestingly.
Starting point is 01:46:35 It's just like different mechanisms to get to total isolation like every addict will tell you you start by relapsing at a bar with friends and maybe you get coke but ultimately you'll be in your closet smoking crack on day three all by yourself and then you'll not want to see anyone and that's all you'll want to do and this thing like even if you started as socially you can never host anyone you're embarrassed by where you live it's easier to not have friends I know it's sad it's heartbreaking okay I looked at percentage of people who have it in America, 2% to 6% of Americans are estimated to have hoarding disorder. According to the Mayo Clinic, trusted brand.
Starting point is 01:47:13 Mayo. Do you think they were called Mayo Clinic before the product mayonnaise existed? Let's see when mayonnaise was invented. Okay, mayonnaise is thought to have been invented in 1756. That's going to be before the Mayo Clinic. Yeah, okay. Mayo Clinic, 1889. Still early.
Starting point is 01:47:31 Yeah. Okay. But we got 100 years different. Although, I want to go back to mayo, because maybe like... Mayonase, that's a weird name, is that's got to be French? With the most common origin story linking it to a French victory celebration in Monorca, Spain during the Seven Years' War. French forces captured Port Mahon, Port Mahonan, and lacking cream for a celebratory sauce, a chef reportedly substituted oil and eggs, creating Mahonnes. Well, nice.
Starting point is 01:48:02 Mahonnes. Nice. So, wow. Okay, great. Yeah, great. Unexpected fact. Great, unexpected fact. Um, and that concludes the facts.
Starting point is 01:48:12 Okay. That's a lot of people, two to six percent. I know. So on the low end, we're saying 30 divided by a five, six million people. And on the high end, 18 million people. That's a lot. That's a lot of junk. The scale is wide of, of, of,
Starting point is 01:48:33 of intensity of disease. I know. It's hard to, like, where you draw the line. Yeah, I mean, like, I... Because I'm in people's apartment, so I'm like, there's too much stuff in here. Right. But that, like, stuff they don't need. If your items can't fit in cabinets or cupboards and they have to be out in the living space, that's too much stuff.
Starting point is 01:48:54 Just technically, that's too much stuff for your place. For your place, but not for your living. Like, you could have a teeny, tiny place in New York, and it just won't feel. fit anything, but you still need stuff. But, like, Bree and I had a rule, right? We lived together for, I don't know, nine years in that one-bedroom apartment. And we had a rule, which is like, if you're going to go buy a garment, any kind of clothing item and you're going to put it in that closet, you have to pull something out.
Starting point is 01:49:21 Like, it's a one-in-one-one-out. Yeah, that's-a-one. Because there's no, when we can put fucking clothes on the floor? Armour. There was no room in our spot for an armoor. Okay, and then you put them on the floor. Yeah, and that's when you're technically, you have more. more stuff than you can handle.
Starting point is 01:49:36 You don't like that. I don't know if I agree. I got to munch on that. Okay. But like you don't buy too much food to fit in your fridge because it has to go in your fridge. Or pantry. Well, no.
Starting point is 01:49:48 This is the fridge items that need refrigeration. No, that's true. You can't just buy it and leave it on your counter. You're like it's got to go on the fridge. And you have to have that same policy about everything. Like the clothes got to go in where they hold the clothes and the toiletries got to go where that's being held. I buy a bottle water.
Starting point is 01:50:04 I'm not really supposed to, but I do. You buy what? Bottled water. Okay. I feel badly about that, but I do do it. Okay. You're a bad person. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:50:13 And I will buy a bunch. I get big ones, Exhibit A. Mm-hmm. Can you show it to the camera? Oh, I think everyone can see this. It's not an extreme close-up of me, but. If you'd show it. And they're big, and so I get like five cases.
Starting point is 01:50:31 Cases. And that's not. fitting anywhere so i have to put it in the laundry room but your laundry room is fine that's a that's your shed you have a shed off your kitchen where your hot water heater is it's not like anyone's going to be hanging out next to your hot water heater right that's fine okay living space you can't if you need to stack up five cases of water in your living room I'm sorry but you're going to have to get one case at a time no that's not efficient for people shit stack why is water We, this is an episode about hoarding.
Starting point is 01:51:05 You don't understand why. You can just have things stacked up. No. So that, there is a difference here. Hoarding is items that aren't used, aren't going to be used. It's like in the future I may need this. I'm going to have it or I feel safe if it's here. Stop piling.
