Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Malala Yousafzai (education activist)
Episode Date: November 5, 2025Malala Yousafzai (Finding My Way, I Am Malala, He Named Me Malala) is an education activist, Nobel Prize laureate, and author. Malala joins the Armchair Expert to discuss having a relatively ...normal life until a militant organization took over her valley in Pakistan, becoming an activist simply to respond to her new oppressive reality, and how lucky she was to have a male ally in her father. Malala and Dax talk about feeling like a fish out of water in a new school after her attack, winning the Nobel Peace Prize at 17 years old, and not being a good student at Oxford because she was more interested in a social life. Malala explains the go-cart meet cute with her now-husband, why girls’ education is the solution to so many world problems including climate change, and coming to the understanding that true bravery is when you go through lows and still stand up for what you believe in.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 Shepard and I'm joined by Lily Patman.
Hi.
Today we have Malala Youssef's eye.
Yes.
And guys, this is a message to me.
Not most listeners will be like, oh, I can't wait to listen.
Uh-huh.
But for pieces of shit like me.
that are like, I don't necessarily want to go on a super emotional ride.
I just want to say, this is the version of Malala that is the fun, playful college student coming-of-age version.
Yeah, human.
Yes, which is really shockingly fun and uplifting, and I loved.
Love.
No, I don't want to, I want to be clear.
I read her book and I love it.
It's very important.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm not saying I'm not up for that story, but just, you know, I want...
This is a different version of her.
It's a different side of Malala, which was a really fun side to get.
It was great.
It was great.
She's a rascal.
I know.
She's a playful rascal.
She's an education activist.
She's the youngest ever Nobel laureate, bestselling author, and award-winning film producer.
Her books are I am Malala.
We are displaced.
Malala's magic pencil.
And now her memoir, Finding My Way,
which is really from the moment we all kind of knew her
to her trying to attempt to have a normal college life.
Yes.
In England.
Yeah.
Yes.
It's really cute.
It's really special.
Please enjoy Malala Youssef's eye.
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I'm actually so excited to be here.
No, you're not.
Yes, I am.
You are not.
You hate press.
You're so sick of it.
We're so excited to have you.
Are you two old friends?
You and Hannah.
Technically, yes.
Rana joined Malala Fund many, many years ago.
She helped me with my work outside Malala Fund as well.
Okay.
The production company.
Then she left me.
Oh, no. Why did you do that?
Exactly.
To start a podcast with your husband, because I can relate.
But she's helping me on this.
Okay, great.
How long is this little tour you're on right now?
It's got to be extensive, I'd imagine, for a book.
I have many things to do, so I'm here to do some press in L.A.
Then I go to New York, do more press.
Prep for the launch.
So the launch will be in New York on the 21st.
The book will be out everywhere.
It'll already be out, yeah.
And then I begin my book tour.
Yeah, wow.
Then I come back.
I go to every city.
Oh, my gosh.
Oh, I wrote down way too many notes for you.
I'm now realizing we never have four page.
This is too many.
I wrote down.
Oh, my God, there's a fifth.
Okay.
This might be a record.
So you already talked to Monica one time.
Yes.
Did Kristen and I.
But that was Zoom and I don't count that.
I agree.
I want to meet Kristen.
Well, she's in the backyard when you're done.
We have met, but we haven't met.
Right.
Right. We have that with a lot of people.
In COVID, we did all Zooms.
And now we decided none of those count.
They kind of don't count.
And we'll have someone on who we had on on Zoom.
And when they come, we're like, this is the first time.
The vibes in person, they're meaningful.
But I love your podcast.
I'm so excited to be here.
Oh, good.
I loved your book.
I loved it so much.
And I cried this morning.
Some of those texts between you and a sir are...
Do you think I was a bit mean to him?
No.
There's a difference between annoying and mean.
Do I think you are annoying sometimes?
Because you didn't know how to handle a new love?
Exactly.
Yeah.
New first love.
I mean, I never thought I would actually fall in love.
Yes.
And you were probably having to integrate that yourself.
That's a lot to process.
Now, I don't know if you guys talked about it the first time you met,
but there's some passages in your book.
I wrote them out in their entire time.
because I'm like, this is Monica's book.
She wrote this book.
Really?
Oh, wait to you hear some of the zingers in here.
There's a lot of overlap.
Oh, my goodness.
Oh, boy, I can't wait.
How can we be so similar?
What's your star sign?
Virgo.
What are you?
I'm cancer.
My husband is a Virgo.
Really?
Which you read were great lovemates.
Yes.
Go well together.
Kristen is a cancer.
Oh.
Yeah, and she's a lovemate of mine.
Two of my soulmates are cancer.
That's right.
Yeah.
Kristen.
Okay, so, rightly so.
This book is about another chapter in your life entirely.
But unfortunately, I'm going to have to bring people up to speed a little bit
because I think there is some foundation that needs to be laid.
I have so much in my life.
You do.
Yes.
You do.
You really do.
And I only know, look, my daughters have your children's book.
I've read it to them out loud.
So that's kind of my knowledge of everything that happened.
And then, of course, I was alive when all this went down.
and so I didn't miss it in the media.
Anything post that I kind of don't know about.
And even just this notion that you end up in like a high school in the UK with the snap of a finger
is really kind of equally bizarre.
But so for the folks that don't know,
and I think maybe a couple of the details that people might not have already known,
I don't think I knew until I read your book,
is you were already kind of a political activist before any of this happened.
You were blogging at 10 years old?
Yeah, I became an activist at age.
10. I blocked for the BBC at age 11 and I volunteered to be in the New York Times documentary when
schools were closed by the Taliban. Again, I was only 11. Yeah, you were kind of already famous before
this other thing. I guess I stupidly thought, oh, this is when she got a lot of attention.
I was known in Pakistan and people had read my story. But I do think that the recognition that
I received after getting attacked was very different than the recognition I had received before.
Yeah, exponential. Yes.
But so for the folks who don't know that little chapter, your father was an educator and was a big proponent of girls being in school.
You were in SWAT this area of Pakistan.
A very beautiful valley in the north of Pakistan.
And we had a pretty normal life until this extremist militant group took over our valley.
And the Taliban started imposing restrictions on women and girls, including a ban on girls' education.
It affected my education directly.
it affected the education of all of my female friends
because girls could no longer go to school
they were punished if they dared to even learn
and it was very scary dark time
and that's when my journey of activism began
it's not like I was passionate about doing something
for my community from a very early age
but circumstances changed
so the way I became an activist
was simply because I was responding
to this new reality where I could not have a future
without an education.
And I knew I have no choice, but to speak out.
Yeah, it wasn't like you sought out to be an activist.
You just sought out to stay in school.
Exactly, to speak up for yourself.
It's not that I was researching different topics and figuring out,
what am I more passionate about?
Let me pick this issue.
It was about our future.
And we know that gulls in our communities,
especially in patriarchal societies,
have very little opportunities if they do not get the complete education.
They are restricted in exploring different careers.
They cannot make a living for themselves.
So many girls are forced into marriages.
Well, it would be right to say they're dependent on whatever the patriarch in their life tells them exists on planet Earth.
It's your dad or your brother and then it's the husband and you just pray you find a kind man.
So then you can at least have a life in dignity and it's not that of like violence and oppression.
It's just a simple wish like that.
I actually realized that when I started speaking to my mom,
more. My mom and I have struggled a bit to be friends. It's comfortingly universal.
Yes, especially like till you make it to your 20s. It's a really difficult phase because I was
just told off by my mom for everything, what I wear, how I dress, what I say. For her, the concern
was always about what would our community in Pakistan say. She was just worried about controversies.
And I used to argue with her all the time. But later on, I realized that my mom was just simply trying to
protect me.
She was scared.
She was scared because she had seen it in her lifetime how girls were punished for simply daring to wear what they wanted.
There was a story of a girl talking to a boy on phone.
The next thing you hear is that she has been killed in the name of honor.
She has been poisoned.
She has been beaten up.
Well, you as a little girl were slapped by a cousin in the street because he saw you doing what?
I was in the river and you know, your clothes get wet and then they stick to you.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I had gone with some boys, just the local cousin's little boys.
And he just slapped me.
He said, why would you go?
I think for him, it was just the fact that gulls, as soon as they have the identity of being a woman,
they need to be restricted to the followers of their houses.
