Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Kimberley Quinlan (on anxiety and self-compassion)
Episode Date: October 23, 2024Kimberley Quinlan is a therapist and anxiety specialist. Kimberley joins the Armchair Expert to discuss her self-compassion test, her techniques in treating anxiety disorders, and what orthor...exia is. Kimberley and Dax talk about how much stress people can feel over their food choices, why having acceptance of your own personality traits is important, and the connection between OCD and eating disorders. Kimberley explains what olfactory reference syndrome is, what happens to your body when you criticize yourself, and tools you can use to get over the fear of flying. 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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Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Expert,
experts on expert.
I'm Dan Rather and I'm joined by Lily Padmon.
Hello. Hello.
What if it was Padmon?
I'm sure somewhere it is.
Well, a lot of people think it's-
Hari doesn't like your name.
Yeah, we have a neighbor who is Indian
and he has a pretty big beef with my name.
He's also, we gotta add,
he's one of the smartest human beings I've ever met in my life.
He's like a double doctorate in finance
and something else crazy, physics or something.
He was a professor at UCLA, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, he's awesome.
But, and we like talking, but every now and then
he'll just be like, ah, like, I just can't.
It's not right.
Can't with your name.
He wants to know what it really was basically.
No, he knows what it was.
And it was, should I say it?
Yes. It was pudmonman-ah-bin.
Woo, pud-man-ah-bin.
That's, that's that reaction,
that very American reaction.
No, I just like that.
Pud, say it again.
Pud-man-ah-bin.
Pud-man-ah-bin.
Yeah.
Woo.
It's hard.
No, it's great.
Well, it is hard for an English.
It's fun, it sounds like alliteration.
Sure, but a lot of, I think people, you know,
there's many Padmans because it does get shortened,
obviously, and my grandfather shortened it, not my dad.
And I think Pari thinks my dad did it.
And I kept saying, this is my grandfather.
And he said, yeah, but why wouldn't it be Padma?
He wanted it to be Padma.
That would be, that's a compromise he could live with.
But Padma's a first name.
We know a Padma, we interviewed a Padma.
That's right, Padma Lakshmi.
Go check it out.
In the archives.
Listen, go to the archives.
I implore everyone to go to the archives.
And just dabble.
You only gotta listen to a couple minutes of an episode
and do that three or four times a week.
Okay, our guest today is Kimberly Quinlan.
And Kimberly, as we'll explain in the episode,
but I think it's fun to know you can go on into it,
is that when we first got criticism
for how we were talking about OCD,
warranted, we were wrong.
And I looked up people that were well-versed in this space.
She's who I found we invited her on,
and she has so much integrity.
She said, you really wanna talk to my friend Allegra.
Yes.
She's awesome.
That was such a great episode.
It's in the archives.
Check it out, even a couple of minutes. So it's episode. It's in the archives. Check it out.
Even a couple of minutes.
So it's, Kimberly.
Now listen to the whole thing of that one.
That one's so good.
Yes, absolutely.
Also, you notice thinking this is totally off basis,
but we had Brody and Kristen on way before
the social phenomena.
I know, I like being ahead.
But I want people now to,
I feel like if we released it right now,
it would be so exciting.
Re-release?
I think we should do a re,
oh, just post about it.
Yeah.
Or just if you're watching this,
go back.
Kimberly is a licensed marriage and family therapist,
a public speaker, a podcast host,
and she is the founder of CBT School and Online
Psychoeducation Platform where she offers support and research-based education products to those
who cannot access correct care. Her podcast, which is great, is called Your Anxiety Toolkit,
and she covers, the topics are endless. Yeah.
Yeah. This was fun. We got into a lot of interesting topics.
And we took a test, which we love taking a test.
Oh, good. Yeah, we live for tests.
Please enjoy Kimberly Quinlan.
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He's an up-chair expert.
He's an up-chair expert.
He's an up-chair expert.
He's an up spy This is kind of a newer look for you.
A polo shirt?
Pink polo.
Yeah.
Matching socks, I see.
No socks, striped gray.
Okay, everyone's accounted for.
Outfits have been checked.
We're gonna take a test today.
Yeah.
Which I'm so excited about.
Me too.
Did Manny already tell you
we like to do these in the fact check?
I know, yeah.
And she was saying when we took blood and stuff
that that was fun, so.
We've done like the personality test,
we've done the Enneagram.
Yeah.
We've done the sorting hat for Potter.
Hogwarts.
Have you done the sorting hat?
Mm-mm.
You haven't?
Oh, that was fun.
Only at the Warner Brothers.
Oh, you put the hat on there.
Yeah, on the tour.
What were you assigned?
I think I would say, oh, my son's gonna be so mad.
Because actually, I don't remember.
Oh my god.
That's how important it is.
Then you're probably a Hufflepuff.
Oh!
I'm just kidding.
That might be.
A lot of people get really mad when I do that.
But so now I think it's funny.
You have to forgive me,
because I have started the Harry Potter thing
in the last month, maybe.
With your child. Yes.
You have a son? I do.
How old? He's nine.
Oh, he's nine.
We have a nine year old too.
He's late for the Harry Potter game,
but we're in it now.
Well, that feels right.
Yeah, that's a good age.
Our nine year old's already done it,
but that's only because we have an 11 year old.
Yeah, well I have a 13 year old and she, no.
Didn't care. No.
How about Swift?
Oh yeah, we just started that.
Only recently did we start that too.
Cause if she didn't get drawn into Potter or Taylor Swift,
now I'm thinking this should be on the DSM.
Yeah.
This must be some kind of pathology.
Yeah, I was just telling how difficult it is
to be a parent who's a therapist.
Yeah, does it make it harder or easier?
So much harder.
You think so, tell me why.
Well, number one, parenting is hard, period.
Yeah, it's no joke.
I was saying, no one told me it was gonna be this hard,
and I'm a therapist.
Right.
What?
I think it's a little harder
because you have read the DSM.
Right.
And I think it's also harder
because I feel that internal pressure
that I'm supposed to raise these totally.
Emotionally regulated.
It would reflect badly on you
if you turned out some maladaptive.
What kind of therapist can't create perfect children?
Yeah.
There's no such thing.
And there's already, so you've got like triple whammy
pressure because you've got just being a mom,
so the requirements that you're perfect
are already through the roof.
Yeah, and then you're supposed to have some upper hand
with your knowledge set.
Yeah.
Yeah, I get that because supposed to have some upper hand with your knowledge set. Yeah. Yeah, I get that. Because I feel myself doing it, you know, they'll exhibit a behavior for 35 seconds.
You know, like, oh, geez, I think they're a narcissist.
Oh, geez, I think they have a—
Borderline.
Borderline personality disorder. Oh, no.
I do that as a non-therapist, but I'm pretty good at going like, bullshit.
Oh, yeah. Well, I think that's the beauty is ifapist, but I'm pretty good at going like bullshit. Oh yeah.
Well, I think that's the beauty
is if you're really clued into it,
you get to just let them be humans.
But I think that is what makes it hard
because you're like, it's their journey,
they get to do it.
That's where I think I have to pump the brakes.
And divorcing or parsing out your own ego and identity in it
is so complicated because we're all inclined to project onto strangers.
Now you add in, well, this person is half me, so I have half a right to actually project.
You really get caught in that.
For sure.
It's a constant self-check, but also one of the coolest growth opportunities of my life.
Thousand percent.
Because you have to then recognize, oh, right, this is my life. Thousand percent. Because you have to then recognize,
oh right, this is my issue.
And then you go, well, we don't really have our arms fully
around this issue, do we?
Because we're projecting this onto a little person.
And the story isn't finished yet.
OK, so let's start with our introduction
because I think it's kind of fun.
Because I just kind of want to applaud your character
in your integrity, which is we had gotten some criticism
for how we were talking about OCD.
And then so I just kinda did a perfunctory search
of who's popular in the space and I came up with your name
and then I reached out to you on Instagram
and I invited you on to talk about OCD
and you were like, yeah, that sounds great.
And then at some point, I guess you probably discovered
that Allegra was one of the critical voices,
turned over your opportunity to be here to her.
Yeah, and she did a great job.
She sure did.
She needed to do that.
She's got such life experience, so she nailed it.
Yeah, it was awesome.
I'm really happy we just had an expert on them.
I'm really happy it was her.
And so I just think it's really cool that,
I mean, I'm not presuming you wanted to be on the show so bad,
but I know if Jimmy Fallon called me to be on, and I was like, you know, I think John Krasinski is probably better as
a guest for you.
Yeah.
I think that shows some integrity.
Well, I love Allegra, and she does a lot of advocacy work, and so we spoke about it, and
yeah, it was absolutely the right thing.
I truly believe my turn will happen when it's right, and here I am.
Yeah.
And so you're a marriage and family therapist,
but additionally, you do have expertise
in other areas as well.
Yes.
OCD being one of them.
Anxiety disorders.
Anxiety disorders.
The overarching work that I do is around self-compassion.
It's woven into everything I do.
So I see very severe anxiety disorders,
but all of my personal work and the work I wanna put out into the world is around that.
Okay, and so I'm also going to exploit you
and make you talk about eating disorders a bit,
because I would say tied with OCD,
we get a lot of people requesting
we have an eating disorder.
Well, I had an eating disorder.
I'm your girl.
Oh, okay, wonderful.
So I would love to dip into that a little bit as well.
When are we taking the test, now or later?
Yeah, let's do that.
Would you like to start with that? Well, sure, I can do anything. I think you should dip into that a little bit as well. When are we taking the test, now or later? Yeah, let's do that.
Would you like to start with that?
Well, sure, I can do anything.
I think you should jump into the test.
It would be fun to take the test.
Let me sort of preface this.
So there are two ways in which we can capture
someone's degree of self-compassion.
We could just talk about it and sort of hear
your inner thinking and I could make a subjective
assumption or I can do what we're gonna do today,
which is called the self-compassion scale.
We're doing the short form.
The long form is 24, we're doing the 12.
But research has shown that the 12 question
is as effective as the 24, so we're golden.
Okay, great.
So what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna ask you both questions.
You're gonna give me a number out of one to five.
One is almost never
and five is almost always. And I'll document it and then I'll just need like
three minutes to calculate. She has a calculator. Look at this. It's my kids. Look how cute it is.
All right. What I would encourage you to do is don't overthink this. Oh good luck.
This is not a diagnosis and we're today talking about self-compassion,
which is around treating yourself kindly.
We're not here to beat yourself up
about how much you beat yourself up.
Yeah, but we'd love to do that.
So this is a non-judgment zone.
You're taking away our hobby.
I know.
What will I do with that?
I'm just helping you guys.
We quit after this.
We quit after this.
All right, so here's question number one.
When I fail at something important to me,
I become consumed by feelings of inadequacy.
So, Dax, five being almost always
and one being almost never.
Okay, great.
So what we never have is the person
administering the questions present.
Yeah, speaking of the questions.
Because here's, I think, the first mental hurdle for me.
After you say don't overthink.
Historically or today?
I would prefer you give me sort of a range
in the last month.
Okay.
And if you prefer to read things,
my husband is a reader of questions.
I'm dyslexic, so this is ideal for me.
Don't overthink it, but it's just funny
because I've changed a lot over time.
Yeah.
Oh no, this is not a life scale.
So this is more like within the last week to month,
how you doing?
Okay, great.
So one is never, five is always?
Five is almost always, and almost never is one.
When I fail at something important to me,
I become consumed by feelings of inadequacy.
You wanna go first, ladies first?
Yeah, you go. Hmm.
Okay.
Tall people first.
I'm gonna go three.
Five.
Okay.
Number two, I try to be understanding and patient
towards those aspects of my personality I don't like.
One is almost never, five is almost always.
One.
Two.
This test has already made me start bleeding.
Bleeding?
Rob, can we see that?
What do you mean?
I just randomly started bleeding for this.
Oh, God.
No, I cut my finger cutting my hair last night.
I've never actually had that happen before.
But I took the band-aid off and it was fine and I just started.
There's no question for that one.
All right, number three.
When something painful happens, I try to take a balanced view of the situation.
Four.
I try.
Try means, try is a good word.
Try is a good word.
Try is a good word.
Try is a good word.
Try is a good word.
Try is a good word.
Try is a good word.
Try is a good word. Try is a good word. Try is a good word. Try is a good word. Try is a good word. When something painful happens, I try to take a balanced view of the situation.
Four.
I try.
Try means, try is a good word.
Also situations operative.
Four.
Okay.
Number four.
When I'm feeling down, I tend to feel like most other people are probably happier than
I am.
One.
That's almost never.
Yeah, I don't think that.
Same.
Same. Okay. I try to see my I don't think that. Same, same. Yeah. Okay.
I try to see my failings as a part of the human condition.
Try to.
I know.
It's like, do I try to or do I?
Try is tricky.
Your own personal failings, not everyone's.
No, I'm gonna go, I never do that.
Whatever that is.
One.
Yeah, I'm a piece of shit and here it is again.
Two.
Okay.
When I'm going through a very hard time,
I give myself the caring and tenderness I need. Two. Okay. When I'm going through a very hard time, I give myself the caring and tenderness I need.
One.
Three.
We're halfway.
But hold on, I'm loving this.
Me too.
Yeah.
I have zero anxiety.
I can bring out the 24 if you need me to.
Oh my God.
We want the 48 pack.
Okay, when something upsets me,
I try to keep my emotions in balance.
God, try it!
Five.
Four.
When I fail at something that's important to me, I tend to feel alone in my failure.
Five.
Five.
When I'm feeling down, I tend to obsess and fixate on everything that's wrong.
Five.
Yeah, five.
When I feel inadequate in some way, I tend to remind myself that feelings of inadequacy
are shared by most people.