Starting point is 01:51:22 Having to go every two days to get water is not efficient for anyone's life. First of all, you're forgetting I know you. You barely drink water. You are not drinking a case of water every two days. okay let's start there secondly it's not true surplus is part of hoarding that's what was her her bathroom her shower was full of 50 shampoo bottles i know so it is part of it the stockpiling is is an aspect 50 is different than like also that's different shampoo bottles you do take a while to get through so yes you can do one at a time or two speak also you're someone who has a ton of surplus yes but i stockpile with
Starting point is 01:52:02 the confines of my storage space. I don't exceed that. That has to be a rule we agree on. Well, that feels interesting and tricky, though, because it's like your space is big, so you're allowed to have surplus, but if your space is small, you don't. Yes, I lived in a small space, and I couldn't have 15 extra toothpaste. But now I can. The rule is you have to live within the limits of your environment.
Starting point is 01:52:26 It's a good policy, Monica. I don't know why you're pushing against it. I am pushing against it because I don't. I don't know that I think it's fair that, like, you, the reason you have a surplus is because it makes you feel safe. It makes you feel safe to have that. That's literally the exact same thing as a hoarder. No. They just don't have a big house.
Starting point is 01:52:48 No, no. Here's the line. It's so clear. I would have also felt safe to have more of those products when I lived in a one-bedroom apartment. But I could not because I live by the premise. I can't have shit stacked up in my living space. So I played by the exact rule I'm still playing by. No, I know, but I'm saying by definition, hoarding, what we just read is it makes people feel safe to have those items.
Starting point is 01:53:12 So that's like part of the psychology behind hoarding. So if that person has just as toothpaste on the ground because they feel safe, I can't be like, well, that's bad, but yours isn't bad because you have the big house. Do you see the confliction? If I had only lived in a big house and I had this premise, yes, I would be hypocritical. But I live for a decade in a one-bedroom apartment and I live by the policy I'm suggesting. But I've already proven that I walked the walk. You, but why can't now, like, you're like, I feel safe having these toothpaste and you see this other guy who has toothpaste on his floor, just like four. And why can't you just be like, yeah, you feel safe.
Starting point is 01:53:58 for that's fine because he has products invading his living space and that's where it becomes he's having all hoarders he's having you over though so he's not embarrassed he should be if he's got toothpaste laying all over his living room floor he should be i'm sorry that should be something oh my god the judgment wow yeah you got uh sorry you can't spend more than you make there's some rules you can't spend more than you make. You can't buy more shit than your place can hold. No. You can't.
Starting point is 01:54:32 Yes. Then your place can hold is different than in this corner I have stuff stacked. To you, that's bad. But to somebody else, that's not bad. That's just the way they're doing their life. Like, they have stuff stacked in this corner. Well, let me be honest. It's happening in my bedroom and I hate it.
Starting point is 01:54:47 But I hate it. You understand? There's like stuff. Yeah, you're. And I don't like. like it. That's fine. You don't have, also, you don't have to like it.
Starting point is 01:55:01 But I think, I think it's, it would be, I'd be surprised. I'm surprised to hear that you're so judgmental of people who like have a stacked area of extra stuff because they don't have a closet for it, but they like having extra stuff. I understand with the, what Amanda's mom having chickens out rotting and stuff, obviously. That's not good, but... Listen, you can have a principle and not be judgmental of people who don't apply to the principle. Well, you are judgmental because you said it. This is Marcus Aurelius.
Starting point is 01:55:35 This is, be hard on yourself and forgiving of others. And I subscribe to that. So for me, I'm just saying, as an ethic, I can't have more stuff than I can put away. I can't spend more money than I may. I hear you about you. But you said they should be embarrassed. Okay. What I should say is I'd be embarrassed.
Starting point is 01:55:53 Okay, great. Yeah. That's fine. Yeah. And, yeah, I'd be very embarrassed if I had toothpaste and sundries stacked up all over my living room. What about just a corner? But if someone else says, I don't actually care because I don't live there. That's my, that's exactly my point.
Starting point is 01:56:08 Like, we are not living there. And I might not want to be in there because it's like, where on this spectrum? So, yeah, you would admit you don't want to sit in a living room where you have to clear the couch off to sit down. Yeah, and there's chicken under the thing. Yeah. So great. Yeah. And we can work backwards from there.
Starting point is 01:56:24 And there's probably a lot of, I don't want to be in a place with stacks and newspapers everywhere. It feels dirty and gross. I personally don't want to be in there. Okay. Someone loves living with all those newspapers and kitty litter all over. Who cares? That's for them. Yeah, that's for them.
Starting point is 01:56:40 Yeah. Yeah. But I don't enjoy that. I understand. Yeah. All right. Well, that's it. I love you.
Starting point is 01:56:46 Love you. Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondry app, Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to every episode of Armchair Expert early and ad free right now by joining Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or on Apple Podcasts. Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondry.com slash survey.

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