But I must say that cousin thinks very differently now and he's a big advocate.
That's good.
But, you know, that was once a time.
These things happen when you're little that form your worldview.
you. And what you learned in that moment was, oh, an older male thinks I'm bringing shame to the family, has the authority and the right to smack me across the face in public.
It was scary.
That introduces you to what world you're living in. You're like, okay, this is life on planet Earth for me.
But I think my story is an exception simply because my dad was very supportive.
Why was he? What about him was so different?
He was so passionate about his own education. He saw his five sisters have completely different lives.
him. They never went to school while he did. So he knew if you are born a girl. It just means
you do not have the same life as a boy. So he wanted to change that and he made a commitment
that he would want a different life for his daughter. He didn't stop me from speaking out
while other men fathers actually stopped girls in our school who were stepping forward
the same way as me to speak out. And even if like a cousin or somebody tried to say something about me
being in media or me speaking out or being in public,
my dad just would remind them that they mind their own business.
Wow.
You just got lucky.
He just had a great person.
I mean, we need male allies.
We need them to stand up with us.
And when we have compassion for your mom, reading the book,
I want to give her Mel Robbins book, let them.
That's what I want to give her.
That's what she needs to read.
Let them talk.
It's okay.
Let them all think what they're going to.
But the culture is different.
Well, I was going to say your father had the free.
really that your mom didn't have in a lot of ways.
So he could have the position of, yeah, mind your own business.
That wasn't really a luxury your mom had.
So it's kind of quite understandable why she has so much more fear.
100%.
If a man is seen as an advocate for women, people celebrate him, it's a lot easier.
It's a different story when we are praising a man.
It's a very different story when we talk about women or mothers
and how they are becoming allies of the next generation of women.
and girls, I feel like their initial instinct is to actually protect us, to keep us safe.
For my mom, it was a whole different world to be able to advocate and change the perspectives
and bring in safety. For her, the first thought was, let's do everything so that none of
these horrible things happen. And if it means you obey the expected dress code or if you just
follow the customs, let's just do that. Because in the end, what's more important is your safety
and just simply focus on your education
but do not cause any trouble.
Yeah, yeah, do it quietly
and do what you need to do.
And in her defense,
the absolute worst nightmare
for a parent would be
exactly what happened to you.
So you got shot on a box.
So I'm sure she was like,
we just barely avoided
the ultimate heartbreak in life.
Let's button it up.
I know we care about these things,
but not as much as I care about you being alive.
I very much understand where she's coming from.
Yeah, after the attack when I moved to a different,
country, we were now settled in the UK, a new culture.
What is it, Eddington?
No, Birmingham.
Birmingham?
Yeah, that's so simple.
Not the Alabama one.
No, no, no, no, no.
Birmingham.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Not Birmingham.
Birmingham. Birmingham.
Birmingham.
Yeah, yeah, right here.
G-H-A-M.
Okay, it's already a really unique life.
You were on the BBC, a doc was made about you,
you're reporting as the Taliban is invading your town, all that's crazy.
Even if none of that happened, another crazy thing would be to come out of a coma, having been raised in Pakistan and then be in Birmingham, UK.
Do you remember how foreign that all felt to you?
Yes, it was a complete shock to wake up in a different country surrounded by people who were speaking a different language.
I was very, very unfamiliar.
And of course, I was grateful that I woke up and I finally opened my eyes that I was alive.
I was in this induced coma for a week and all I remembered was this last day of my school in Pakistan
and then I have these mixed memories and these visuals and pictures of attacks happening again and again
and I'm like stuck in this induced coma where I just cannot wake up.
I feel like am I dead, am I alive?
But the moment I woke up, I was so grateful.
But at the same time, I was just figuring out who has brought me here, where are my parents, when will I recover?
But when will I be able to get back to my all normal life?
Also, when are you learning that you are now a world figure?
Weeks later.
How old were you again?
Fifteen.
I had no idea.
I just thought nobody even knew.
So I had this tube in my neck initially, so I could not speak.
So I had to write everything down.
And because my vision was so blurry, I could not even write well.
So every time I would just ask the nurses and doctors, where's my father?
I want to meet my family.
And then the second thing I would write is, who's going to pay for my hospital?
Sure, sure. It looks expensive, I'm sure.
I was just so worried. I said, do I have to go and get a job or something?
But my family arrived 10 days later when they joined.
That was the first time I actually cried.
Of course.
It's because you're going through a trauma.
You don't even know what a normal emotion is.
Yeah.
We're going through so much pain that you cannot even cry.
Like, how do I become that normal person that I was?
You're disassociated, right?
You're out of your body.
And almost the crying is you reentering your actual body.
So I saw my family. That's the first time I cried. And even then I thought as soon as I'm discharged from the hospital, I'll be able to go back to Pakistan. But things changed really quickly. I was working on these different projects that I was approached with, starting Malala Fund, writing my book, giving my first speech at the UN. And then also starting a new school locally. They said, you know, we cannot let your time be wasted. So you have to get back into your education. I thought this was all temporary. But I didn't realize before I knew it, it had
been a long time when I went back to Pakistan again.
But this was like a whole new path where that my life was taking?
And I was like, where is this going?
Where is my old life?
And where am I now?
Now, I find this to be the most interesting part because it's so human.
So yet you start this school in England and it's a disaster, right?
I loved that school, by the way.
But what was really challenging for me was making friends.
Yeah.
I was a completely different person when I was.
in Pakistan.
You're popular and outgoing.
Mischievous.
I was in every competition, debate, singing, playing cricket.
I had so many friends.
Now at this new school, I felt like a stranger.
I just thought nobody could ever know me.
I could not be that old self of mine.
I would try to have a conversation with people.
You start and it dies.
It's such a stressful moment.
You know, you're like, I hope somebody picks up this topic and it could be a funny thing.
And it just fell flat.
Yeah.
You had so much it working against you.
You're from another country.
I can't imagine your English was bulletproof at that point.
I mean, it was more like textbook English.
Textbook English is very different than what people actually speak.
You have the cultural thing.
You know, the fact that you're famous, which is an awkward thing.
You've also just been shot in the face.
So you're not like feeling...
A hundred percent.
I became very self-conscious.
We all look at each other and we all just think sometimes,
what is that person actually looking at right now?
Yes, of course.
And usually they're not, but we just think that way.
But I think at school, yes, I was very self-conscious.
And I was thinking about the facial nerve damage on the left side because of the bullet.
I just was hesitating even to smile because I now had like a crooked smile.
Malta, when I had acne, I didn't want to go to school.
Exactly.
When if I had pimples, I would not interact with anyone those days.
It's hard enough.
And you have to sort of carry the weight.
People are looking to you to be like the voice of activism and you're 15 and you're in a
new place and people are expecting wisdom from you. That's too much. I know. Thank God you were kind of
delivering on that front because it's a mess at high school. You're rising to the occasion of the
political stuff and making the speeches at UN. You're crushing that part of your life. I just thought
maybe at 15 this is where I'm supposed to be at these UN conferences, bilateral meetings with
world leaders advocating for girls education, running a foundation. I just thought maybe this is how my life
is supposed to look like.
I won't get this other thing.
And to be honest, yes, I wanted all of it.
I wanted to be a normal student at the same time to have friends and to be able to
express myself and to try new things.
But somehow I thought that maybe because I'm supposed to live this activist life, it means
sacrificing.
It's one or the other.
Of course, I'm sad and lonely.
But I thought, okay, this is how it's supposed to be.
You did the cutest things to you enlisted on.
field day to run the 200 meter dash and came in last.
I know.
I tried everything.
It's horrible.
I know.
It makes me love you so much.
When this is going on and you're struggling at school, I think a lot of American kids,
they would come home and tell their parents and I feel left out.
And did you feel like you could do that?
No, I think when you are supposed to be this strong, brave, courageous girl, you feel you
cannot complain about not having friends or crying alone in the bathroom to get over this or feel
like, oh, I wish more people could talk to me in the school dining hall.
I never really shared it with my parents.
I would just go home and talk to my best friend in Pakistan.
I would ask her about everything that was happening in our neighborhood with our friends
and how her studies were going and just try to like reconnect with my old life.
And I knew that's just not a reality.
I'm not there.