One.
Two.
I'm disapproving and judgmental
about my own flaws and inadequacies.
Five.
Yeah, five.
I'm intolerant and impatient towards those aspects
of my personality I don't like.
I'm tolerant or intolerant?
Intolerant and impatient.
Yeah, four.
Yeah, four.
I just thought of a very funny thing.
What if like every time one of us went first,
the other one changed it?
I know.
I go three and you go three, I go two.
Actually, I'm more two.
It also is fun when we do,
because normally we're doing you or me. Yeah, and you're usually administering it. Yeah, I like more too. It also is fun when we do, because normally we're doing you or me.
Yeah, and you're usually administering it.
Yeah, I like to administer.
She's an administrator at heart.
Did you try to evaluate mine too?
Sure.
Did you think I was right?
Well, what's fun is I was realizing as well as I know you,
there are some things I don't know about you.
Sure.
Were you thinking that at all?
Or you were like, all right, nailed everyone.
You seemed right.
Yeah, you seemed right, but there were a couple
where it was like, I wouldn't have had a guess.
Interesting.
Like, are other people having a great time around me?
Right.
I don't really know how you process that.
How I think about that, yeah.
I assume everyone's miserable in general.
Yeah, I just don't think about the way other people
are feeling when I'm doing anything, really.
Other people in the world that aren't a part of it.
Right.
Do you have any questions before I rate your scales?
I know good students have questions,
so I'm trying to think of one, but I don't have one.
No, we're good.
All right, let's do this.
Okay.
How do you guys think you went?
Let's hear more about the metric.
Or maybe the spectrum.
Yeah.
So it's actually out of one to five, just like you scaled.
Someone who measures low in self-compassion
is between one and 2.49.
Someone who is moderate is 2.5 to 3.5.
And someone who is high in self-compassion
is 3.51 to five.
I would just like to say,
I think I'm not very compassionate to myself.
I think I'm moderate.
So both of you actually came out with exactly the same score.
Whoa.
Maybe that's why this works.
But in different areas.
So there are six components that we break this down to.
So you both got the response for today.
It could be different, but right now you're at 2.25 each,
which puts you both in the low
category, in the upper low.
Okay.
Cusp.
Again, this is just for reflection and sort of to see, hmm, that's interesting.
Let's take a look at why.
So if we looked at self-kindness, because one of the subscales here is self-kindness,
how kind you are to yourself.
Monika, you actually were in the moderate, but Dax,
you were in the low.
Okay. Well, congratulations, Monika.
Thanks.
Yeah. So that's how kind you are to yourself in the face of adversity. We're not talking
about how kind you are when you kick butt, right?
Right.
It's not about that. It's sort of more about how do you sit by your side when things go
to shit? So the second is self judgment.
How much do you judge yourself for the highs
and the lows of life?
You both got 1.5.
Okay, so we really nailed that one.
Which is low.
Yeah.
The cool thing about all this is once you know,
then you know what to work on.
Then you know where you might first be like,
okay, I'm gonna work on this one little area
or you might choose not to.
Some people are like, I'm cool.
I'm good just to know it, and I'm good to go.
The next one is the common humanity,
and that's what you guys were talking about before.
When you're suffering, how do you see yourself
as this being a normal part of the human condition?
How do you see that it's a human thing to suffer,
it's a human thing to go through hard things,
all humans fail, humans mess up some days,
that's what common humanity is around, and you both got 1.5.
Okay.
Okay.
Yeah.
I'm not seeing how we're gonna get up to two.
This is where you go well.
The next step is isolation.
So when things are hard, how much do you isolate?
How do you think it's just you're the only one and that no one else is having this problem
that you're the only, quote unquote, loser in the area? You both did really well, you're in moderate one and that no one else is having this problem that you're the only quote unquote loser in the area.
You both did really well, you're in moderate there.
Okay.
That makes sense.
So here we go, we're on the upswing.
The next part is mindfulness
and you both scored very well in mindfulness.
That's being aware of your suffering,
being in touch with, oh, I'm having a hard time,
how am I doing, what's going on.
So Dax, you got 4.5 and Monaco, you got four.
Oh.
Wow.
This is the one I really love the most
and I find this is one of the ones
that can really help us to understand someone.
The last part is over identification,
which is when you're going through something difficult,
how much do you make it about yourself?
How do you put it on yourself as an identity?
Like if you make a mistake that you're someone who's a total loser.
Flawed.
Bad.
Broken.
Yeah, it's very shame related. And so this one, Dax, you got two and Monica, you got
one for that one.
Yeah, that tracks. I don't like making mistakes.
So that's your results. We can also see both sides of this. you're very successful. Often people rely on a lot of these pieces
to drive them into success, and sometimes it works.
I'm so glad you're bringing this up.
I would be interested in how many people
have a similar story, which is, without that,
what would be the motivation, right?
I see a lot of very, very successful people
in the industry here in LA, or very, very high in the tech field.
They're at the top of their game,
and they have relied on a lot of the things
that you guys were waiting for that got them to the top.
But at some point, it starts to not work anymore,
and things start to break down around them.
Or they're in relation with people
where it's creating conflict.
Or you start questioning, is it worth it?
Yeah.
Right, I'm like, great, I got all the cash and prizes
and whistles and I'm not very happy.
So it's like existential.
Yeah, and it's a really hard experience,
especially here in LA, everyone around you
when you're famous, everyone loves you, but you don't.
That's a really conflicting place to live.
And so often when people come to me,
they're usually having panic attacks,
got some other anxiety disorder
or a mood disorder like depression.
And then we start to look at these things served you
in some pretty tricky situations.
And can we come up with some alternative solutions
that will still keep you in the game,
but don't give you those consequences.
I have long thought about, could I get to that same goal without the same catalyst?
And it's such a leap of faith.
Well, here's the thing is research shows that self-criticism and self-judgment, which
you guys do a lot of, it seems, actually has higher rates of procrastination, reduced levels of motivation, higher rates
of burnout, end up creating less productivity.
So it makes sense.
You would be like, oh, you piece of shit, you've got to do this, makes you sit down.
So you go, okay, it must be working.
I'll keep going.
But with too much use of that, it actually creates all these negative consequences, which
then we go,
well, it must be me.
It's me that I'm not getting my book written.
I've written a book, one of the hardest things
I've ever done in my entire career.
That's seller, congrats.
In my field, not like a New York Times best seller,
but in my field, yes.
But you beat yourself up.
So then when you're beating yourself up,
you start to procrastinate, you start to feel like crap
and you don't wanna write, and then you go, well, I'm a piece of shit
because I can't write.
And then it's a cycle.
Yeah.
We've got to dispel the myths of these behaviors
and see that there's another way.
What is it?
What is the other way?
What's the other way?
Well, it's simply treating yourself
like you would treat a loved one
if they were in that situation.
I'm glad you're saying that.
The only window into my awareness of my self abuse
and flagellation is simply being an AA,
which is it occurred to me at one point,
I have listened to, at this point,
thousands of men share a character defect that they have
or even an action that came out of that character defect.
And I go like, yeah, you were scared and you stole.
Yeah, you blank and you cheated.
Yes, and you punched somebody.
Like, I can listen to anyone else's thing
and have total understanding and compassion
and go like, yeah, that was a situation that's happened.
But if I'm guilty of the same thing,
that's just not what I think.
But luckily, I have had the experience
of regularly hearing people say stuff that I also suffer from and having total acceptance.
And when you said that to your friend, he didn't get caught up in shame. He felt a sense of relief
of like, I'm not alone. Dax can see the good in me.
I'm not being excommunicated from.
And therefore he is more likely to go and do good things for himself. And it's the same for us.
Now, the thing to remember here
is it's easier said than done.
If you've beaten yourself up for your whole life,
talking to yourself like your best friend
might feel like a massive leap.
Some people go, gross, I don't wanna talk to myself.
That is not how I talk to myself.
But what we can then start to think of
is what would feel good to you?
I guess for me, the fear is if I'm not hard on myself,
then I'm not being reflective.
You know what I mean?
I know exactly what you're saying,
because as you were saying it, I was thinking
why I can say that to another person, not me,
which is to do that to me would be like
granting permission for it to continue.
Yeah, excuses.
Oh, I guess this isn't a big deal
for not beating ourselves up over it.
I get is a paradox because I don't think
the stranger needs more abuse.
They've clearly given themselves enough.
Yeah, this is why I love talking about this.
This exact conundrum.
Because here's the thing,
self-compassion is not letting yourself off the hook.
I treat anxiety disorders.
My job is to help people face their worst fear.
You have panic disorder and you don't want to fly an airplane.
My job is to get you on an airplane.
Whether I fly with you or you do it alone, that's my job.
You're afraid of needles.
My job is to get you to go and have needles.
The work here is that not reflecting
is an act of kindness.
The act of kindness is the reflection,
but doing it in a way that is kind,
you can still do the hard thing, but do it kindly.
When I play soccer or volleyball
or anything with my oldest daughter,
every time she makes a mistake, sorry.
And I go, love, you don't have to say sorry,
you haven't done anything to me.
You just know now to do it differently.
She can practice and doesn't have to feel guilty
when she's failing.
No, and that is the work. Let's say we don't do something well. Let's say I totally screw
this up today.
Uh-huh.
Fingers crossed. That would be so exciting.
The self-compassionate act would be to reflect. How did it go? What went well? What didn't
go well? What could I have done differently? We still would reflect, but we would do it
from a place of, it's okay that we make mistakes and what can we learn from this? That's the piece.
The personalizing that I imagine would be helpful, which is like, an interview needs
this, did I have my information, did I have blank? Not am I a lazy piece of shit?
Yeah. But then it isn't like, did they like me? It gets very muddy there, because that's
not anything that you have any control over, Right, but a kind act is to give permission to people to think what they like to think.
I fully give you permission to have your thoughts about me.
That's okay.
And then my responsibility, all that I have control over, is how I tend to those emotions
I have to feel.
So self-compassion also isn't like happy feelings all day long and it's unicorns and it's roses.
It's also going, okay, they may or may not have liked me.
Maybe you straight up said, I don't like you, Kimberly.
And I get to have my feelings, you get to have yours.
And my job is to be gentle with the feelings I have
about you not liking me.
Then everyone gets to have their experience
and I'm not afraid of any emotion
because I've had them all and they're all safe.
Okay.
I have a very specific thing that was just recent and I want to know if this was adaptive
or maladaptive.
So there was a long, long phase in my life where I would go on a talk show and I want
to be great.
And then on my ride home, if I didn't hit whatever mark, you know, I would spin out
about that and I'd be very upset.
I just did a week of press in New York.
By the way, I'm gonna add, my wife is now left
to go do a week of press, and I was like sharing with her.
I don't know if this is compartmentalization or compassion.
I was like, yeah, I'm gonna go do these shows.
They're gonna be what they're gonna be.
I'm really not even gonna know about it.
If they're terrible,
I likely won't even see anyone that saw it.
I just like unplugged from the results of it.
I'm like, I'm just gonna go do it and it doesn't matter.
I'm still a dad, you know, I still have a great business.
My life is totally fine whether I shit the bed
on those or not.
I didn't really do any post-game evaluation after it
and it felt great.
And so I don't know if I am using the tools
you're talking about or if I just decided
to ignore the results.
You here would rate high in all of those, self-kindness.
You reduce the self-judgment.
There was a common humanity there of like,
humans get to make mistakes,
they get to just show up and be themselves.
That's common humanity.
Like we're all in this together.
Somebody else is sitting across from you, interviewing you,
also getting to be a human being that has good and bad days.
You didn't isolate yourself.
You talked to your partner about it and you normalized,
this is a big deal.
You were mindful.
You didn't over identify that this means
that I'm a good person or a bad person.
You nailed it.
Okay, okay, okay, good.
More of that.
In the wake of that, I was like,
God, you could really probably apply that to everything.
I would.
You're in this great opportunity
where you're like, I have all the good things.
For those who are listening
and they don't have all the good things,
and it is a big deal, I would still use the same skills.
I actually had to practice this this morning
because you guys are incredible.
Oh, thank you.
This is a big deal,
but me not using the skills that we're talking about today is only going
to make me feel bad about this.
So for my experience of today, it can be paradoxical in that this is a big deal, and I still get
to do the skills and be kind and let it be and allow it to be imperfect.
Those two opposing things can happen at the same time.
Well, you're now bringing up something
that's probably quite interesting,
which is I think most of us tend to do this work
post something and it sounds like you did it preemptively.
I'm lucky I've studied this for a long time.
And I'm not always great at it either,
but yes, the work that I have people practice,
particularly if you have a lot of anxiety,
I always kind of talk about it like a sandwich. I call it a compassion sandwich, which I know is
not that cool. But the meat of the work is facing your fears. But the bread is the before and after
of compassion when you face those fears. So you be gentle and you use these skills before you
practice compassion during and then afterwards afterwards a big piece of this work
is celebrating that you did a hard thing.
Ah, yeah, yeah, forget how you did.
You just did a hard thing.
You did a hard thing at the end of the day,
and then you can say, what did I learn?
What didn't go well?
What did?
What would I do differently?
But not from a place of like, you idiot,
but more of like, okay, interesting note to self
with more reps of this, I'll get better.
Well, now there's a part of having kids
that's really helpful and wonderful, right?
Cause when you're watching your own children,
I keep trying to tell them this.
What I'm impressed by is not whether you were good
or bad in the play.
I'm so blown away you put yourself out there.
You know what you're proud of with your kids
and it's, I don't give a shit
if they're number one at anything. I'm just blown away when they put yourself out there. You know what you're proud of with your kids and it's I don't give a shit if they're number one at anything. I'm just blown away when they put themselves out there.