But I used to just imagine myself being there and imagine what life would have been like if I were there.
So deep inside, I wanted to make friends and just know.
Oh, who is that true Malala?
And what would my life have looked like if none of these things had happened?
So the day when I saw most of the students at my school talk to me
was the day when I heard the news about the Nobel Peace Prize.
Oh.
So I had gone to school and I was not expected that I would get it.
I was 17. Yes.
I was in my chemistry class.
The school's deputy head teacher walks in and calls me outside and tells me that I have won
the Nobel Peace Prize.
Oh, my God.
And I'm like, wait, what?
And I'm like, oh, thank you.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Thank you.
But I actually went back to my class.
I finished my whole school day.
In hopes that people might engage with you and show interest.
And I feel like more faces were looking at me that day.
You know when you feel noticed?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But the day after, it was just back to normal.
Everybody's looking that other way.
They were all going to McDonald's and you weren't.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
What a bizarre.
You're winning the Nobel Peace Prize and you're not getting invited to McDonald's.
This is too much.
I loved your question, Monica, about asking Mom and Dad.
And I'm wondering, do you think party you did not want to share that with them
because you were afraid you had already put them through so much?
My parents do worry a lot.
They freak out.
And for them, it's just like, how could you be sad?
Don't be sad.
Yes, exactly.
Help me, please.
This is where Monica really knows.
This has happened many, many times.
I mean, I have gone to them several times
or tried to signal something.
Initially, I'm like testing it.
I'm like, what if something like this?
They're like, why would this even happen?
My dad came up to my room and he just saw
I was really stressed and worried.
I was worried about some work thing that was going on.
And my dad was like, no, no, like, we can't see you sad.
You should be happy.
And I was like, Dad, can you respect my right to all of these emotions,
whether that'd be happiness and sadness
and grumpiness.
I know you want me to be happy
and I understand it,
but that does not mean
I suppress every emotion.
You can't.
Because I have to make you guys happy.
So he's like,
when you are happy,
we are happy.
And I'm like,
that's too much pressure.
That's a lot of pressure.
Also, you have to go out on the road.
You're still at all the conferences
and doing all that stuff.
And it's like,
even more do you need when you get home
to be able to be the scared lonely kid
because you're putting on a brave face everywhere else.
They have to be the landing.
spot. But culturally, I do think it's very, it's very hard.
My parents. Subcontinent any of you guys.
Yeah. My dad, too. He's come a long way. He tries. He'll be like, tell me what's going on.
And I can see the panic. Before I've even said anything, he's so panicked. And then it's like, well, I can't tell you because you're going to get so stressed out.
And then that's going to stress me out. So let's just not do any of this. And then you don't have anyone.
And then sometimes my dad will be like, you need to know you can.
can talk to us.
And I'm like, well, that's not the way to say it, for one.
But I understand it because they grew up in such a different environment.
And with a lot more struggle, they want their kids just to be happy.
That's it.
Yeah.
And I fully understand that parents want their kids to know that their happiness is everything
to them.
But we also want our parents to know that we go through many emotions.
And sometimes it's just some space.
That's all we need.
It's listening.
It's just you being there.
But we don't have to fix it.
it, allow us to go through the emotion, to process it.
Well, most importantly, that I would be lovable even if I'm very unhappy.
Can I have my whole array of emotions and you still love me?
Because that's what you want to hear.
It's way too much pressure on a child really at any age to take on a grown-ups emotional state.
Regulating their emotions by yours is just not okay.
The other thing which I realized was that I had taken this.
adult role from such an early age. I mean, like, I was looking after my family. All of a sudden,
the roles had switched completely. My dad, mom, everybody had to move to a new country. So I was
doing all of these things from signing a book to a documentary to giving speeches so that I can
make an income. And this has been forever part of my life to help my family and our relatives
and people who need support from us in Pakistan. So there's always been that pressure as well.
And I think that also somehow affected me because I thought I cannot be that child anymore.
I have to be acting like an adult.
I'm the grown up here.
Exactly.
This is all my shoulders.
You win cash for the Nobel Prize?
They give you money?
Yeah, it comes to the prize.
Oh, really?
They give you some around town money.
I think it's usually like a million euros.
Oh, really?
The year I won had two winners.
No.
Oh, this is bullshit.
It's okay.
Double.
It's okay.
It's okay.
It's okay.
It's okay.
Then you can even root for the person.
You want to be able to be excited for them, but not if you're giving them half your money.
But the school that I support in my parents' village in the north of Pakistan started with the help of the Nobel Peace Prize money.
Oh, that was the seed money for it.
And in my speech, I said, I want to build a school there because right now, there's no high school for girls.
I want to start the first one.
We need to be ambitious about bringing change in the world.
But let's start from home.
If we can make it happen there, there's hope that we can make it happen.
elsewhere. It's one of the most challenging areas. It's in the north of Pakistan, up in the mountains.
And the literacy rate is so low. And hardly any woman, any girl had actually graduated. There
was no high school for girls. But we started it, I think, seven, eight years ago. And now that
school is complete. And this year, the first class graduated. And I met them for the first time.
Ah, how great is that? I went to Pakistan. It was amazing. And I shared this story in the book as well.
It's really, really important to me because seeing how the lives of these girls have changed.
to because of education is the most rewarding feeling.
It's just hope for the whole community.
I was just looking around like the trees, the mountains, the river.
Everything is sort of like the same.
But one thing that was different in the whole village was the school.
And I thought that the school had given hope for the community.
That's so incredible.
Yeah.
Okay.
So your book really is a coming of age story of you entering Oxford.
And as we've already set up, you know, it didn't go well in high school.
and you just have the sweetest singular desire.
Like, I'm going to Oxford and I am going to make friends.
And it's so endearing and sweet.
You know Mindy Kaling?
Yes.
Yeah, so I texted her yesterday like, oh my God, I just read Malala's new book.
This is a show you would make.
It's so cute.
I have watched all her shows.
Never have I ever.
And the college.
Yeah, what is that?
Girls like sex or something?
Sex on her.
Sexy college.
No, I mean, the title is a bit long, but not what you said.
Exact lives of college.
Yes, I got her.
Okay, so you arrive at Oxford and you get a dorm and then you decide to just kind of hit the sidewalk and start walking around.
And you're sweetly taking charge.
You're just introducing yourself to people and you meet this cute girl who at first is taken back.
Her name is.
Korah.
Meaning you're like,
Oh, great. We've got one friend.
And then you go to the Freshers Fair.
And just tell Monica what you do at this Freshers Fair.
This is such a comedy set piece.
Yeah, I mean, you sign up for these different clubs and societies like rowing and jumping, running.
Anything you can think of.
There's like a club for everything.
Jazz club.
Music, languages, anything.
So I signed up for a few clubs, including rowing.
I had never done it and I couldn't swim.
I don't know why I signed up.
But I did it anyway.
She signed up for everything.
She left this fair, Monica.
I was like, I want to make friends.
I should be everywhere.
But that's such a smart thing to do.
I want to make friends.
I got to sign up.
I got to get myself out there.
No, it was like a real formal.
I want to be everywhere in this college life.
There's the Oxford Union, so which is like this famous debating society at Oxford.
I was signing up for that to get membership.
And then there was this big poster behind.
And they had photos of all of these famous speakers who had previously spoken there before.
Oh, boy.
I'm looking at all of these famous names.
and then I see my photo.
And I'm like,
ah.
Oh, I remember I spoke here before.
Oh, my God.
Also a little feeding frenzy.
Some person wants a picture.
Then 10 people want a picture.
Oh, wait a second.
Is that you people started asking for photos.
But my friend who I had just met.
Yeah, your new best friend.
Best friend, yes.
She was supporting me and she took some photos.
And I was like, oh, I'm so sorry.
I felt so embarrassed.
You know, I just do not want it to be awkward.
I want my friends not to think like they're here to take photos for me.
She was just so chill about it.
And quickly, we were talking about next lectures and essays.
And I was like, I love it.
I know that I'm meeting the right people.
Stay tuned for more armchair expert, if you dare.
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My name is Ed. Everyone say hello, Ed.
I'm from a very rural background myself. My dad is a farmer.
And my mom is a cousin. So, like, it's not like...
What do you get when a true crime producer walks into a comedy club?
I know it sounds like the start of a bad joke, but that really was my reality nine years ago.
I just normally do straight stand-up, but this is a bit different.
On stage stood a comedian with a story that no one expected to hear.
Well, 22nd of July 2015, a 23-year-old man had killed his family.
And then he came to my house.
So what do you get when a true crime producer walks into a comedy club?
A new podcast called Wisecrack,
where stand-up comedy and murder takes center stage.
Available now.
Listen to Wisecrack on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I miss one part, though.
Before we even get there, and this is very sweet,
up until this moment when you leave your house,
your mother has dressed you every day of high school.
She picked out your clothes.
She laid out your clothes, right?
This is what you're going to wear.
So my mom prefers traditional Pakistani clothes.
And I think for her, it's like anything, jeans, top, any of these land colors are just too boring.
She's like, why would anybody wear that?
Why would you not wear the traditional colorful clothes?
But it's also representing the culture.
And that's what you are expected to wear.
So I was looking at the bags she had packed for me for college.
And I was like, Mom, if I wear this, I will be instantly recognized as the public figure Malala.
Yes.
I just want to like mix industry.
students and not stand out.
And I want to wear college outfit.
Like that's the dress code there.
She would put one dress out, remove it.
And also tell Monica, what you Google.
Oh, I googled Selena Gomez, casual wear 2017.
And what to wear to college 2017 Googled it because she'd never worn anything but these.
What did it tell you?
What did she wear?
Cardigan, tight jeans, skinny jeans, skinny, necklaces, necklaces.
Selena Gomez casual.
Don't you feel like you would do this, Monica?
You would.
Actually, that's really funny that you bring that up
because I think Taylor Swift just went on Fallon
and talked about how it's Selena's wedding,
which was last weekend, I guess.
Okay.
Taylor gave a speech and she said she made fun of the way they dressed.
Back then when they were first friends,
which is probably around this time.
You're wearing what they were wearing.
I'm adding the door to the day.
debate. Exactly. Taylor would have razzed you. Okay, so you got your 2017 college clothes. You've met
Cora and then gracefully and luckily, you meet Henn. Tell us about Henn. Henn is such a jolly,
funny, entertaining character. She's from Zimbabwe? Yes. She just talks forever. Like, you cannot stop
her. I loved her. I just, I was like, wow, I don't even have to do anything. I just have to sit and
listen to her. Yeah, she's got it. She wanted to try new things and explore things and take photos. And I just
love that. I was her photographer. I would be just taking her photos all the time. We are really
good friends. I mean, isn't this a 90s college movie? Sure. We're like, you meet the outgoing
girl. She's like, I'm going to take you under my wing. Are you so friends with Kora? I'm friends
with everybody. Oh, good. Good. I love this. And I met really interesting people. I met a lot of
Pakistani friends. I met some friends who were very supportive at times and were also a bit mean at times.
Yes, this is your girlfriend, Anisa. She's mean. She's like making fun of how you look.
Look, what you're wearing.
I remember there was this mug.
You put sugar in it and then you stirred.
So I was just stirring it.
She was like, that's not how you do it.
You do it like back and forth.
Like this is the more posh way.
Oh.
Wait a second.
What?
Anyway, I was like, okay, I'll just stir it this way like the way the queen does it.
You should have been like, bitch, we invented tea.
What are you talking about?
Also, hey, I have a Nobel Prize.
So I would be throwing that in everyone's face.
Yeah.
But you're like starting to play Scrabble.
It's off to a really great start.
Amazing start.
You're not a great student.
I like this.
I like this.
The first person who's praising me for not being a good student.
I like this because our association with you is wise beyond her years, completely poised, can somehow write the speech, deliver the speech.
We're thinking you're going to go there and this is going to be a cakewalk.
And what I love is, you're kind of lazy.
You're there to make friends.
There to be social.
Yeah.
And it was shocking to you as well.
If I wanted to do incredibly well academically, I had to stay in the library for seven, eight hours a day.
I was like, why would I do that?
I want to be with my friends right now.
I had signed up for every society.
There were these gatherings and parties, like a Diwali ball and Eid party and a biryani event.
Like anything you could think of, I just wanted to be everywhere.
I'm so proud of you for making that decision because I think you are receiving so much praise for being adult and being a good little soldier.
and doing everything you were supposed to do,
to let go of that praise.
You would have been most praised to go there
and finish top of your class.
You know, this is what my dad was expecting.
My dad was sort of mentioning now and then, like,
how are you doing and do you think what grades you will get?
Or are you going to run for the president of the Oxford Union?
And I said, like, Dad, I don't think I'm here for any of those things.
I'm here to actually just find out who I am as a young woman.
I was living my late teenage very, very late in my 20th.
That's how I see it.
And it was the first time that I was not with my parents.
I was living on my own.
I did not have my work people around me.
I was managing my calendar myself.
Poorly.
Really poorly.
But you know when you see like you're free to explore whatever you want
and I said, I may not get this opportunity again.
I knew that I could go to these libraries any time in my life.
I could reopen these books.
No, you did it right.
Friends in your early 20s is such a blessing.
And I'm so glad I met these people because they help you grow.
They help you learn more about yourself and who you become.
I am who I am today because of these friends.
They took her to McDonald's.
Finally, you got to go to McDonald's.
I learned so much.
You know, like if I were studying, would I have ever learned about how to order?
No, like Chaucer, my ass.
We need to know what's on a Big Mac.
What's in those nuggets.
We don't need to know about that.
What's cute is, this is so fun, these girlfriends.
They took care of her.
They each decided to get her their favorite.
item.
Yes.
Oh, fine.
So you were at McDonald's just completely surrounded by nuggets and big
Macs and did you like it?
I mean, the caramel frappy, of course.
Okay, that one's the one that got yet.
Tell us about Terekic, Tariq, Tariq, I mean, doesn't matter.
Okay.
And this is the part I've written down.
This is textbook, Monica, here.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Chasing a guy who's unavailable?
Oh.
What ever heard of it?
Just my whole life.
I mean, I'm just describing my story.
I'm not saying anything about you.
This mysterious character, he was gorgeous.
He was a bad boy.
He was saying less.
And I was like, I want to know what he wants to tell me.
He had nothing to care, actually.
Rumored to be a drug dealer.
He's from Iraq.
That's what my friends used to say.
And I refuse to believe that.
I was like, he's really struggling, you know, with the college pressure.
And somebody needs to help him out.
Many times he came to my room and he was hungry.
So I was like, okay, you know, there's some biscuits.
and bananas.
He was just eating bananas and the biscuits.
And then, like, go back.
I know.
And I saw him in college.
He was sitting on this bench, which had a clear sign of no smoking.
So he's smoking and he's reading a book.
And I'm like, excuse me, it says no smoking.
And he's like, oh, I'm dyslexic.
Oh.
I was like, oh, okay.
Then later on I was questioning myself, like, he was reading a book.
What does smoking have to do?
It probably didn't have the word smoking in his book.
That's why he was able to read it.
He just couldn't read the word smoking.
That's when you know you have a crush.
because you're just so nervous in front of them.
You'll do anything.
I know.
If they say they're reading a book and they're dyslexic,
I don't know.
You'll just believe that, whatever that is.
Or if they say nobody understands them.
I was like, yeah, nobody gets sick.
You're going through a lot.
Let me help you.
And Tarek was like a Wunderkin when he was young.
But then he was in year six at Oxford.
He couldn't get his shit together.
Oh, I know.
But you were like, because he's struggling.
He's struggling.
Nobody's there to help him.
Let me help him.
And my friends told me.
off. They were like, what are you doing?
The girl that was kind of catty at times,
she was the real talk express. She's like,
you're a fucking delusional. This guy doesn't like you.
All of these hard conversations, she would just tell me
directly. She said, I don't care if I
sound rude or not, but she said, you need
to get your life together. You cannot go and
fix this guy's life. Don't you see it?
But it's hard for anyone at that age
if they have a crush on someone to be
self-actualized enough to be like, no,
he's not good for me. But also,
you have had experience
of changing the world.
So you have some evidence?
The reason that I was enjoying this crush scenario was because he was unavailable.
He was not even responding.
And for me, it was this one-sided love that I was experiencing.
And I was so insecure about my looks because of the damage of my facial nerve on the left side.
And I just thought this love life and all of these things are not going to be part of my life.