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If you don't feel like it's too personal, I would love to know,
in practice, what does your pre-interview look like?
Do you have mantras?
Do you write anything?
Is it meditation?
Is it meditation?
Is it too private to you?
No, I'm an open book.
There's nothing I don't talk about.
For me, in Australia, we call it a seesaw.
I think America, you call it a teeter totter.
I think we do both.
We say both, yeah.
It's a seesaw of my purpose.
My motto for life is to love as hard as I can.
That's my whole goal in life.
So I teeter-totter between I'm just gonna love on you guys and pour love into you and then on the other side also pour
Love into me. So it's this sort of like I hope that I get to love on you guys
And then maybe someone listening will feel a sense of aha that would be great and then it like you talked about before
Where's the anxiety in my body?
Okay, it's in my chest.
All right, it's okay that it's there.
It's not dangerous.
I'm gonna let it be there.
It may or may not interrupt your session with them,
but that's okay.
It is a lot of talking to myself,
but it's more, I always think of it like,
have you ever held a baby chicken?
Boy.
I don't think so.
I don't think so.
Very fragile.
Oh, you got it, you haven't lived until you've held a baby. Oh my God, this is great advice. Get your hands on a baby chicken? Boy. I don't think so. I don't think so. Very fragile. Oh, you got it, you haven't lived until you held a baby.
Oh my God, this is great advice.
Get your hands on a baby chicken.
That's it, that's all I have to say.
Unexpected.
It's just their bones are so small.
Well, that's the thing.
Yeah.
It's like holding yourself with a baby chicken.
You wouldn't grab them and crush them
because they're fragile.
They're important, they matter.
You wouldn't want to hurt them.
And so it's a little bit of like, I'm the baby chicken, it's scary,
this is a scary thing, but it's a lot of that teeter tottering.
Okay, so since your main thrust is self compassion,
do you see it as somewhat of a universal tool
for all these many different, they're called disorders, right?
I'm not being pejorative by saying disorders, yeah? Do you see that as a thread that kind of links all these many different, they're called disorders, right? I'm not being pejorative by saying disorders, yeah?
Do you see that as a thread that kind of links all these things?
Cuz I was reading an LA Times article that you were a part of, which was-
Orthorexia.
Orthorexia.
One of the women who suffered from it,
I found fascinating that she started as OCD as a child.
So ding, ding, ding, me.
Then went into addiction, and then got sober, and then in sobriety became orthorexic.
Which is?
That's a subtype of an eating disorder.
It's sort of an obsession with the purity of food.
Or clean food.
The cleanliness of food, or the contamination of food.
So, it's about eliminating food groups,
having it being all pure or all organic,
maybe spending a lot of time with preoccupation
on preparing the foods
or having it be as uncooked as possible.
Raw, non-GMO, paleo, any one of these very popular.
Sugar-free, dairy-free.
It looks different for each person,
but that's what orthorexia is.
It's also now better diagnosed under what we call
avoidant and restrictive food intake disorder.
It's big, even here in LA it's big,
because wherever there's a culture where there's sort of
like a morality around food, like it's a good food
or a bad food or clean or it's not clean,
that's where it can get really out of control.
Yeah, I've heard different religion professors talk about this as falling so beautifully
into a religion, because it does have this underlying good, evil, bad, impure, pure.
The woman in the article found herself crying uncontrollably in the produce section of the
grocery store debating between chard and kale.
Like which one was more pure, what should she be getting?
And so you think of that taken to its nth degree,
whereas I guess like all addictions or disorders,
it's such a spectrum, I'm on this spectrum.
Like I relate to this.
I don't see it having caused any wreckage yet in my life,
and I'm certainly not in the grocery store crying yet,
and I'm not isolated from it,
but I can relate to the evaluation.
Yeah, me too.
Okay.
Is that just coincidental that she was OCD then, Attic?
They're very related.
Eating disorders and OCD have a very big crossover.
Some people even now are sort of speculating
that they're very much the same thing.
I had an eating disorder.
I treat obsessive-compulsive disorder.
I always felt like my eating disorder was a form of OCD.
It looked and felt exactly like my clients in that there was an obsession and a fear
that was intolerable.
And it was so overwhelming that I had to engage in these very repetitive,
constrictive, controlling behaviors to reduce or eliminate that discomfort.
And then I got stuck in a cycle. So, okay, that worked. I tend to manage my anxiety with that.
I'll just do more of that. And all of a sudden you've eliminated food groups, you're malnourished,
everybody in your family is worried about you, you haven't
got the energy to function, it can ruin your life.
I have to imagine it leads to isolation as well, the same way addiction does, right?
It's like, well, you're not going out to meet anyone for dinner at this point, you're not
having anyone over for dinner, you can't go to someone's house for dinner, and you're by
yourself eating your egg whites and feta, that's my current thing, egg white, feta, and elk.
Eating your egg whites and feta, that's my current thing. Egg white, feta, and elk.
Oh, the elk piece is so disturbing.
I can sort of get on for-
I know why that one's triggering.
Tell me.
Is it because Joe Rogan eats a lot of elk?
Oh no, I didn't know that.
Oh, there is a mildly political aspect to the diet stuff,
which is fascinating.
Is it like ground?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's kind of a magic, here we go, you ready?
It's magic and pure. It's super, super high, here we go, you ready? It's magic and pure.
It's super, super high protein and low fat,
but it doesn't taste low fat.
It's got a robust taste, yet it's insane amount of protein.
Like lamb maybe.
Yeah, love lamb too.
Bison, you know, anything really high, high protein
and kind of low fat that tastes good, I love.
I guess to me from the outside,
because yeah, Dax eats very specifically
and he has psoriatic arthritis,
so there's a reason for how it started,
but I do think it's gotten a little.
So that's in the article.
A lot of people that have this clean, pure diet,
to explain it to others and get the heat off of them,
they'll claim to have a bunch of allergies they don't have.
Yeah.
So like if you had read that,
you might go like,
Jesus Christ, is this seroetic arthritis thing bullshit?
Right, yeah.
This is you telling us that you don't have that condition?
No, I 1,000% had it.
I've had surgeries, I guess I could have gone that far.
I've had joints lock up and fuse
and have to get them corrected.
But it's like anything else.
Yeah, it gets sneaky.
It's very sneaky, drinking works.
Like the drug worked for a long, long time
before it stopped working.
And so even I can experience like,
oh wow, I did cut gluten out of my thing
and I feel better.
Oh, that was a good positive reward blueprint of the brain.
Yeah, but to talk about that article
you asked about the addiction piece,
I don't often see people,
not that this isn't a case for some people,
but not often do I see someone who is active in their addiction with orthorexia because
they kind of bounce against each other. But post addiction recovery where they're like,
okay, I'm gonna clean up my life, I'm gonna stop using, I'm also gonna start eating well,
I'm gonna start exercising. And then like you're talking about, then it gets a little
slippery into, well, this is another way in which I can control my exercising and then like you're talking about then it gets a little slippery into well
This is another way in which I can control my life and I feel powerful and I can manage my emotions by being preoccupied
On this thing. I see that much more than I would with an active addiction
Yeah
I'm a big fan of the word regulation like you figured out another way to regulate your internal state with something external
Which is always kind of destined for implosion
at some point, I suppose.
But, and I think this is a bit self compassionate of myself.
So like, I accept I'm an addict.
That is how this boy operates.
If I get a good result from something,
I will repeat it until it's dead.
I've accepted that's who I am.
And so instead of me trying to fight that that's who I am,
I just have to aim this crazy laser beam at things
that don't really create wreckage for me.
So yes, on the outside, you could go,
if you look at how I exercise and eat, right,
there's clearly something going on there.
I would agree.
But for me, it's like, it hasn't led to secrecy, shame,
isolation, my family doesn't care, my friends don't care.
There's no downside to it.
So like how do you feel in general about embracing your this way and just trying to figure out
an outlet for that that doesn't lead to the shame and the guilt?
100%.
The most common and best self-compassion question is, does this help the long-term me?
Is this good for me?
Is this what I need to be able to make the next step? Whatever
that looks like, the next step today or the next step in 10 years, whatever that might
be. So if it's working for you and it's working for your relationships and it's not causing
you distress, it's effective. And if it's effective, go for it. What's right for one
person might not be right for the other person. I always love watching the Olympics and being
like, what does that person think versus what does this person think? Because their
self-talk is going to be different and what works for one person might not work
for the other and so everyone gets to pick. You see a lot of athletes have a
lot of neuroses, a lot of compulsions and routines and superstitions and again we
would say it's working for them. Who am I to tell somebody what's right or wrong for them?
Is it working for them in their goal
or is it working against them?
And that's the question.
And yeah, and are they miserable in the pursuit of this
or are they happy?
Some of them are.
I've heard interviews where they'll say,
I don't even like this sport.
This is the goal I set for myself
and I'll do whatever I have to and then I'll reassess.
And so I think that's where we all get to give them
permission to do what they want.
Doesn't mean it's healthy.
Right.
I have a question about eating disorders really quick
before we get fully off of that.
What are you supposed to do if you notice
that in somebody else?
We know for one thing that telling them to do something different probably doesn't work.
Here's a question.
If you had an eating disorder, what would you want them to say to you?
Well, I guess the goal if you're in that is getting away with it would be my guess.
So I think anyone saying anything would be a problem, probably.
Well, all we can do is come from a place of loving kindness.
So for me, it would be, hey, I'm noticing ABC,
I'm noticing the bison or the L.
Because you're buying a lot of bison.
I'm noticing this is happening, how is that working for you?
Is there other things going on for you?
How can I support you?
Because that's where they're gonna be receptive
to your help.
Whereas if I came in and was like,
you're eating too much bison and I don't like it
and I'm worried about you and it's getting compulsive
and that's me assuming my ideas for what's right for you.
No one wants to hear that.
So it's asking, coming from a place of care
and genuine interest in their wellness
and having a conversation.
I could hear it in just the way you were saying,
I was almost waiting to hear you also say like,
how do you feel on this?
You know, like, how's it going?
Yeah, the thing about eating disorders,
I had anorexia and my husband used to say,
you know, I used to love when your body looked this way
compared to this way, it meant nothing.
Of course.
It didn't even seep in 1% of my body.
In my mind, I was like, that sounds terrifying.
That's all I could think of is,
oh, that's okay for you to think.
But in my mind, I would be a complete disgusting person.
You could have told me that all day.
You're right, cause if someone said to me,
you look much better with boogers hanging out of your nose.
I'd be like, well, great, you're a one-off, that's nuts.
I know for sure that doesn't look good.
And for you, it's as real as boogers in your nose
that you would be X-white.
It's just not about anyone else.
It is how you are viewing yourself.
So you wouldn't even say like, it's a one-off.
You'd just be like, I don't like it.
It'd be easy to reject most often eating disorders are
Partially about your body but also nothing to do with your body. Anyway, it's about how you feel your identity
There's so many other components to it in some cases. There were times where I'm like, yeah, probably I would look better
But that would require me to do things. I'm willing to do. You'd be unhappy doing the things.
I was terrified. It was horrible.
The pop culture thing you hear a lot is that, yeah, eating disorders are about control,
or the anti-correlated to moments when you feel totally out of control.
We don't know. Yes, that is very much a core theme in eating disorder recovery,
is your relationship with control. But there's so many other impactful pieces of it, whether you have BDD, body
dysmorphic disorder, because if that's the case that needs to be treated and
looked at as well. Is there any trauma or an abuse in your family? Your
relationship with your own emotions and your body is a big piece. How you
actually can be in your body is a big piece of it as well. The societal impact of people being praised for being thin their whole life,
there's so many things that need to be looked at in eating disorder recovery.
Okay, I have been defensive.
I find that the eating disorder commenters,
and I don't know what percentage they make up of the community of people with eating disorders
who are engaged in the fight.
No, they have an eating disorder or are in recovery, I would imagine.
If we have someone on the show mention a diet or we did a show that was two different friends,
one was 317, one was 225, they were racing to 270 for cash and prizes,
we'll get lots of, you're perpetuating diet culture.
The reason I'm defensive and angry by that very predictable common outcome is like, I'm an addict.
I'm not on people's social media pages
who are enjoying drinking and doing drugs
in the way they do and saying you're promoting a disease.
I have a disease, they don't.
It's not their responsibility to be making sure
they don't trigger my disease.
Like that is all on me.
So my issue is like all the people that are screaming
that diet culture is being perpetuated
when I just think there's no marketing campaign
like the booze marketing campaign,
but I'm not mad at those people.
70% of people are drinking fine.
So help me understand why that's happening
and how could I be more compassionate?
I totally understand what you're saying by the way.
I think that the piece there,
and I think it's often more placed on females,
is there is a very heavy emphasis
where women are told the way their body should look.
And I think there's a rebellion against that.
And I think that's what it is.
Now, that doesn't mean I would go on
and post on social media about it.
I tend to prefer to advocate one-on-one
than to advocate in
the comment section.
But I think that a lot of the time people are trying to advocate for the fact that when
I was a teenager, I don't know how old you are, but being stick thin was really cool.
Having no butt and no breasts were the thing you were going for.
And I think people were really pissed off at that because now, you know, bodies should be curvy
and the Kardashians and that's the newer body thing.
But back then, I think people are mad
at the expectations that are put on people
and therefore they're expressing that on the internet.
That's a key, the way you just phrased it,
and I agree that is what people are saying.
And obviously we are motivated by our culture
and our society, but put on you versus I put it on myself.
I hear a lot of comments, we're gonna get gendered.
I've had this long standing opinion,
it's like women aren't responding to what men want.
Women are responding to what women consume and want.
And men are responding to what men consume and want.
So like, I'm getting really muscly.
If you pulled women, that's not even the desired state.
But I'm a boy trying to be a man
and I'm responding to whatever all the men are saying
is most malely.
So like, when you say stick thin was popular,
I acknowledge that.
There's like the Kate Moss trajectory.
But I don't believe that was driven by men.
They're not buying fashion magazines.
They don't even know these supermodels exist.
That's not the industry.
It's a female-driven industry
as there's a male-driven supplement industry.
And so this notion of we have to look this way
to get a mate, I think it lacks a little responsibility.
I think we gotta look this way to be accepted
by our group, which is female.
Well, all people.
Yeah, boys are doing boys.
No, no, no, it's not even like I need to look this way
to get a mate, it's like I need to look this way
to be attractive in general in this life.
To be worthy.
And to be worthy and lovable.
And not lovable necessarily from a partner
just in the world.
Sure.
So it's not really about like,
well, men want this and women want this.
It's just society is telling us
that we need to look this way to be accepted.
And I think it depends on the person.
There's a lot of people in the eating disorder community
that aren't angry about it too.
We hear different perspectives and the loud, the creaky.
Squeaky wheel gives the oil, yeah.
But I think too, from my clients and what I do understand
is there are people where their set point is.
Set point is like where you naturally are
when you're not on a diet, where your body lands.
Their body isn't in that body and they're advocating for bodies being beautiful in whatever set point that they're in.
And I think that is a huge piece we're talking about is celebrating bodies in any way we can.
And I think it's also a part of recovery. Sometimes people in different stages
of recovery become advocates. For someone who had an eating disorder, I don't talk about
eating disorders that much in my advocacy, on my podcast, in my work. I'm at a different
stage in my recovery to where I have this other mission. And I'm not saying that those
people will move on from their mission, maybe they're on it, but I know for me there was
a stage where I was really advocating,
and now it's not as important.
I so relate to that.
The first five years I was sober,
I could have told you anybody in show business
that was either sober or in an active addiction,
and now I just don't know.
But yeah, I was like, I need to know who was this
and who was that, and a lot of people get an impulse
in their first year of sobriety to write a book about it.
You feel very motivated.
I've just experienced this huge shift, so my next thing sobriety to write a book about it. You feel very motivated. I've just experienced this huge shift.
So my next thing is I'm going to write a book about it.
I'm going to proselytize and be vigilant about this.
That's it.
With any condition, once you've been through it and you've seen how much it's
decimated your life, you're mad.
And you're mad at whoever and wherever that could have stemmed from.
You know, some people who aren't on the internet might be in therapy, like so
mad at their mom or so mad at their dad. And that's where they're really focusing. So I
think usually when people are mad, it's a response from how much suffering they had.
You and I are now both in a very interesting position scientifically, which is these GLP-1
drugs are going to impact both of these things, addiction and eating disorders, in very interesting ways,
potentially unforeseeable for a while.
Let me just say anecdotally what I've noticed
is a lot of people that I know that are on those
who are normal moderate drinkers stop drinking.
Like, they're just not even interested in anything.
I'm like, well, that's very interesting.
In our book of AA, the big book,
it says science hasn't yet given us a cure,
which opens the
door to maybe one day it will. And so that's just really interesting.
It is.
How is it impacting your line of work?
Not a lot.
It's not?
No. I mean, there are some, of course, who take it, but again, the work that I do is
very much focused on management of anxiety, the practice of compassion. I basically teach
people how to face their fear.
That's what I do for a living.
I do wonder though with the anxiety piece,
it does seem, and for everyone we've heard,
to just quiet the chatter,
whether it's food chatter or whatever.
I do wonder how it would affect people's anxiety
just in that way of like the rumination
or they're not able to like turn something off
or even OCD when it's these impulses that you can't shut off. I wonder if it would quiet that. I don't know.
I don't know either.
Yeah, none of us know. We don't know yet.
You just have to be uncertain.
It's kind of a fascinating time though.
Yeah, it is.
In many ways.
So how did you get into recovery? What pushed you?
I live in America, but I am Australian. I'm American too.
What age were you when you moved here?
I was 19.
And I came here just to go skiing.
And I met my husband who is from Michigan.
No way!
Oh my gosh, I can't believe it.
Yes, and we got married and there you have it.
After we'd been married for a couple of years,
I was so deep in my eating disorder
and I was planning a trip home to Australia.
And I had a little meltdown because the menu on the airplane was not loading onto the internet.
And I needed to see this menu to determine whether I would gain massive amounts of weight
on this airplane.
That's where I was at.
And I had a meltdown and he gently said, I think it's time we get you some help.
And to be honest, I was so relieved.
I was so relieved.
Some people with eating disorders like absolutely not.
But for me, I was just like, thank you for acknowledging
that I cannot do this anymore.
So I went to therapy and she made me eat a lot of burritos.
And this is where I got into self-compassion.
This was back in the day when you had an iPod,
and you would download things like podcasts onto the iPads.
I would download a podcast of Tara Brock.
Do you know Tara Brock?
Yes, I love her radical acceptance.
And the therapist had given me a rule
that I was not allowed to go to the gym anymore,
which made me very mad.
It was very, very hard for me,
because that was one of the compulsions I did.
So she agreed I was allowed to take walks,
so I'd put Tara Brock in my ears,
and I would just walk and walk and walk,
still compulsively, right, like 16 hours of walk.
What's the point of doing it
if you're not gonna do it?
But something about that shifted
in that I would be listening to her,
she would be talking about compassion,
and that we're all equal,
that you're neither good nor bad, that you're no better or less than other people.
And slowly the message got in.
So that was huge for me.
But no, I would go back and she would say, okay, now you have to put cheese in your burrito
and now you have to put extra sour cream on your burrito.
Wow.
And so slowly you just adapted.
Yeah. extra sour cream on your burrito. Wow, and so slowly you just adapted. Yeah, it took a lot of work,
but to be honest, I was lucky
because I wanted to have a good life.
We would go out for like Friday night drinks
and I would have a drink, I would have a margarita,
and then I would feel like crap
and everyone else seemed to be so happy
and I felt guilty and I felt scared.
It just took up so much of my life
and I knew there was something better than that.
Yeah, I relate to that in addiction,
which is like, it's just so consuming
that your real life's playing in the background
of your head.
It's like you're walking through everything,
you're experiencing everything,
but what you're thinking in real time is like,
okay, I have three pills in my pocket
and I'll go to the bathroom
and then I'll be able to put one in
and then I think one fell out of my chair,
I gotta get that before someone else.
You're doing all the things, but the preoccupation is really what your all-day existence is.
It is.
It's exhausting and there's no joy.
And you're missing life.
Yeah, I have a photo of me at like a El Torito or something and I have a margarita and my
husband took it and he's like, look how beautiful you look.
And I look at that picture now and I'm like,
I remember as you took that photo,
I was counting calories.
Wow.
Wow.
Yeah.
I do not remember the joy of that at all.
And just faking the whole thing.
Yes.
So you don't get busted.
Yes.
Well, this is where I have so much compassion
for folks with eating disorders because,
and I've said this before, forgive me,
but if you told me I had to have a line of cocaine
at 8 a.m., then a line of cocaine at 1 p.m.,
and a line of cocaine at 8 p.m., no fucking way.
Like the notion that you guys have to three times a day eat,
and that's the issue, I think is heroic
of the many addictions or disorders.
I mean, that's the one where you have to dance
with the devil.
Yes.
Absence isn't an option.
No, you can't just stay away from food.
And it is this dance on either side.
So you have to eat, but you're not allowed to binge
because that would be a disordered behavior,
but you're also not allowed to restrict,
but you also have to learn to trust your body's satiation,
which you have no idea what that looks like.
And so it's this constant dance
of trying to figure that out.
It takes time.
Yeah, fuck, that seems so hard.
And it's funny because you can be recovered
for a very, very long time, which I have been,
and get a stomach flu and throw up a bunch.
And then there's this little voice in your brain
that goes, this is really good.
Yeah.
And then you have to be like,
oh, bring in the tools, let's go.
You have to be so ready for that.
Aware.
Especially at the beginning of recovery.
Now I'm like, oh hun, I got you, you don't have to worry.
But at the beginning, there had to be
some pretty systematic strategies to intervene with
when you had a stomach flu.
Or how about, I don't think I have disordered eating, but also I think pretty normal is we have these periods of total gorging, like holidays.
Everyone's gonna do it. We've not made one dessert. My mom starts cooking like December 10th for the snacks, you know, and it's like 8,000 options.
Those must be really challenging. For sure. And I think going back to what you were saying about how angry people can be,
something that is so easy for some people is so hard for us because Aunt Jean is talking about how she's over eight,
which makes you think you've over eight. And then Aunt Dorothy is saying, oh, I feel like a big fat pig.
And now you're like, am I a big fat pig? Thanksgiving, everyone's like, like oh you've looked great or you've gained weight or you've lost weight. You're surrounded by this constant you're doing
it right or you're doing it wrong and the messaging of the eating disorder is being fed to you all the
time. Yes. Thinking now coming back to your question I think that's why people are mad. I remember if
someone was like oh I feel so fat that used to be so hard for me. Or they'd be like, oh, I've got this great diet.
And I'd be like, you have no idea how hard it is
for me to hear that.
Yeah, yeah.
That could so trigger me back into behaviors.
It's a slow chipping away of behaviors.
I haven't weighed myself in 15 years for that reason.
You have to chip away.
Like if someone told me I had to start weighing myself,
my anxiety, I notice it right away. I remember when I was pregnant, the scariest part of being pregnant was that I might have to chip away. Like if someone told me I had to start weighing myself, my anxiety, I notice it right away.
I remember when I was pregnant,
the scariest part of being pregnant
was that I might have to get weighed.
I would do a blind weigh in every time.
I'd be like, do not tell me I'm recovering
from an eating disorder and they'd go,
I got you, don't worry.
I wanna applaud Monica
because I think Monica has enough self-awareness
about herself in her own ruminations and powers
of obsession. I have a lot of anxiety.
That Monica, to my knowledge,
has never had an eating issue,
but doesn't weigh herself preemptively.
Like I know I could become obsessed.
I think it's smart for me just not to see it.
I mean, I've had like some tiny slippery slopes
that have been enough that are like,
ah, I think that's something I just can't do.
Well, that's an act of compassion, right?
You know yourself, you know what's right for you,
and you're willing to hold that boundary
for your long-term wellbeing, that's perfect.
Okay, so anxiety, as much as we use the word,
I think it might be useful to actually
kind of talk about anxiety,
and talk about anxiety versus anxiety disorder.
What's just like a cursory, if we were taking anxiety 101,
what could you tell us about anxiety?
Well, anxiety isn't actually bad.
Everybody needs it.
If you're crossing the street and there is a bus coming your way,
your brain detects danger and sends out a bunch of anxiety hormones
so that you know that you need to get off the road as soon as possible.
That's a good thing.
And we're constantly checking for danger too.
So as I came in here, without my even knowledge, I'm sure my brain did a little zoom through the room,
like, is anyone weird in here?
And is the roof going to fall on my head?
And your brain is constantly checking.
Maybe, by the way. We can't guarantee that it won't.
That's OK. But we're constantly checking for danger as a way to stay alive.
And if there are danger presents, anxiety presents and encourages us to fight, flight, freeze,
or fawn.
That's the four Fs.
So that's not a problem.
But as we've evolved over time, for some lucky ones of us who have genetically been set up for anxiety,
our brains tend to go over and above looking for dangers now to look at like
just in case fears. So someone without anxiety comes in, looks good, sit down, I'm
good. For someone with an anxiety disorder, your brain starts to go, but
what if the roof does fall on our head and what if Monica isn't a nice person?
What if Dax doesn't like me?
You're like now creating multiple steps.
Yeah, in different areas.
So different disorders have different fears.
So if I had an eating disorder, maybe I'm like,
what did the cappuccino I have?
Is it going to make me gain weight?
Or is if I had social anxiety, I'd be like,
do they think I'm lame?
If I had obsessions like you had with OCD,
it might be, will I lose control and kill both of you right now? do they think I'm lame? If I had obsessions like you had with OCD,
it might be, will I lose control
and kill both of you right now?
It depends on where your brain goes.
But the disordered piece is when that response
impacts your functioning,
starts to impact your ability to enjoy your day,
that there's a degree of distress.
Well, yeah, because what I really, really enjoyed
learning from Allegra was the difference
between OCD and OCPD.
Yes.
Such a clear distinction between if you're straightening up your house methodically,
you ultimately agree that's the right decision.
You do think that's a virtue that you're, you know.
It aligns with your values.
It aligns with your values.
Well, it depends on the function.
We always assess function.
So when I finish seeing clients
for the day, I tidy. Not because I'm doing it from a place of anxiety. It's very soothing for me to
feel like I'm finishing off the day. I don't have to think about anything. I might just potter around
and fuss with things. Whereas if I was doing it because I felt such anxiety that I couldn't
move on to my evening or that if the house wasn't tidy,
bad things might happen to my children.
That's a whole different thing.
I read something else you wrote.
If we do things perfectly,
people will be less upset at us, experience less adversity.
Yeah.
Also, I was listening to you had a guest on your podcast
talking about social anxiety.
And again, there's like these pop culture understandings
of this versus what it is, OCD versus OCPD.
And then I would think, yeah, in general,
we would regard social anxiety as being shyness.
No.
Not at all, please dispel that.
So there are all kinds of humans, none are right.
Some are introverts, some are extroverts,
some are shy, some are really outspoken.
And any of those can have social anxiety.
Social anxiety is the fear of being judged.
In fact, some people believe that social anxiety is more of a shame disorder than an anxiety disorder.
The fear that you're not good enough or that you're bad.