And I thought maybe the closest that I can come to it is this imaginary relationship that I have
right now? This is what I wrote down. I want to read it verbatim if I could. Walking away from her
room, I felt strange. Like the spell that had brought me there was broken. I'd failed in my
mission to help Tarek and Anisa thought I was a fool for trying. She was right. He had not
asked for my help and didn't accept it when I offered. So why was I doing this? Because I enjoyed
crafting elaborate narratives around our brief interactions. I could have snapped myself out of
the delusion at any time, but I didn't want to. When Tarek disappeared for days, I would
Sit on my bed and listen to Bollywood duets, imagining the two of us embroiled in an epic love story.
Then he'd show up again without explanation, eat my food, and leave.
He didn't want to be close to me, didn't ask about my friends or weekend plans.
And that never bothered me because I preferred the fantasy in my head where everything was both thrilling and safe.
Obsessing over an unapproachable boy was just another way of avoiding rejection and staying single,
filling my need for connection with one-sided romance.
Sorry I had to read that.
It's so dead on.
That's Monica in high school.
That's me now.
Yeah.
That's me still.
Hopefully we'll get to is how you got over that.
Because those are big feelings.
They're so safe.
I bet if he did start to like you, you would have been like, no, I don't want that.
That used to happen to me a lot.
It's scary.
It's scary when it feels more real.
Part of that actually did happen to me when I actually started.
seeing my now husband Asar, it felt more and more real that this guy is real, the feelings
are real, I am actually going through these emotions and it means I have to make decisions
about my future with this person. Do I want us to be together or not? That changes you as a person.
Like I felt different when I made that decision. But initially with these crushing or like
these relationships in my imagination, it was fun because I was like, what if? It's just
these scenarios that you are like imagining and that's how you pass your day.
You can't get hurt in them because they're not real.
But when it's real, all of a sudden we can get hurt.
And now a whole other batch of thoughts and emotions enter.
Yeah, I actually did not want to be in a relationship, to be honest,
because I just thought culturally for many other reasons, I thought it was not for me.
And I just never thought somebody would actually love me because of my insecurities.
So many reasons for why I just thought it was never going to be the story of my life.
For me, it was this reality that it's not going to happen.
I would not do it because of the culture and all of that,
but also that I don't think anybody is going to love me
or I'm going to find a person.
Yeah.
Was that so confusing because also the world is telling you they love you.
You're being praised.
You're on covers of time, I assume.
Hang it with Obama.
Exactly.
Absensibly, the world is like, Malala, we love you.
But then internally, you're like,
but that's not real and no one will really love me.
Even this recognition that you receive or the way people imagine that you are in these circles
and you are hanging out with some prime ministers and presidents every day or you are meeting
famous celebrities, that's not a true picture of my life.
I'm spending most of my time with my family or my college friends and now with my husband.
That's just a more true picture of my everyday life.
I'm meeting our activists and the projects that we support.
So it's like a mix of that, but people have these perceptions.
You're probably a victim of a lot of projection.
For us to know that a little girl got shot on a bus over wanting to go to school is so terrible that the only way it's palatable is she's fine and she's turned it into this great thing and she's won the Nelble.
So it's okay, I can handle this stark.
Yes, I need you to be this because it's way too uncomfortable for me to think a little girl got shot.
So I think you probably were just this blank canvas that people just projected onto you
what they wanted you to be so they could feel better.
It's really hard to process the response from people because I come across all sorts of
reactions.
Even if we denied, I think they do affect us in one way or another.
I think in the middle of it, I just did not give myself enough time to know what I wanted.
life was moving so fast that I thought,
okay, this is what's expected of me
and I'm supposed to live this way.
It's work, it's being an advocate,
that I'm supposed to know everything
when I'm still reading a biology textbook
learning about cells or I have to do an essay
for my English subject or solve some math problems
that I somehow need to be able to address
policymakers about their budgets for girls' education
and I need to have the correct opinion
about every political issue out there.
And I sort of accepted.
I said, yeah, if you are applauded and if you are recognized,
then somehow you need to know everything and you need to know it the right way.
It's a lot of pressure.
You know, you're not being yourself anymore.
You cannot make a mistake.
You're being scrutinized for it.
And it still happens.
Even now, there are so many things that I actually don't know.
I have principles in life that I follow.
For me, the most important thing is promoting peace, promoting compassion.
It's creating equal opportunities for girls through education.
And it's ensuring that we actually.
listen to each other and bring more harmony and stand against oppression and violence and
wars.
I sort of know these things and I also know that whoever it happens to, we have to stand with
them.
In whatever part of the world it's happening, we have to stand up to that.
But it's not that I have to like know the history and the background of every political
issue.
But I bet it's not enough for people.
I bet you have that, but they now want you to be an environmentalist and they want you
to be nine other issues that they care a lot about because they are in alignment with
you on this thing, I bet you're now feeling the pressure of getting sucked into all these other
political arenas that maybe isn't your passion. Yeah, the way now I look into it is I see it from
the perspective of girls and I related to the issue of girls' education. So, for example, climate
change, I don't know everything about this climate change topic, but what I do know is that climate
related events are affecting girls' education. Girls' education is actually one of the
the top solutions to all things, including climate change.
So I think about it that way now.
I'm like, sure, like I can help in some of these things, but my focus will be
girls' education.
Right.
I think that takes courage because people want you to be all things.
And it's okay to have one message.
I care about girls getting educated.
Y'all can solve the rest of the stuff.
I mean, looking at all these conflicts and things that are happening in the world, like
what's happening in Afghanistan or what's happening in Gaza, for me, it's girls in their future.
If their schools are bombed, if they do not have an education,
they are denied the opportunity to have a future.
So I support the education programs.
I help bring attention to their stories.
And my goal is that we promote the message that can give them a chance back to their education.
So that means we have to promote peace.
We have to advocate against wars.
Okay, so Oxford's going well.
You've got a friendship group.
You have gone to one of your rowing meets, which is hysterical because you've never rowed.
Are you afraid of falling in and not swimming?
Wham, there's another overlap.
Of course.
I'll drown.
Oh, God.
She's still out there.
Because she is hell back.
The worst thing that could happen is I could drown.
Yeah.
Did you wear a life mask?
No.
Yeah.
I couldn't even tell them.
I was just like, do it once and then get out.
So she does this, and she's walking home from rowing practice, and she's wearing jeans.
And then a photo of you emerges.
You already have so much on your plate.
You're trying to get through Oxford.
You're trying to make friends.
And now these things kind of keep bubbling up.
Yeah.
you're like confused, what's wrong with jeans, right?
Yeah, exactly.
You know, before that, I had only worn my Pakistani traditional clothes.
Even if it was a non-uniform day at school, I would just wear Pakistani clothes.
And I felt awkward.
I always stand out as this public figure Malala because that's the clothes that she wears.
The Pakistani clothes are beautiful.
They're just flashy, colorful, and I love them, and I still wear them.
But in college, I just thought if I wear that, everybody's going to see me as this public figure.
And they're going to approach me differently.
So I decided that I was going to wear jeans and these jumpers or a shirt, cardigans, all of that.
Selina-Govett style.
Oh, whatever Selena was in here.
Coming back from rowing, somebody took a photo of me in skinny jeans with a green bomber jacket.
Sounds cute.
I know. Sounds really cute, right?
Yeah, I like it.
And that photo somehow went viral.
And there was this whole social media controversy that started that was criticizing me for wearing jeans that it was against my culture and religious.
anti-Islamic, you're a Satanist, your parents now know, your family members in Pakistan
are getting heat and moms, of course, freaked out.
She's like, I told you.
I know, and then I opened my phone and I just check what's happening and my parents
called me and they're like, can you respond to this or can we help fix this?
Because for them, it's like, let's fix the problem.
They were getting these calls from Pakistan.
And I told my parents, I said, I'm not here for some pilgrimage.
I'm here to study.
I'm here to be like any other student.
I said, I'm not going to be defending myself or apologizing.
I'm going to wear what I want.
And I'm not going to issue any statement on this.
And that's the right move.
You did the right thing.
And you did as well as you could to not let it affect you.
But there's a reality of all that is insanely stressful.
You've got a whole country up in arms right now over the fact that you wore jeans.
I know.
And then it just started a whole debate.