Shame can be a very painful component of the disorder,
but typically it's the fear of being judged by other people.
Now, for some people with social anxiety,
they could come and do this
and have not an ounce of social anxiety,
but put them in a party or at a networking event
or to speak on stage and uh-uh, no way.
Whereas some of my patients go on the red carpet
and put on a show and speak in front of millions of people,
but sitting across from someone at a date
is terrifying to them.
So it depends on the person
and it depends on the circumstances.
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And again, it kind of starts overlapping a little bit with OCD, which is the guest you had on.
She was saying like, before she goes to a social event,
she'll start compulsively checking that her face isn't red armpit sweat,
checking if she smells.
Yes. That to me is like, well, that's the compulsion, right?
There's some obsession I'll be excluded or I'll be judged
or I'm not good enough to be there.
And then the compulsion is like, what is my checklist
of things that might alienate me?
Yeah, so there's something also to know about this.
So that can be a symptom of social anxiety,
the fear that you would smell and therefore would be judged
socially because of it. There is actually another diagnosis called olfactory reference
syndrome where people's core fear are that they smell. That is the only part of their
condition and they spend a lot of time obsessing and compulsing over whether they smell, do
people notice them, asking a lot of reassurance seeking. So that could bleed into a different disorder as well.
I've been asked as we all have like,
do I smell or do you smell or does my breath smell?
And I'm not thinking that they might possibly
have a disorder that that's on their mind all the time.
The thing to take note of is repetition
with all these conditions.
If you're having a particularly stinky day,
you might ask, do I smell? But if you're noticing that person asking it repetitively,
that's where we're looking more at a degree of disorder.
Can I add in for fun, if someone steps out of the shower
and they say, do I smell?
It might be a red flag.
Your podcast, Your Anxiety Toolkit is wonderful,
and you cover so many different topics on there.
Do you have a favorite guest?
Yeah, I have a couple. Tara Baraka has been on my podcast.
Oh, amazing.
Was that so wonderful for you in full circle?
It was like a career highlight. I was traveling for a conference to Washington and I reached
out to her and I said, I will literally take 10 minutes if you've got it and I will make
a donation because she has an Insight Meditation Center
and she said yes.
That was such a wonderful, like literally,
the person who helped me recover, it was such a moment.
Can I ask what your anxiety level was
approaching that interview?
My anxiety was that I was gonna go to the wrong location.
Actually, that was my anxiety here today as well.
What if I just show up and I'm standing outside someone's gate
and I'm not even at the right place?
But no, actually, it just felt so right.
It was so good.
But my other favorite episode was my husband.
Oh.
Because he had his own anxiety disorder
that he was working through.
And he bravely came on and shared about how he was working
through his own panic disorder on airplanes.
And it was just cool.
Not to derail us totally, but I just know so many people
who are so afraid of flying.
Do you have a two minute way to get people past that?
You have a 90 second cure for that?
How fast can I talk?
But you know what I mean, are there any tools?
Because it's debilitating for people.
It depends on the fear.
So if the fear is that the plane will crash, it might be around some psychoeducation of
the safety of a plane and helping them to understand what planes do and how they function.
I don't feel like that helps them.
I know, I've always tried that.
There's that group and then there are those who just simply have panic disorder.
And that's that they're afraid they'll have a panic attack on a plane.
Oh.
So that's different.
Often people say they're afraid of planes, but they're actually afraid of panicking.
Yeah, interesting.
I can way more relate to that category.
Yeah, and he was that.
He was more afraid that if I get on a plane, I can't get off the plane.
And if I can't get off the plane, I'll panic.
It's almost a claustrophobia adjacent.
And it's so common.
Panic is the fear of panic.
Wow, yeah.
That's so true. That's what it is.
How circular is that?
Oh my God. Panic is the fear of panic.
And panic is terrifying.
It's 10 out of 10.
You feel like you're gonna die.
You feel like you've left your body.
So I don't blame anybody
for not wanting to have a panic attack.
But believe it or not,
as someone who's had lots of panic attacks,
the best thing you can do is let it happen.
Do nothing about it at all.
And that sounds very easy and it is simple,
but it's hard at the same time,
is allow that panic to rise and fall.
And with each time you panic,
you'll build mastery over panic. And interestingly,
as you build mastery, your panic gets smaller and smaller. So you think that letting it
come will blow your head off, but it's actually the opposite.
Would I be right to guess that it's the fighting it that is the fuel of it?
100%. What you resist persists.
Wow.
And it's knowing it. Oh, this is what it is. It's a panic attack. I had them for a while.
I just thought I was dying every time until many doctors
were like, you're fine.
You probably should go to therapy.
And I was like, oh, OK.
And then, yeah.
Blah, blah.
Like.
But it is so scary because you're like,
what if I have one while I'm?
I mean, at the beginning, I was starting to babysit for them.
I was like, well, what if I'm holding the baby
and I have one in the car?
And I had had one in the car. So it does start perpetuating and get really crazy. But once you recognize, like, well, what if I'm holding the baby and I have one or in the car? And I had had one in the car.
So it does start perpetuating and get really crazy.
But once you recognize, like, that's what it is that's happening.
Panic attacks are not dangerous.
And when you can wrap your head around that, I always sort of make a joke.
But I have literally had to ride panic attacks in this exact way.
Is you just starfish, like you lay down and you open your palms
and you're like, bring
it on, let's go.
Let's go motherfucker, let's party.
Let's do this.
Let's do this.
And you wait it out.
Again, a lot of this is mindfulness skills.
So it's bringing your attention to the present, practicing non-judgment about the panic attack.
Like, this is neither good nor bad, it just is.
I'm not broken because of this.
Did I go over time?
Nine seconds.
No, that's perfect.
And people talk about that with addiction too, right? You've got to ride a wave of an urge. I'm not broken because of this. Did I go over time? No, that's perfect.
And people talk about that with addiction too, right?
You've got to ride a wave of an urge.
Yeah.
So it's very similar.
You're probably reticent to give these kind of hard,
fast rules, but I think a lot of people are dancing
on the spectrum of a lot of these things.
We had this great catahoccus.
She was a sex therapist and she defined something
in a way for me
that was so crystal clear and so helpful. I was thinking, what if people have sexual
trauma and then they want to explore that sexual trauma in different ways as they're
adults? Who are we to say that it's wrong for them? Like they were dealt this hand.
And she said, oh, it's very simple. Whatever your sexual proclivity or tendency is, if
it doesn't result in shame or secrecy,
then you're golden.
I was like, oh, so clear cut.
Thank you, that's helpful to people.
So is there anything we can say about people
who are on this spectrum of diet and exercise?
Are there things, are there red flags
that we should be aware of?
Are there things that we should take account of and assess?
Yeah, so my job as a clinician we should be aware of, are there things that we should take account of and assess? Yeah.
So my job as a clinician is actually
to always assess medical first, not mental.
And so if I have a client who is of healthy weight
and isn't doing harm to themselves or others,
then my job is actually to just help them
explore what's best for them.
My job is not here to sit across from you and say,
you have a disorder and you must rid yourself
of all disorders.
You need 2,200 calories a day.
Yes, that's not my personal experience of my job.
However, if there is someone sitting across from me
who is medically in trouble, they're malnourished,
they haven't had a period in a very long time,
to the degree in which their medical professionals are concerned. It could be just anything that's
starting to impact their short-term and long-term wellness. I will raise a concern and say, I'm
worried. What can I do? What are you willing to do? What would feel safe for you? Can I bring in
other team members and have a discussion first?
There are a small degree of people who, if they keep going,
they're going to have a heart attack.
I've had those clients.
They're so malnourished.
They're putting so much stress on their internal organs.
A heart attack is around the corner.
That's different, where we may look at hospitalization
and so forth.
But I think there's so much beauty in first exploring
people and their own values and understanding
what is this pattern, what are these behaviors
actually doing for you first?
Before I rip them from you?
Yeah, yeah.
I wanna know how they're helping you.
And then we can start to talk about alternatives
and you get to decide.
I like that approach.
I want you to rid me of something.
I think.
But the interesting thing is, it's funny you say that,
is as soon as I come at it from an angle of how does this
help you, how does it not help you,
you're more likely to say I'm willing to trust you
with my problem.
Of course.
Whereas if I'm across from you being like,
you've got to stop doing this thing, yikes.
You've already got enough anxiety.
You don't need any more.
Control's a huge element of it, and now you're telling me
that your solution is to control me,
and I already am feeling out of control,
then it's just gonna accelerate this thing.
Yeah, this is big for teens, right?
You got a teen who's got an anxiety disorder,
or a mood disorder, or an eating disorder.
They don't wanna give their parents
the satisfaction of changing things.
So it's saying, what are you willing to do?
What would be better for you?
Instead of the mom and dad coming in and being like,
we want you to do this.
It's so much more effective.
It builds a sense of self-mastery
when they come up with their own solution.
I guess I have stereotypes.
Is this something that affects younger people
more than older people?
Or is it all pretty much across the board?
There's as many people.
Anxiety or?
I guess you just had brought up a teenager
with an eating disorder and that seems
the one I'm probably thinking feels like
they would be most vulnerable to that at that age.
Very much.
I actually didn't get my eating disorder until I was 17,
really ramped up when I moved to America.
But it wasn't because of American culture.
It's because I had nothing else to define me.
I was alone here with a husband who was working a lot
and I didn't have a visa to work.
And what was I gonna do?
I felt so powerful when I was on a diet.
I felt so in control and better than other people.
It was such a drug.
People would say you're so disciplined
and I'd be like, I know.
But inside I was completely miserable.
This has nothing to do with any of these topics
although maybe it will dovetail into it.
But I'm impressed that your relationship
weathered you moving and leaving everything for that person.
Because if I were you and I was scared and I was lonely
and I was unmoored and I didn't know my identity,
I would be so hypervigilantly evaluating this person
I had done all this for.
I just feel like I would be scrutinizing them
to a degree that would not be natural.
Yeah, we've navigated that.
It's impressive.
My husband and I are very different,
but he gives the world's best hugs.
If there is a competition for the world's best hugs,
it is him.
He and I need to have a hug on.
Yeah, Dax is pretty good. Maybe it's a Michigan thing.
I was like, oh my God, maybe it is.
The mitten, it has something to do with the mitten.
Oh wow.
You'll have to give me one after this,
and I will compare and contrast.
I'll give you the proper one.
And I'll give you a little like out of five.
Look at it. You love the five scale. It makes me uncomfortable. after this and I will compare and contrast and I'll give you a little like out of five.
Look at it.
You love the five scale.
It makes me uncomfortable.
I want everything on a 10.
I think for him, there's a safety there with that.
So even though it was so scary
and something I would never wish on anybody,
I was so young.
I was married when I was 21.
We had actually lived apart on opposite ends of the world
longer than we had been together on the day we got married.
So we'd spent more time apart than together.
Well, you guys made this.
Wow, that's incredible.
This is low odds, everything you're saying.
It is, it is.
So I don't really know, but you know,
I say to friends, marriage is not easy.
It's mostly just the decision to stay married.
That person has to be enough, you're a safe person,
and it's mostly a decision, right?
And we just keep making the decision.
Yeah.
I'm gonna repeat this too many times at this point,
but our first therapy session between my wife and I,
which was months into dating, he wanted to meet with me
first, because he was her therapist, so we had like
a session, but he was sober, which made me trust him.
And he's like, so tell me this whole thing.
And I said, well, basically we were dating,
then we went away and did a movie together
and they did not wanna hire us
because we were dating.
And I told one of the producers,
who's one of my best friends,
I said, listen, I'm gonna promise you,
under no circumstance will we break up during this movie.
I don't give a shit what happens.
I'm promising you I'm not gonna do that.
And now we're home and I'm like,
now we're back in real life and I don't know.
And he goes, that's an interesting phrase,
you're in real life.
Because actually, that was real life.
Yes.
Committing no matter what, that was real life.
And I was like, whoa.
Mind blown.
Wow, that is really it, huh?
I can't believe how simple that was,
but it kind of blew my mind.
Yeah.
Tell me the title of your book.
I wrote The Self-Compassion Workbook for OCD.
Okay, The Self-Compassion Workbook for OCD.
If you don't have OCD,
does that book still have tools for compassion?
It does, but I'm in the process of writing
the every person version.
It's way more sassy.
That's very much almost like a textbook.
Publishers asked me to write it as a clinical workbook
for people who don't have access to treatment.
This is more sassy in daily life stuff.
Okay, great.
That's the problem is like be more compassionate
to yourself, that's easily said.
But I think one of the great parts of AA
is simply there are actionable steps you take
so that you're engaged.
It's not in your mind.
Even if it's not in your mind.
Even if it's bullshit, we figured out ways
to give you actions that help reinforce
what's going on in your brain.
Yeah, there are actions, and it's also today,
like you guys now know the areas,
and just that awareness sometimes is enough.
Even if you don't move to self-kindness,
you just catch yourself in the negative. That can be great too. This is so important. When you criticize yourself and
judge yourself, it actually ramps up your nervous system. It prompts your body. When you're mean,
you're like, you idiot. If I sat across from you or you even said it to yourself and we put heart
rate monitors on you and we did an evaluation of your brain,
your whole body goes into anxiety
and a lot of nervous system ramping up.
So think about, if you're going to do something hard,
do you need that extra horrible feeling?
Right, are you setting yourself up?
Yeah, it's already hard enough.
Don't make it worse by beating yourself up.
Physiologically, our body does add more suffering
when we act that way.
Well, Kimberly, this was delightful,
and I'm so glad that you got to come in and talk to us,
and I'll very much be looking forward
to Self-Compassion for Lay People,
non-OCD version. Me too, all the people.
And everyone should check out your anxiety toolkit.
Your husband and...
Tara Brock. Yeah, Tara.
That's exciting, I'm definitely gonna listen to that.
Yeah, good starter episodes.
Well, I hope we get to see you again.
Maybe when you finish your book, you can come back.
Thank you, that would be great.
Thank you so much for having me, what a treat.
I wanna tell you, you did a great job,
but I also feel like that might feed it.
Yeah. Yeah.
In Australia, we say tickets.
If you're full of yourself, everyone goes, tickets.
Oh my God. Like you're selling tickets
for yourself. Oh, I like that.
Sorry, don't give me tickets.
Don't give me tickets.
All right, well thank you so much, Kimberly.
Stay tuned for the fact check.
It's where the party's at.
Company engaged.
Your shirt kinda matches my shoes.
I'll say, should I put those boots on
so I can tie this whole thing together a little better?
No, I wouldn't want you to mess them up.
Oh. Stretch them out.
Okay.
Well, don't you think you-
Well, my feelings are a little hurt,
but we can continue.
Oh, okay.
Do you think you would-
You can try my shoes on, even if you ruin them.
Well, here's the thing.
I don't think I'm really at risk of stretching yours out.
You're not, but you could have a toe fungus.
Oh, never.
I have a toenail fungus.
I think I might too.
I've opened up a two front war on it though, finally.
How are you handling this?
I have this crazy theory.
I mean, I only believe in this theory like 1%.
Okay.
This would be very clear about
how much I think this is plausible.
You know this about me.
I have a toenail that's dead.
Yeah.
Big toenail on my left foot.
From a motorcycle accident years ago, 13 years ago, right?
Yeah.
And so this is grotesque.
In fact, this whole podcast is becoming so grotesque
because I talked about an oily evac the other day.
We always talk about stuff like that.
I know, but it's getting worse.
But at any rate, I do have this disgusting toe.
Everyone should know this dark side of me.
And it doesn't grow.
I discovered it because, you may remember this detail,
I used to take Kristin on her birthday
to get manicure pedicures.
Yes.
And I would join.
Yeah.
And I would get a pedicure.
And I'd always do the same blue.
I love this blue, it's a gumball blue.
Audi made a A4 in it.
It's gorgeous.
Well, it's like July 17th.
I'm like planning tomorrow's trip.
And I just realized, I don't know how I missed this.
All the blue was gone from the year before
on all of my toenails, except for my left big toe.
It was solid blue.
And I was like, oh, that toenail's not growing.
Mind you, I noticed it looked weird,
but I assumed it was still growing.
It hadn't grown.
This was probably an eight year ago realization.
Yikes.
And I use a Dremel tool and I grind it.
I do all these things.
Well, the last, so bad.
The last time recently I got in it with the Dremel
and I took it down really far,
I noticed under the toenail, like in my nail bed,
it's like black.
Okay. So then I, listen how crazy this theory is. the toenail in my nail bed, it's like black. Okay?
So then I, listen how crazy this theory is.
Okay.
So then I was like, maybe I don't have
psoriatic arthritis or autoimmune thing.
Maybe I've had this fucking, like a toe infection
under my toenail for the last 13 years
and it's what's been causing all my ailments.
And once I launched that theory, I'm like, we must,
I either need to remove, okay, so I did something crazy
that the kids watched the other day.
Okay.
This is nuts.
So my dad, it was embarrassing.
I took a safety pin and I heated it up in a candle,
and I put like 20 holes
throughout the toenail and then I doused it all
in rubbing alcohol, hoping to kill the fungus in there.
Oh my God.
And my kids were watching this whole operation.
Dax, can't you just go to the doctor?
I can't, I can't seem to find the time.
Yes, you can.
I can't.
Something that's like destroying your immune system,
think about how well you would have done
on the cognitive test if you didn't have this fungus.
I can't, yeah, it's probably best
that I wasn't at my peak.
If I would've been bragging,
I brag so much just with my half-coagulation.
You didn't, you did a good job.
But can you, like, you really should go to the doctor.
I can't go to the doctor.
Why?
I know.
Don't be that person. I am against that person. Of course, you really should go to the doctor. I can't go to the doctor. Why? I know. Don't be that person.
I am against that person.
Of course, you should be.
I am.
It's not, cause I don't wanna see that.
Let me put it this way.
If the doctor came over, I'm not asking for that.
That's not my expectation.
I'm not that entitled.
If the doctor came over between records,
I'd let him probe my whole body. that entitled. If the doctor came over between records,
I'd let him probe my whole body.
I'm not afraid in that masculine way.
It's when will I have time to drive to Beverly Hills
between now and December?
Because the calendar is not,
and it's been nonstop for about five weeks.
It's nonstop and you can find the time.
Like let's be realistic.
Yeah, someone was selling a 1986 911 Turbo
for $4,000 in Marina Del Rey.
Somehow I would figure out how to get over there
in that time window.
So I agree.
Yeah, you can go and you should.
I should, but I was like, go or just put a bunch
of holes in it.
Did it fix it?
I have a toenail fungus spray.
This is, my star meter just went down to zero.
Brad Pitt doesn't have a fungus spray.
Yes he does, he probably does.
You think he has fungus?
I don't think so.
Okay, hold on, I'm gonna look up.
Does Brad Pitt have fungus?
I mean, okay, hold on. I'm gonna look up.
Does Brad Pitt have fungus?
Ha!
Okay, so I then, I left my fungal spray
and on the Nashville trip somewhere.
I don't even know.
How often do you spray it?
I'm streaky.
I remember four nights in a row
and then I forget for two months.
I'm bad at it.
Interesting.
So, but it's part of your, like,
technically it's part of your routine.
Well, once I started grinding it,
I'm like, I think that's a toenail fungus.
And I got a spray about two years ago,
but I've only used it,
I don't even wanna tell you all the details
because it's too embarrassing.
I wanna hear it.
Okay, so I've only used it probably,
that's two years old and the bottle was very full.
So I was just having a-
I'm not sure if you're supposed to use it
for that long either.
Yeah, you're supposed to spray it on top,
it's just rubbing alcohol, it just kills fungus.
Okay.
So anyways, I forgot it and I was like,
shit, I gotta order more.
Well, when I went to Amazon to order more,
I realized there's a lot of products.
I'm not alone in this battle.
No, I just looked it up and approximately 15 to 25%
of people are likely to have a fungal infection.
15 to 25% of people.
A fungal infection like athlete's foot at any given time
with superficial skin and nail fungal infection like athlete's foot at any given time with superficial skin and nail fungal infections
affecting up to 20 to 25% of the global population.
Wow.
So that means there's two billion people with toe fungus.
So the chances of Brad Pitt having it is actually pretty-
25%.
High as in 25%.
Yeah.
Well, not really, cause well, whatever.
He's in a different, he's not even in the populace.
Okay, point being, I discovered all these different,
is that, oh, that's the unit, they are cute.
Aren't they cute?
Yes, this is the aforementioned mug.
Yep.
The coveted mug.
She's got some tea on her.
Looks like shit.
Okay, did you get shit on that?
I guess cause it's coffee and tea, it's kind of,
anyways, I don't wanna make this even grosser.
Once I got onto that page of Tonnet,
well then I discovered there are like humongous band-aids
you can put over your tone.
It has a patch with some chemical, I'm sure,
that seeps in.
And I have an advantage because I've drilled holes
in the top of the Swiss cheese on my-
Eww! As soon as that cheese, that was really bad. And I have an advantage because I've drilled holes in the top of the Swiss cheese on my- Ew!
As soon as that cheese, that was really bad.
Don't ever say cheese when they're talking about fungus.
But isn't cheese fungus?
Well, I don't wanna- Is it milk fungus?
No one wants to think about that.
Okay, so I got these,
I was just bragging about it last night.
So I got these band-aid-y things,
and that's a nighttime thing.
And then in the morning, I have this now milky liquid
I put in all around the cuticle
and slather it with a brush.
So I've opened up a two front war morning and night
on this toenail.
What if I care this,
what if the fungal infection's seeping into my bloodstream
and that's all of my autoimmune issues?
It's not out of the realm.
It's not out of the realm.
I think it could be, which is why you have to go
to the doctor, this, what you're doing is such a waste
of time and it's silly. Give me a couple of weeks
to see if I can clean up all the darkness
in the nail and everything.
Let's see if I can knock out this thing
and have a really healthy pink toenail bed.
And if I can't accomplish that,
look, I've been living with this for 12 years
and we can go another couple of weeks.
If it's in your bloodstream,
it's more than some rubbing alcohol that's gonna fix it.
You're gonna have to get blood transfusions.
Wait a minute.
And full new blood.
All right, I'll give myself a blood transfusion.
I'll figure out how to get some fresh blood.
Well, now it's making more sense why you got so offended
by my joke about my shoe.
Cause you're dealing with something very real.
You're right. I wasn't even aware of that. That you're dealing with something very real. You're right.
I wasn't even aware of that.
That's how the subconscious works.
Yeah.
Oh my god.
Because I have this deep insecurity
about how gross my foot is.
You said it was about stretching it out.
But what I heard was your toes are too fungusy.
I know you didn't even hear the part about stretching out.
You just heard about your nasty foot.
It's just another step into my father's shadow,
which is so crazy.
Cause I used to come into my dad's bedroom.
I know I've told you this,
and he had the largest Swiss Army knife
with every one of the attachments.
It was like six inches thick.
And I'd come in there and he'd have paper towel
under his foot and he would have the little scissors
from it going in the knife and there.
What?
Everywhere.
Ew, ew.
And I'm like, what are you doing?
He was always operating on his feet.
And I was like, this man is a monster
and he's disgusting.
And I was sitting there poking holes in my toenail
and I was like, I'm doing it.
I'm repeating the pattern.
Can't you be the one to break the pattern,
break the chain?
I think it's gonna be on Lincoln and Delta to break it.
No, you can do it.
I can only do so good.
You can, I promise you can do it.
There's a few things I have,
I have floating out in the ether,
like three stupid fucking errands that were years into.
Every time I write a to-do list,
a couple of items make it on there and then six others,
and I knock out the six and I just keep rewriting.
What are they?
I can't tell one, cause one of them's illegal.
What is it? I'll cut it.
Well, I...
You're gonna murder?
No.
Okay, got it.
You need to do that.
I know I need to do it.
And I need to fix this poisonous toe.
Okay, I want you to fix the toe
before you do that though, for real.
Yeah, that's likely.
I think I'm going to have an update for you
on a couple of fact checks
that I've knocked out this whole issue.
Think of the pride I'll have of having-
This is why men, uh-huh.
People try to make it so,
they try to make it so kind and sweet,
like, well, men are just too afraid to be vulnerable,
so they don't wanna go to the doctor.
That's not it.
They're arrogant.
They think they can fix,
they can poke holes in their body
and pour rubbing alcohol and fix their bloodstream.
You're not being fair to men.
I'm being so fair.
I am a, I don't think your average man is sawing at his toes.
My father did.
I come by this honestly.
Men are, their standing of their weak goes down.
We can be compassionate to that.
For what?
Say it again?
Their social standing of their weak goes down.
You know what makes someone's social standing go down?
Fungus.
Yes.
Uncontrolled fungus.
Men can't even see that that's the truth.
We're a pretty unhealthy population.
When you're traveling around,
I don't know why I'm taking it here,
but I, because I have it, right?
So I know if I eat my, like have a big gluttony meal
and then there's garlic in it,
the next day my skin will show it.
And I'm traveling around a lot
and like a good chunk of us is fucking poisoning ourselves.
I see it.
Like I'll be talking to a guy, an older guy
and it's just his face is inflamed
with so clearly so much stuff's going on.
It's so visible in the face.
Well, he probably didn't go to the doctor.
He's like, what the fuck?
I guess I'll just pour some rubbing alcohol on my face.
This redness will go away.
Poke some holes in it.
I poked so many holes in it.
Don't worry, in a couple of weeks, it'll be fixed.
This'll be straightened out.
Well, I think it's twofold.
A, these things are hard to track down.
Like, what are you allergic to?
We're eating one million things.
So it's a very hard task to figure out
what you're allergic to.
If it were like you went there and they go,
oh yeah, you're positive for, name your known pathogen,
here's a medicine that works on it.
Unfortunately, this stuff for allergic
just doesn't work that way.
Not always, but sometimes, like, you know,
you can go do an allergy test
and some things do pop up pretty quickly
and you can know.
Yep, like you can do the skin prick test.
I've done it and Aaron's done it.
And you know, that's a good start.
I think it's more, that's a very rudimentary version.
Yeah, I think that's right.
It's hard.
Cause I have poured more time into that,
the autoimmune thing than anything else.
I've been to hundreds of doctor's appointments
and labs and fucking Poncho Karma cleanse.
Anyways, okay.
So that's what's going on with my toenail.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert. fucking Poncho Karma cleanse. Anyways, okay, so that's what's going on with my toenail.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
I saw substance last night. I wanna see it so bad.
You brought it up last fact check.
I brought it up on an episode.
Next month?
An upcoming episode.
Oh, I thought it was on a fact check.
What the fuck, you beat me?
Yeah.
Tell me your thoughts.
First of all, okay, so Substance, it's Demi Moore.
Margaret Qualley.
And I don't wanna give a lot away,
but I think the premise is fine,
which is Demi Moore is playing this aging actress,
public personality.
It is incredible metaphor at the beginning
with the star on the Walk of Fame.
She comes to find out there's this thing
she can take, the substance.
And if you take it, you'll be able to be young
for seven days, but then you gotta go back
to your old self for seven days.
And there's really strict rules, they're very simple,
it's laid out.
And it's the most relentless movie I think I've ever seen.