People were criticizing that my dress was either too un-Islamic.
And then some people were saying that she's still wearing a head skull.
scarf like a hijab. And she's not fully liberated if she continues to wear that.
Right. So she's wearing too much. She's wearing too much. Too little, too much. And not enough.
For me, it is about the right of every girl and woman to choose for herself, what she does, what she
wears. Were your friends at least support, like, were they good? Okay, good. Always. I mean,
they just could not believe it. It's just a crazy world out there that no matter what women do,
they're just criticized for it. You are promoting work too much or career, anti-career, staying at home.
you're wearing this or that.
You guys can't do it right.
I know.
But you do discover 24 obbs.
Yes.
Is a party.
In the wake of all this,
you get invited to join a Pakistani club.
Yes, Friends Club.
And so you go there with a ton of fear.
I don't know.
The rest of Pakistan seems pretty pissed at me.
How are they all going to feel?
Yeah.
It had been nearly five years.
I hadn't gone back to Pakistan since the attack.
And this was the first time that I was getting.
so close to my country where you feel like the people who have just come here as international
students for Pakistani, now they're meeting you. I was so nervous because when your exposure
is limited, then you think that what you see on social media is what people think. Yes,
that's the danger of it. I was nervous. I was preparing an answer for every possible,
like, ridiculous question I could be asked. What have you done for the country? And why don't you
go back and all of these ridiculous things? Why are you wearing jeans? Yeah, all of that. And when I go
there, they're like so excited. I feel like they had just cleaned their living room just for me.
And they're everything, just like the real world. You guys, some people smoke pot and drink.
And there was like Pakistani food and somebody's smoking weed and somebody's not. And somebody is
talking about boyfriend and girlfriend and somebody's like, none of those things. You know,
we're not going to talk about that. I was so quiet and I was just watching. I was just worried
what's going to come next. It was such a chill, fun evening. And I ended up staying there till late.
This is the rascal in her. She stays.
till only the people left her high.
And she'll sleep till two the next day
and she'll miss class. Yeah.
You'll let it rip.
I know.
And you danced at this one?
Yeah, to Pakistani music.
And Pakistani songs are like so addictive.
And the friends were just wonderful.
Like that became my safe space,
the 24 obs house.
It was a perfect place I would just be there almost every day.
It's kind of beautiful because in some ways you had judged them
without knowing them in the same way that people were judging you.
I know.
And I was just so.
anxious, like they're going to ask me this ridiculous question the next minute.
Yeah.
One of my friends there told me that I know what you might be thinking, but just know that
any hateful things that you come across, that's not what most of the people think and
that I support you and all of that.
And I was like, oh, my goodness, thank you.
I believe more in what I experience in real life than what I see on social media.
So I've been asked constantly about what do I think about the hatred I receive in Pakistan?
And I'm like, what hatred?
I actually receive a lot more love in Pakistan.
I have been working in the country since I started this mission for girls' education.
There are incredible organizations that I'm supporting through Malala Fund.
We have a school there.
We're doing like so much work.
And people are working together with us and they're supporting us.
So of course, trolls on these things are always there because people will be disagreeing you for one reason or another.
The pathetic nature of Twitter and all of it is it's 0.5% creating 95% of the content.
It's not representative at all of anything in real life.
I forgot the most embarrassing and awkward part of her journey.
Oh, okay.
She had a full security detail for all this.
So she's rolling around two white, old middle-aged cops who are living in a dorm down the hall from her.
I put them in a student room.
How funny is that?
I mean, you're already feeling out of place and you've got.
I know.
You're trying so hard to blend in.
You just can't.
I made them eat the college dining hall.
Baked beans.
And this was educational for me.
So the English or at least Oxford
were so different than an American college.
You're there for three years.
You take a test at the end of one year
that tells you you're out or you get to stay
for another two years.
Oh.
And they tell you where you rank.
And so you take the first year one
and you're like at the very bottom.
I was at the very bottom.
I nearly failed my exams.
Wow.
Yeah.
But they didn't kick you out.
So you didn't do so bad that they booted you.
No.
But they warned me.
They weren't going to kick you out.
They were like, you're going to fail your degree if you...
Carry on.
Yeah.
And that's when my senior tutor had a meeting with me.
She said, I'm serious this time.
Like, I have seen your results.
You need to change the way you do your work.
I asked her to write a letter to my parents and Malala fun team.
Everybody was like, okay, you know, fine.
Basically, I need to stop being on the road.
I need to stop my other responsibilities.
She said being a student means you are a full-time student.
Yeah.
This is a full-time job.
You cannot be traveling.
to three different countries in a week or so.
That's what I was doing in my first year.
I was in Lebanon, then I was in Switzerland,
then I was in Monaco, I was doing different things.
Some were for Malala Fund advocacy,
really significant and important,
but some were paid events
where I could support my family and all of that.
But they said, no, you have to do it in your summer breaks.
You cannot do it during college time.
And it did affect my studies.
I was, of course, prioritizing,
socializing, but at the same time,
I was doing work as well,
which meant I had even less time
for my essays, and I was so behind in my academic work.
Wow.
Yeah, you were kind of drowning in that.
So for my second and third year, when it was like serious, serious,
I said, okay, like, I am going to work hard.
It was quite stressful to get back into it and get it all together.
But then I found out about the student support system at college,
and there was this amazing person.
She was brought into college to help students who are struggling with their studies.
I was nervous to go there because I thought I might be.
the only one who's going to be there and I had this imposter syndrome and I thought maybe I don't
deserve to be here. She told me so many students get to see her and I even saw my friends there
that gave me a bit of comfort that it's quite normal and quite common for students to ask for
help. And I think we should encourage students the sooner you ask for it. There's just small things
that can significantly help you. Yes. Your friend Raja invites you and your friend to go go-karting.
Do you ever see the movie, Yes, man, Jim Carrey?
Yes.
He has to say yes to everything for a year or whatever, some period.
And his life takes off.
And in that same way, they're like, you want to come go card and you're like, let's go.
And there's this boy there and he is so cute.
It was not Raj. It was Jamal.
Oh, it was Jamal.
Sorry, sorry.
Different friend.
But you get invited and then there's this incredibly cute boy in town from Pakistan who is a cricket player.
Yeah, I was just getting over my crush who had ghosted me.
eat all your food.
You eat all your bananas.
I had just given up on love.
And then this other guy enters my life.
A new guy.
A new guy.
A new guy.
A new guy.
Yes. Maybe it's not a fantasy.
Exactly.
Yeah.
He's gorgeous, though.
He's gorgeous.
He's really handsome.
I immediately was like, wow, this is the guy I sort of used to imagine.
He's very charming.
And she drove her go car directly into some, into some tires and really fucked herself up and
had to get taken to the manager's office and her security had to check her
vitals is all in front of the guy.
Talk about a set piece.
To be honest.
So that was our first time meeting.
So that's what I met Aser.
Aser, who's now my husband.
Yes.
This is a meet Q.
I know.
And you totally crashed and had a big episode.
And he basically talked to you out of it a little bit.
I know.
I was like, got to give me a minute.
This is a serious injury.
And he's like, get over it.
He's like, you were driving at like 10 miles per hour.
I made some tires.
He said, I said, I said, I.
I think you're fine.
He should have been like, girl, you were shot.
What are you talking about?
He never brought that up.
He never asked me about my past.
He never brought those things up.
And I instantly knew that this guy is different.
He was more interested in the person who I was and who I was becoming.
And I needed that person because you want to grow.
You are exploring more about yourself.
And I thought he's like the perfect partner.
Because with him I can be myself.
I can be funny.
I can say silly things.
I don't have to think twice.
Am I getting this right or not?
or am I saying something incorrect?
But do you think part of it was because you were like, oh, he's gorgeous.
He's out of my league.
Nothing's at risk here.
A little bit, yes.
Yeah, I think that's not to out Monica more, but the hotter our guess is,
the more powerful Monica is as a flurter.
We'll have Brad Pitt and she'll be like, what's up, girl?
Like she'll be so confident because she's like, well, he ain't going to like me.
Well, no?
Yes, it's the same thing, though.
It's an unavailable person or an unapproachable.
It's like, okay, yeah, there's no reason to be anything but me.
Yes.
Because there's no pressure.
But then that's when you get into the circumstance where it's like, oh, wait, no, maybe
actually they do like me.
Uh-oh, there's something wrong with them, so I don't like them anymore.
Yeah, no, I thought it would be like one of those one-sided imagination kind of love story,
but it turns out I was actually in love with him.
Yeah.
He's so sweet.
If he's anything like how you describe him in the book.
I know.
I don't want to give too many spoilers about the love story because I think this is like a really,
really fun story.
It is.
But at one point, I felt like it was not going to work out.
At the beginning, you were very assertive.
And I like this.
Yes.
You knew he was leaving town and you're like, I got to get together with this guy.
He's going back to Pakistan.
I'm going to show some initiation.
It's like we couldn't say it out loud.
But we were trying to like signal it to say, I'm interested.
By the end of that first summer, it was 2018, I had just finished my first year at college.
He didn't even communicate.
His friend told my other friend.
to communicate to me.
So it was like a long way that, oh, well, Asa is not thinking about you in that way.
Just a friend.
Just a friend.
And I was like, what?
Yeah.
Anyway, broke my heart.
I know, but then we got back together and I don't want to, you know, people can read how it happens.
Oh, this is so cute.
Monica, he's so sweet.
He's so cute.
He's older than you.
His love is cricket.
That's his life.
He's from a very poor background.
He's had a pretty
gnarly childhood
in his own right.
His father had a lot of issues.
So you guys knew each other.
We had a lot in common
because we both used humor
as a coping mechanism.
Yeah.
So being funny is everything to us.
And I just realized that this guy
has the best sense of humor.
But most importantly,
he finds me funny.
Yeah.
So he laughs at my jokes and I love that.
Yeah.
I really want to know why he first...
Of course, there's more in the book,
but he also tells the story
that his right angel was telling him
that if there's one person in the world
that you don't want to hurt,
it's Malala.
And that his left angel was telling him,
the devil,
that the one person,
if you hurt her,
you are going to be her enemy number one.
So I think for him,
it was our friendship.
He did not want that friendship to go away.
He also understood that we were at a different state in our life.
He was already working.
He had graduated.
I had just finished my first year of university.
So he knew that I was still figuring things out in life.
To be honest, I think he was thinking the right way.
Right.
He had also been burned.
He was a sweet boy and he was a sweet boy to a few different girls and they kind of left
him in the lurch.
Yeah, and he was just scared.
If Malala speaks publicly about me.
I think he was just scared like if we start sort of technically dating each other and
then he messes things up that he thought it's going to be over for him because the mission
of Malala fun changes.
And then we are like.
Education, we're going to come back to that, but there's just one guy.
Education aside.
We've all come together today to talk about the educational challenges of Mongolia.
But before we get to that, do you guys know this guy, sir?
He's like, oh, I'm a cricket player.
Oh, my gosh, yeah, everyone would hate him because everyone loves you so much.
So I understand the fear.
Well, we hate Terek. I hate Terek.
I do, too.
Yeah.
Stay tuned for more armchair expert.
If you dare.
I mean, this is such a movie.
You decide to smoke pot.
Yes.
And you have what is the worst experience I've ever heard detailed from someone's smoking pot.
It turns into a two-and-a-half-day thing.
And do you want to try to describe what that sensation was?
Of course, I had become this adventurous student at college.
I was trying to try everything.
So one evening, my friends called me to the college garden and said,
let's hang out.
I visit them.
They're trying this new thing, which looks like a flask, and it's called a bong.
Yeah.
So I was like, huh, like, I've never seen this.
What is it?
They're like, give it a try.
It's just weed and something.
I was like, okay, they said, just take one puff.
And I was like, oh, what could one puff to?
Sure.
First attempt, I coughed.
Yeah.
Second attempt, I inhaled it.
And it went all inside my body.
In that moment, I froze.
Everything changed instantly.
I was reliving the Taliban attack.
And prior to this, you had said many times and maybe believed yourself that you had no memory of that whole thing, that you got on a bus one day and you woke up in Birmingham.
A week-long induced coma, it's hard to know what happened, what didn't happen, what was a real memory and what wasn't.
But now, seven years later, at college, after this bong experience, I was reliving that flashback.
It makes so much sense because when you're high and you have no experience with it, you're out of control, you don't know when it'll end, you feel trapped.
These are like all the things you experience.
And it doesn't end.
It went on and on for hours.
I was shaking.
I wanted to scream.
I wanted to move, but I couldn't.
I thought I was being attacked again.
I thought maybe I'm dead and my dead body somewhere and this is maybe an afterlife.
I just could not figure it out.
And you're seeing flashes of memories now.
Yes.
And you sort of lose that sense of reality.
You feel so detached.
That whole night I was in my friend's room.
I was just so scared.
I couldn't close my eyes.
I couldn't sleep because I thought as soon as I closed my eyes, maybe I'll die.
Yeah.
That's when my mental health journey began.
I had not seen a therapist before.
And if you don't mind, you had a second experience too,
and this all makes so much sense,
which is you also go to Boston to get the nerve surgery,
and they put you on oxycodone, and then you're back again.
Really?
So now we've got, again, and it's the same thing,
because I don't have my full faculties.
I'm in this purgatory nether world.
I just can't do drugs, basically.
Yeah, that's fine.
Now you know.
And I wouldn't do it.
You should, though.
No, don't.
She already did it twice.
No, she should do, let's try ex-a-C-C-Nax, okay.
Are those things in here?
I've heard of the things in here.
What is it?
I've heard something about MDMA.
What is that?
That's ex-s-season.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's great for intimacy at some point, you and, you and does her want to rekindle?
Dax, if you make her feel this again, this is not my...
No, because she's going to do all the work, and she's going to decouple all that,
and there'll be a moment, there'll be a big signal that she has processed everything.
Okay.
The kissing you guys are going to do on it?
Oh, my God.
Okay.
The disassociation that you probably felt in the attack is what you are also feeling on drugs.
There is a disassociation that happens when you're drinking or on drugs.
And so it is literally the exact same feeling.
Those suppressed memories, I could not acknowledge that I had actually seen it.
Yes.
Again, back to, it wasn't what people wanted to hear.
They want to hear that you survived and that you're strong.
And I want to hear that I survived and I don't remember any.
thing. Who wants to remember that?
And you said you had been given this identity marker of brave.
Yes.
And now all of a sudden you're just scared out of your mind to be alive.
I felt that I had failed living up to the expectations.
You have this thing that so few people could relate to, but I find it so heartbreaking.
You have this Wunderkin thing, which is like these prodigy musicians.
They're 12.
The world loves them.
And it's like, where do we go from here?
It's untenable.
You'd have to grow up and be Beethoven to deliver on what this prime.
Thomas at 12 was. It's such a kind of cruel expectation. It's dangerous to celebrate young people
in such a profound way. Yeah. And I think the way we are received in media, and especially now
on social media, that exposure is just crazy. People then have this fixed image of you and you
also internalize it. So I just thought the girl that I was recognized as being strong and brave
at age 15 who survived the Taliban bullet, this is who I need to be for the rest of my life.
I have to be brave and courageous.
And I was actually like really happy with myself that I didn't need therapy,
that I had overcome all of these things so quickly.
I was now on this mission and then I was enjoying my life.
And suddenly something so small triggered the whole trauma again.
The body keeps the score.
And I felt like maybe it was all there this whole time.
So this was the first time I started getting mental health support.
I started therapy.
Which you had a lot of hurdles, right?
You have some cultural hurdles.
As you say in the book, there are 243 million Pakistanis,
and there are 500 practicing psychiatrists in the whole country.
So it pretty much tell you culturally how your culture feels about psychiatry.
Growing up, we were not familiar with this.
It's weak, it's indulgent, it's anti-God somehow.
You should be turning to God for these solutions.
It's either like you're supposed to get some medication for everything
because they see it as like a real physical problem or maybe you're cursed or something.
Well, generally, yeah, you were saying in Pakistan,
if you're having mental health issues,
that's almost a sign that you're not connected to God.
I don't want to go and tell my parents
because then they will think that I've gone mad or something.
Yeah, yeah.
You're crazy.
Yes.
I myself just thought that maybe a therapist
just would not understand my situation.
For everybody, it's just so unique and personal.
Well, that's the thing.
Your story is unique and it's not.