It's intense.
I'm really curious to see how you're gonna be able
to handle it.
It is, it's relentless.
I can see where people, a couple people walked out.
I think it's one of these things that if you don't walk out
you're gonna love it, but it's very intense.
Well, I told you that I heard someone
had a heart attack and a seizure.
So the seizure, I remember you telling me about the seizure
and I definitely know what the part is.
There's a lot of, like there's some graphics that flicker.
But you don't have that.
I have epilepsy.
I know you have epilepsy.
I forgot that.
But you haven't ever been triggered by a strobe light,
right? I don't think so.
But you don't wanna roll the dice.
I'm scared to roll the dice.
And also the night before the first seizure,
Yeah.
we did go to a play.
Terrence Posner? Yeah, we did. We went to Terrence Posner and it go to a play. Terrence Posner?
Yeah, we did.
We went to Terrence Posner and it was a great play,
but there was like some light stuff and some big pop outs.
Yeah.
Big frights.
Yeah, yeah.
And then I had a seizure that night.
Yeah, I mean, I don't wanna speak.
But I'm on vacation, I think it's fine.
I'm more willing to deal with a fungus if you have that.
I'm a little nervous to dip my toe in your epilepsy water,
but regardless, you could also go with a friend.
It's obvious when that comes,
they could tell you to shut your eyes
and then tell you when that part's over.
Yeah, okay.
I had a dinner last night where somebody else saw it.
It's funny, I'm getting sort of mixed things
because, well, not mixed reviews.
Everyone's like, whoa, it's like.
It's intense. Yeah, it's intense.
Might be the most intense movie I've ever seen.
Yes, and that's what a lot of people have said,
but then this person said, she was like, you'll be fine.
Well, you're gonna love the messaging so much.
Yeah.
The messaging and what they're exploring is phenomenal.
Who'd you go with?
Kristen, she surprised me and had bought tickets.
Oh, good.
So I think she had been hearing about it too.
Uh-huh.
And yeah, you're gonna love the metaphors.
Did she get freaked out too?
Like was she?
She loved it.
But Kristen loves gore and slasher and gross.
I have a burgeoning theory.
Demi Moore's phenomenal in it. The bravery of both the actors is off the charts.
Yeah.
They're naked most of the movie.
I heard that, yeah.
Which is so relevant.
Yeah.
Because that's what it's all about.
Yeah, bodies.
Our obsession with our bodies and our,
and fuck, it's really good.
It's fantastic.
I wonder if the amount of like feeling disturbed
is gonna break down by gender.
I don't think so,
cause there's just very disturbing visuals.
From men who have seen it, they have your,
it's like they are freaking out about how intense it was
and how, and the person with the seizure
and the heart attack was a man.
And then I've talked to a few women who are like,
whoa, it's crazy, you gotta see it,
but like, but they don't have that.
And I-
Well, I think what could be different,
cause the thing that is intense isn't the metaphor.
Like I know what you're saying and guessing at,
which is very astute,
but it's just the visuals of,
it's way the visuals of,
it's way gorier than any slasher picture
I've ever seen in my life.
So there's just a visceral visual gnarliness to it.
Now, what I do agree with is that for women,
they will feel so seen that they'll be having
this complimentary feeling of the pleasure of being seen so well.
To offset probably the uncomfortableness.
So in that way maybe, but I think,
I think women are gonna be just as shook
by some of the visuals.
Yeah, oh, I'm sure.
A lot of women have put substances in their body.
Oh, uh-huh.
In attempt to stop aging, look younger,
and I myself included, chin filler, chin filler botox.
Uh, but really, right?
So yes, but I will say what is really great
about the movie is it, all these things are very related.
Sure, it's about beauty and aging for a woman.
It's also very much a metaphor for addiction.
As you'll see, I don't wanna give away
kind of what the interesting twist of it all is,
but there's a very, very, very strong parallel
with addiction
and kind of robbing from your future to experience something now is really interesting.
Anyway, it's incredible.
Well, it's kind of a ding, ding, ding.
Already feels like a stretch,
the way you're saying it.
This is for Kimberly.
So it was about self-compassion,
actually very much a ding ding ding.
We talked a lot about eating disorders.
Oh, uh-huh.
And phobias and things like that,
so it is a ding ding ding.
Yeah.
We took a test.
We took a test.
We love taking a test. We love taking a test.
Love taking it, absolutely love it.
And you know what, I don't even really wanna think about it
because I don't want to know how the sausage is made and then love it. And you know what? I don't even really wanna think about it because I don't want to know how this sausage is made
and then ruin it.
But clearly you and I have some thing.
Like some work to do?
No, no, no, no.
We have some symbiosis.
Oh.
Right?
Yeah.
And I always kind of wonder, well, what is,
like if you had to distill it down to
what is the core thing
that enables this.
To work.
Yeah, yeah, this like kind of explosive point of view
situation.
Yeah.
And it's not gender, it's not race, it's not a lot of stuff.
It's not size.
And so just, it's curious if maybe like, well,
this is the thing we seem to have overlapped
on the very most.
Well, that's funny that you say that,
because I think it is all those things.
I think it is gender, race, size, innate personality.
Like I think it's, it is all those things that add up to,
for some reason, these puzzle pieces
like go together well as foils.
Sure, yeah, that's true.
But I think there's something bigger than that,
because I meet a lot of tiny Indian women.
No, you don't.
I do.
You do?
Yes.
Who?
Oh God, that girl.
What one?
That girl.
That girl.
Oh, my friend from Instagram?
Yes.
No, no, no, no, no.
Believe it or not, there's a lot of Indians
moving through the world and I meet them.
We work, we work.
You meet them, but you don't know them.
Let's be kidding, maybe.
None of my points are working today.
But really, that'd be like me saying.
That, our oppositeness, I don't think is the explanation.
Personally.
Okay.
Okay, because I mean a lot of opposites.
Okay, that's fair. Yeah, I think that, here's the things I personally. Okay. Okay, because I mean a lot of opposites. Okay, that's fair.
Yeah, I think that like,
here's the things I think about us.
Like our justlessness is part of the engine.
Yeah.
Right, that we share this character defect
or proclivity for being justice.
Or strength.
Arbiters, yeah.
But I don't know, I think this beating ourselves up
might be part of it.
I could see that.
Scratch all my points today.
I'm keeping them all in.
I guess when you start with operating
on your own toe fungus,
everything else probably is gonna fall apart.
You lose some validity.
Do you think we're compassionate?
To one another?
Yeah, on the same level we are to other people?
I don't think so, I'll admit that.
Really?
Yeah, and I think it's weirdly a compliment to you.
This is a big revelation. I'm glad you're saying it. I'm thinking it, I'm just evaluating weirdly a compliment to you. This is a big revelation.
I'm glad you're saying it.
I'm thinking it, I'm just evaluating it
in this very moment, which is I'm very hard on myself
because I know better, I've demonstrated willpower,
I should be able to tackle any of these things
I hate about myself.
And I think because I have a very high opinion of you,
I'm probably harsher on you than I am someone
who I think is half as smart as you, half as whatever.
So I think it's possible there's some spectrum
of how compassionate I am towards people.
And I'm like, I'm myself here,
I have zero compassion for myself.
And then let's just take my most disenfranchised person.
Yeah.
And I'm like, they're doing the best they can.
Sure.
Give them a fucking break.
And then you're probably like a third of the way
to the left of that person.
Interesting.
Well, first of all, I'll say this.
I think I have less compassion,
I'm not sure it's like bad, but I think it's true.
The closer you are to me, the less compassion I have.
Yeah, which in a way is natural.
I think there's two things happening.
One is I think you're capable of anything.
So my expectations of you are high.
Two is yes, family.
You don't feel bad.
I don't feel bad for my brother or my sister.
Well, I do occasionally, but it's definitely a sliding scale.
Yes, and it comes in and out.
It's not a constant.
And I have to almost, I have to look for it.
I have to search for it.
Yes, I have to do that with Kristin.
I have to remind myself she's a human being,
trying her best to get through this life.
Yes, yeah.
So I think it's, for for me it's more that we're close.
So by sort of default.
I'm your brother.
I don't give you as much.
It's not even, I don't think compassion,
it's just like, I don't give you as much leeway.
I do have compassion for you.
Right, privately by yourself.
This is why. No, I do. I think I am pretty good, I think, and I think you're good at building the other person up. If you're down, I think I'm pretty good at being like, that's silly.
Like this-
Come on tiger, you can do a little buddy.
Let's go champ.
Come on champ.
You're being too hard on yourself.
Okay, here, I think I have something.
Okay.
I think you could break it down into finer categories.
And so I think if you're hurting and suffering,
I do have a lot of compassion for you. If you're annoyed and angry,
and it's about something I think you could fix,
I have no compassion for you.
That no, that no.
But I think that's actually,
I think within this broad umbrella of compassion,
I think there's categories.
Because when you're suffering, I feel really bad for you.
Yeah, me too, yeah.
But when you're just like,
eye rolling your eyes off your head for a day.
That's also because you think that's related to you.
Yeah, one of my problems well established that I can own
is I'm uncomfortable with people I love being angry.
I know, it's just like, you get angry.
And then I get angry.
I'm like, oh, we're playing angry?
Okay, well I can play angry too.
Yeah.
Fight anger with anger.
But you need to fight anger with love and compassion.
Yeah.
But I don't always do that.
I fight anger with anger. I'm a work in progress Monica you need to fight anger with love and compassion. Yeah, that's right. But I don't always do that. I fight anger with anger.
I'm a work in progress, Monica.
I'm not.
I know.
We all are. I'm not there.
We all are, we all are.
Do you think any of that's true in reverse?
Like if I'm sad and broken, you're very yes.
Yeah, that's horrible for me.
You've seen me sad and.
It's horrible.
It's weird.
It's like the closer you are to me as a person,
the less leeway I give, I'm hardest on those people,
but I definitely care the most.
Sure, sure.
So in that way, if they're hurting,
I care way more about my family or you or Jess
or anyone who's like hurting over that stranger
who I give a ton of leeway to.
Right.
So it's all trade-offs.
Yeah, it is all trade-offs.
But the leeway thing is just because, yeah, you're right.
It's like, I know you don't have to do this.
Like I know you know better.
Yeah, I've evaluated you as very powerful.
Yeah.
And so I think you have the power, you know.
Yeah.
It's a compliment you'd rather live without, basically.
You give me a lot of compliments.
That I know. That are backwards.
I know I have to explain them to you,
which is not the sign of a great compliment.
It's not, it's really not.
But I'm glad you said that
because I think I've thought that before.
And I think maybe I've said like,
you don't give me the benefit of the doubt
that you give other people and I don't like that.
And so, confirmation.
Yeah.
Which is, I mean, I get it.
I get it.
And I think I-
But by the way,
It goes both ways.
I want you to know that I just put all that together.
It's not like I've been sitting on that
and then when you bring it up, I gaslight you into not.
I really just now decided to evaluate it.
I know, but isn't that funny though,
because when we bring things up,
it's so quickly like, no, that's great, no.
I just gotta defend myself.
Yeah, you just get in defense mode
and then it takes like six years
and then it's like, oh, actually.
Yeah, we have to be getting along really well
for me to open up that vault
and take a little peek in there what's going on.
God, that's why, do you think in marriage it's easier?
Sometimes I think this if we're in like a fight
or if something's going on between us.
Sometimes I'm like, it's kind of shitty
because we, me and you can let things drag out for a while.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah, used to.
Used to, used to, used to.
But when you're married, sometimes I'm like,
I think this type of thing comes up in marriages
all the time, but then they have dinner
and then they have the bed time.
Like by the end of the night,
you're forced to sort of figure it out.
And I don't think, well, unless you don't.
And I think that would be really rough.
A lot of people don't.
A lot of people give their partner the silent treatment
for like three days at a time.
Yeah, that's tough.
That's rough.
And like living in that environment. But I guess that's like, that's tough. That's rough, yeah, yeah. And living in that environment.
But I guess that's a benefit of marriage
is I think it can expedite a resolution.
Because you're forced to work that idiot.
It's like if you're on a sailboat together
in the middle of the ocean, you gotta figure it out.
Or you get thrown overboard.
I even see this with the kids.
There's times where they have all the time in the world
to fight and be, and then there's other times
where it's like, no, everyone's gotta get their shit together.
We can feel that.
But I have been guilty that very male pattern
of shutting down.
Like when the conflict is overwhelming emotionally for me,
I have just completely, I just disassociate for a while.
Yeah. This is on topic for Kimberly.
Yeah, it is.
Yeah.
There's only one fact, and it's not really a fact.
She mentioned olfactory reference syndrome,
which is a core fear that you smell.
Oh, right.
Which I thought was very interesting.
I wonder what percentage,
way less than toe fungus probably.
Right, definitely.
But then I wanted to look up listophobia,
like interesting phobias.
Really quick though, does this account for,
some people smell.
Well, I don't think they have, well, they might have it.
They might be right to have this.
That crossover is gonna be sad.
The people who are obsessed with it and it's true.
Yes.
But I think the people who are obsessed with it
is probably not true because they're probably going
to such extreme lengths to make sure it's not true
but then they're just obsessed with it.
Ooh, I wonder if people who score higher
on the cognitive smell test are higher likelihood
to have this disease.
Right, super smeller tasters.
Yeah, I really hope they come back and tell me I'm a super smeller. I really disorder. Super smeller tasters. Yeah, I really hope they come back
and tell me I'm a super smeller.
I really want to smell.
Yeah, I had a friend, he's deceased now,
so I can tell this story.
We would go to the movies sometimes together
and just sitting next to each other,
I could smell his breath.
And it wasn't.
Yeah, some people, I know.
It's not like bad breath smell. It's like something genetic. There's, some people, I know. It's not like bad breast smell.
It's like something genetic.
There's a sharpness.
I know.
That just exists.
I don't think they can go brush their teeth
and get rid of it. I think it's halitosis.
Simple chronic halitosis.
Yes.
Expeeladocious.
Yeah.
I think it's halitosis. I know.
Although. I feel so bad.
I know, okay.
Or people that are dealing with really intense
vaginal smells or they have really stinky balls as this happens.
I feel so much compassion because-
The stinky balls though, okay.
You feel like you should be able to knock that out.
Yes.
It's not internal, so you should be able to get that under.
True, but my balls once in a while,
in fact it just happened when I was with Aaron
down in Texas, because we were in and out of the bus
and blah, blah, blah.
And when I was going pee, I was like,
Aaron, I think I can smell my balls,
which is so disgusting.
But that's because you haven't showered.
But even when I don't shower, that doesn't generally happen.
I don't know why I was going stress,
whatever, too much emotional.
I don't know.
Probably stress.
But that's something that happens to me twice a year. Right.
I'm like, oh my God, I can smell me balls
while I'm going pee at this year.
Okay.
It's just, I'm out.
Toe fungus, stinky balls.
Is there anything else I can say?
No, listen, I think that that is not the same though.
It's not.
As like, if you're having like a vulva vagina issue.
A flora issue.
Yes. Then that is not like you can having like a vulva vagina issue. A flora issue.
Yes, then that is not like you can just take a shower
and then that's over.
No.
No.
And also do people know?
I've known people who like they eat clean,
quote clean, which this is on topic as well.
Sure.
But like they're doing everything right.
I have heard like lemon.
And they can't take lemon. Like lemons good. You put it in your vagina or you just eat a lot of it? No, no, no, don't right. I have heard like lemon. And they can't take lemon.
Like lemons good.
You put it in your vagina or you just eat a lot of it?
No, no, no, don't do that.
No one do that.
You eat it.
And because it, I mean, stuff you eat like.
Well, and you're supposed to put lemon
in a garbage disposal that smells.
Yeah.
Hold on.
I'm sorry, that is the prescription
for a stinky garbage disposal.
Make that the same thing.
Well, if there's a commercial for vaginal flora,
and it says your garbage smells.
No, it's really scary.
And also the vagina smells so, or the vagina.
Yeah, I don't think it's the vulva,
I think it's the vagina.
Let's be clear here.
Sometimes I can't believe I still get confused.
It changes smells throughout the month.
Surely, flies are here, they're not here.
The flies are here, not here, ovulation.
I mean, there's just so much hormonal stuff going on
that the vagina.
And you get irony because blood's coming out.
That's very specific irony smell.
Gosh, should I say this?
Oh yeah, you should.
After everything I've said with my balls stinking
and my disgusting toe fungus.
You know what's upsetting is like.
People will still like me.
Yes, and they won't like me
because people would be like, ew, women are, periods, ew.
But like they'll take, ew.
And then they'll take your toe fungus and be like,
that's hot.
He's even hotter now because of his toes.
He's disgusting.
No, but sometimes I can smell,
not just like if I'm peeing,
I can smell if my period is coming.
He's on the, yeah, he's on the prowl.
I think that's standard.
Someone has to say it out loud so all women can go, me too. I guess it's standard. God. Someone has to say it out loud so all women can go,
me too.
I guess it's me.
Yeah.
I guess it's gotta be me who says it out loud.
Okay, so phobias.
I wanted to talk about some ones
people probably haven't heard of.
There's half a phobia.
That's a morbid fear of being touched.
Halfaphobia?
H-A-P-H-E phobia, or maybe it's haphaphobia.
Sounds weird though to say I have halfaphobia.
Doraphobia, the dread of touching the skin
or fur of an animal.
I don't have that, but maybe I should claim to have that,
and then that's why I'm not a huge fan of dogs.
That's great.
That's a good plan.
Doraphobia.
I only have half a doraphobia.
I don't like to touch fish.
I thought you were making a joke,
cause half a phobia.
Oh my God, I didn't even realize that.
So I guess I have two phobias,
I have half of a phobia of doraphobia.
But yeah, reptile, scales, fish,
gross chicken's feet, their talons, whatever we call them.
Yeah, I don't like that.
The hooves.
Yeah.
Ugh, the tail of a possum,
I'd rather die than touch the tail of a possum.
What's the tail like?
It's skin.
You know possums have got that pink skin tail.
That's disgusting.
Yeah, I don't like that at all.
Arama phobia, that's a morbid dread of being alone. That's disgusting. That's disgusting. Yeah, I don't like that at all. Aromaphobia, that's a morbid dread of being alone.
That's sad.
That's our friend.
Won't we?
I'm so won't we.
Yeah.
I have, what's it called?
Aromaphobia.
I have aromaphobia.
I'm so won't we all the time.
Aw. Even when I'm at a sporting event.
Oh God.
Surrounded by people.
Okay, ergo-phobia, that's a fear.
Do you know this?
Oh.
No, ADHD.
I don't really have it, but I want to play something.
It's just reminding me that I had saved something to play.
Okay.
It's an update on Steven Seagal.
Oh, Pugliari.
Yeti, he sent it to you.
Yes, he did.
Okay, okay.
He did, yes.
Okay, we'll come back to that.
Ergophobia, a fear of or aversion to work.
Don't have that.
I don't have that either.
Do you wanna play it now?
Do you wanna break up our list?
No, no, we can keep going.
Okay.
Hypnophobia, a morbid fear of sleep.
That's interesting.
Morbid fear of sleep.
I might have a touch of that.
Brontophobia.
Oh, and abnormal fear of thunder.
Oh.
I think a lot of dogs have it.
Yes, I love thunder.
Oh, the same word serves as the root of words
such as brontosaurus,
which literally means thunder lizard.
Oh, that makes sense.
Yeah.
Woke last night to the sound of thunder.
How far off I sat and wondered.
Started humming a song from 1962.
This is a ding, ding, ding.
Okay.
This is cacorhapheophobia.
Holy smokes.
A fear of saying crazy words.
Cacorhapheophobia. Holy smokes. A fear of saying crazy words? Corahepheophobia, okay?
It's an abnormal fear of failure.
Yeah.
These are sad.
It's a sad list.
Oh, I have this, 100%.
Ophidiophobia, an abnormal fear of snakes. Oh, okay. I didn't know that wasideophobia, an abnormal fear of snakes.
Oh, okay.
I didn't know that was-
What's an abnormal fear of snakes?
I think it's irrational.
They made it the bad animal in the Bible for a reason.
I think we all innately are a little freaked out
by these things that slither around.
But when I was on my hike, well, first about the bears,
but then I was like, I'll definitely probably see a snake.
Yeah.
And I got very anxious.
And I was like, I got to be done with this hike now.
Yeah.
I really, really hate snakes.
And my friend Kirsten has this more than me.
She doesn't even like, like, if there's a picture of a snake
or a chord.
Well, I guess if you try to make it like a snake and a dancey snake or a stuffy of a snake or a- Cord. Well, I guess if you try to make it like a snake
and a dancey snake or a stuffy of a snake,
like she can't handle it.
She hates that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I have a friend that had that with frogs
and then went to therapy over it
and now can deal with frogs.
That is abnormal.
He worked at a pet store and everything was great.
He's like star employee. And then the owner bought a bunch of frogs
and he couldn't do it.
He told the guy, like, I have to quit.
Stop.
Cannot be around frogs.
Did he know before that or it was like, what?
Yeah, he was so valuable
and he really ran the whole pet store
that the guy did stop selling frogs.
But like he was moving through the world that the guy did stop selling frogs.
But he was moving through the world
on high, high alert for frogs.
And it became even like,
so what's great is he went to therapy over it.
I'm gonna add he wasn't born in this country.
So kinda what I really liked about it
is it broke my stereotype of like,
oh, Latino men don't wanna go to therapy.
Yeah.
He now has a frog key chain.
Which he could have never had.
He said like, this would have driven me crazy,
but that was part of his like, submersion therapy.
So now he has a little frog key chain
and now he's fine with frogs.
But he had to go through a whole process.
That is so sweet.
It's really sweet.
I love that he has a frog key chain.
I was so like touched that he shared that story with me.
Yeah.
Also that's a literal ding, ding, ding.
That's exactly what Kimberly does.
Yes.
Is like get people over their fears.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's very sweet.
You wanna hear Steven Seagal now?
Sure.
Or do you got a couple more you're hot to get?
Yeah, go ahead, give me.
Taffophobia and a rational or disproportionate fear
of being buried alive.
Again, irrational?
Well, I get that.
Yeah, yeah, that makes sense.
Because I don't think about that often.
It doesn't cross my mind.
I don't think that's ever gonna happen to me.
Oh, but you know what happened to that little girl?
Or boy, I forget.
Little person.
Yeah, a little person got buried alive at a beach.
And it was like caving in on her.
And one of these, when kids bury each other.
Yeah, they were playing in and it went so deep
and then it like, and that kid died.
God damn.
And they're standing around trying to get her out
and they keep, I know.
Oh my gosh, stop telling the story.
What'd you say? You're not my friend today.
Yes, I am.
You're my best friend.
I know.
Phobophobia is an excessive fear of acquiring a phobia.
That sounds like something I would have.
Yeah, you might have that.
Yeah, like even hearing about phobias will give you the phobia.
Yeah, phobias are phobias.
Yeah, phobias are phobias.
Yeah, phobias are phobias.
Yeah, phobias are phobias.
Yeah, phobias are phobias. Yeah, phobias are phobias. Yeah, phobias are phobias. Yeah, phobias are phobias. Yeah, ph of acquiring a phobia. That sounds like something I would have.
Yeah, you might have that.
Yeah, like even hearing about phobias
will give you the phobias.
Yeah, exactly.
Oh my God, there's one.
You're so bad, you wanna play this stupid video so bad.
I have anxiety about how many phobias there are.
Man, I think if I know how many are on the list.
So you have a fear of lists.
Lists that are too long, yes.
Or Taylor Swift's entire commencement speech.
I have certain fears of things being very long, I guess.
Oh my God, except not-
Do you have any real fears?
I do have a single phobia, maybe more than one,
but there's one I know of.
I am a bit claustrophobic.
Yeah, you are.
I'm not.
You're not at all.
I don't think.
You like being confined, trapped.
No, I wouldn't say I like it, but I don't have excessive fear of it.
If I start to get the hunch,
like, oh, we're gonna be locked in,
I get really panicky.
Have you ever watched bee-lunking?
I'm never watching that.
You know what it is?
Yeah, isn't that like water-based?
No, they're exploring caves
and they're going in these tunnels
that are getting tighter and tighter.
And I'm like, how can you possibly enjoy that?
Right.
It fucking freaks me out to no end.
Or that famous, there was a book and a dock
and all kinds of stuff.
It was two climbers, one fell on a crevasse.
The other guy had to leave. Oh, 127 hours.
No, that was the one with Franco. Franco, yeah. This guy was like fell into a crevasse. The other guy had to leave. Oh, 127 hours. No, that was the one with Franco.
Franco, yeah.
This guy was like fell into a crevice
and was like looking up and there's no way out.
And he's just there and there and there and there.
And at some point he decides to go deeper into the crevice.
And he found a fucking tunnel that led him
out of the ice pack and he ended up living.
But the notion of having to decide to go even deeper
into the crevice, I'm like, that is, oh.
We gotta right the ship here.
I'm panicked.
I know a lot of people are panicked.
Let's hear a couple more.
Hold on.
Okay.
This one's not scary.
It's- Fear of being hugged.
Unless you have this. Abaphobia, it's- Fear of being hugged. Unless you have this.
Abaphobia, it's a fear of palindromes.
Weird.
Yeah, there's like interesting things out there.
There are.
Okay, I guess I'll stop.
Hold on.
Okay.
Floraphobia.
Phylophobia, fear of love.
That's a sad one.
I don't understand that one.
Well, you don't have it.
Okay, we ready for Steven Seagal?
Oh my God, sure.
Okay.
I was in Kazakhstan, I think,
I was somewhere crazy in the world the other day.
Maybe six months ago, something like that.
And there was a big Kyokushinkai,
how do you say in English, like-
Gathering or convocation?
Well, yeah, convocation, something like that.
They were doing all this, you know-
They can't believe how they only hear it.
Demonstrations and fighting and competition
and all the old senpai,
all the old Kyokushinkai masters were there.
And they saw me come in, this was like chilling.
And they were, oh, you know, he's here, know he's here and they made me come and sit
with the other masters and they introduced me as their senpai wow what a tremendous honor tremendous
honor who are in their 70s who could kill most of the guys who think they're great warriors that are
in their 20s or 30s seven years old i. These guys are all still seven years old. I believe you can kill someone with a karate stuff.
But that stuff that most people who will hear this will go,
oh, come on, that's a joke.
Yeah, help me out.
Well, amongst real martial arts masters, it's not a joke.
Exactly, I mean, I'd say, for example,
one of my favorite martial arts masters ever,
Sose Masoyama, who invented Kyokushin karate.
There's a man who passed away.
I'm gonna pause it there and just say
the notion that he says, how do you say in English?
What are you fucking talking?
You're acting like English isn't your first language.
I know, that's the part.
That guy goes on to tell the story of a great master.
And of course, Stephen goes,
he was a very close personal friend of mine.
I know.
It's endless.
How do you say in English?
And he was like, he stopped himself just short
of doing like a really bad Asian accent.
He's like, yeah, well I did.
Well don't do it.
Okay.
Oh my God.
Jesus Christ.
Okay, love you.
Love you.
Okay, love you. Love you.
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