Exactly.
Because you're just a human who's scared, right?
It's like we think we're so unique.
and you are objectively unique, but also you're not.
Fundamentally, the things you're struggling with are the things that's so many.
You're afraid to smile at times.
We're really doing all day long.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, I was really nervous about my exams.
I was nervous about life after I graduate.
I was nervous about a decision whether to get married or not when I was seeing us.
So there was a lot on my mind.
From the flashbacks to the time when I started getting therapy,
we're still a few months in between.
My friends noticed that I wasn't being myself anymore.
And one of my friends then suggested that I see a therapist.
I was like, they won't get it.
But she said, give it a try because a lot of college students too,
that she herself is seeing a therapist.
That gave me a little comfort that I'm not the only one.
And the first time I went to see that therapist, Evelyn, I told her everything.
I said, okay, and now prescribe, you know, what do I need to take?
And I like, fix it.
Tell me where I got it wrong this time.
I just wanted it all to go away.
and I wanted myself to be the person who I was before the bong incident and the flashbacks.
I came to this understanding that you're never going to be the same person as you were.
Everything has changed, the way you think, the way you feel, everything has changed.
You have to acknowledge that and you have to coexist with it.
And your therapist is like, you have PTSD and you're like, yeah, what is that?
People say they get PTSD for the line was too long.
Exactly.
It's like been so overused.
I got PTSD seven years after.
Yeah.
It's insane.
Anybody would bring up this topic.
and I was like, not me.
But you started having panic attacks.
Yes.
There's a lot going on.
You move in with your friends.
That's a little different.
She diagnosed me with anxiety and panic attacks.
We had many sessions together.
She told me to understand my emotions a bit, write it down, breathing techniques.
Then she helped me separate emotions and thoughts and feelings from actions.
And sometimes you are in the spiral of thoughts and you feel so helpless or you feel
frightened from nothing.
You're like, why am I scared?
I can stand up to the scariest people who try to silence and at the same time I'm scared.
And then you're mad at yourself because you're weak in that domain and then you're ashamed
to yourself and that's its own fucking thing. Now we do. We're so cruel to ourselves sometimes.
I know and it was just so hard to like go through it. But now I still get therapy.
These kind of panic attacks and flashbacks have happened a few more times after that.
I'm doing well now but I just don't know what's going to happen in the future. The transition,
the change is, just seeing new things.
But at least I know that I will always ask for help.
Yes.
I also have anxiety and panic.
And for me now, if it starts to happen,
it is actually a sign now that something else is going on.
Because, you know, you're just going through life
and then all of a sudden you're like in a zone.
Overwhelmed.
And it's actually helpful to say, oh, I'm having a panic attack.
That means I need to deal with something.
Something's going on.
Yes.
Yes, go talk to your therapist.
It can be a good indicator.
or if you know what it is.
This is what my therapist told me
there's a window of tolerance for each of us
and that can change throughout our lives.
I kept questioning her
that I stood up to so many challenging,
difficult things in my life.
Why am I scared now
when this is not scary,
but I'm somehow really scared?
You're fighting a lion but you're afraid of a mouse.
And she said that the window of tolerance
that we have can shrink in,
it can grow bigger at times.
Right now you might be overwhelmed
with everything that is happening, you might be just scared about what life would look like for you after
college or whether you should get married or not.
You're dating a certain. It's a secret. You're not allowed to be doing that.
Yeah, that's a lot. And the work pressure exams, all of these things. Maybe that window of tolerance
has gotten a bit smaller, but it's okay because your body is giving you these signs.
You're very right. It's a sign telling us something about how we are coping with the stress.
Yeah, and maybe I need to be a little bit gentler with myself right now.
There's something to look at.
Yeah, there's something to investigate.
Now, the one thing that's going great in your life at this point is still a sir.
Yes.
This boy, I like him so much.
The taxi sends the way she does this British Vogue interview and she discusses her thoughts on marriage and some other things and it causes yet again one of these insane outcries and her own parents are freaked out and you got to know.
Correct this statement.
I get the British Vogue cover seven, eight months before our marriage.
We did not know we were going to get married, but it was the same year.
The Vogue piece came out and it received this backlash and it became another controversy
because I was asked by the interviewer, what do I think about marriage?
And at the time, I was so stressed about this marriage decision and I was seeing Usur and I was
confused, like should I get married?
What about the system of patriarchy and am I giving up to it?
And what about the millions?
of girls who are forced into marriages.
Am I losing something?
Am I making more compromises?
Marriage has been an instrument of oppression.
Let's just say that.
Exactly.
You've been fighting actively against that.
I know.
And it's not that I was either against it or probate,
but I was questioning it.
Right.
So I said something like,
I don't know why people have to get married.
Why can't it just be like a partnership
or just sort of an agreement or friendship or something like this?
My comments don't even make sense to me now.
I'm like, what was I saying?
Well, it makes sense to me because that's what you were experiencing with a surer.
You're like, I'm in the sense.
something that's great, and I can't say that.
It also sounds like a fine thing to think.
Yeah, yeah. And I think we should be allowed to be confused and question these things.
But people were like, oh, she's now promoting girls not to get married, and she's like against
this Islamic religious ceremony around marriage, which is called Nika, and this whole thing
that Malala is now promoting anti-marriage culture.
And I was like, wait what?
Oh, my gosh.
And the parents, this one, I felt very protective of you.
I was like, I want to be in this house right now
because initially they saw it
and they were so proud of this thing
and then the backlash happened
and they succumbed to it
and they want her to make a statement
and then it serves like,
do you want me to talk to him?
To your parents?
What a stud.
You know, in that moment you sort of know
like I think he's the one.
Yeah.
We're here to protect.
We don't offer a lot but we should be protecting you.
And I knew he was the right one
because he sort of stood up to that patriarchal
narrative, that misogynistic narrative.
He's like, you look beautiful, and it's a great article.
And let me remind your parents that they loved it to two, two hours ago.
I love him.
Oh, I love him.
There's some text, Monica, that'll make you ball your eyes out.
In therapy, I've talked a lot about this, where I just want someone who just has my back
regardless.
And it's really hard to find because also people are their own people, and no one needs to
have your back regardless.
That's kind of asking a lot.
but in moments where people show up for you like that,
it is so meaningful.
I love that you have that.
So the Malala right after was like,
let's take a trip.
Because he's also living in Pakistan.
He's got kind of his dream job working for a cricket organization.
So you guys take this lovely trip to Lake Placid.
Yeah, I mean, it was a long distance.
It was still the COVID travel restrictions
and we somehow managed to make it to Lake Placid in the U.S.
And it was just the two of us.
So it was a time where we were not thinking about
anything else, family, culture, all of these things. It's just, what do I want? How do I feel?
And you're supposed to have a talk? I know I had prepared a long list of questions that I'm going to ask him everything.
Does he have any problem with a woman earning more money or not? Would he feel insecure about what I do?
Or he has to adjust to my schedule. Are you going to feel emasculated by joining me? Yeah, yeah.
Because I ain't got time for it. I know. Does he truly, truly love me or not? We're so worried.
Anyway, we are in Lake Placid.
It's a beautiful place.
We are exploring different things, doing like a yoga session,
and then watching birds and walking and hiking.
And then we consider canoeing as well.
Again, can't swim.
Okay, I need you to see.
Because I'm getting in boat.
I know.
So we start canoeing, and the waves were really strong.
So we are trying to, like, head back to the hotel.
This is Monica's nightmare.
But the waves are taking us in a different direction.
And before we know it, we're like quite far away and we're both panicking now.
We sort of see this house and then we stop by the dog.
But then they have three, four big dogs and they were like barking at us.
Now I'm okay.
But at the time, I was like really scared of dogs as well.
That's okay.
Yeah, that's reasonable.
The house owner shows up and she's like, I'm going to help you.
This happens all the time.
And then she drives us back to the hotel.
Well, let me just add.
She's a rascal.
She's a procrastinator.
She's gone on this trip to have this talk
and they go the entire trip
and he keeps wanting to talk
and she's like, no, later, later, later, later, later.
Because you're having fun, you don't want to bring it down.
He's like, so what did you want to ask?
I'm like, oh, this yoga session, that's going to be so cool.
Let's do that.
It's like, okay, are you ready to talk now?
No, no, no, let's go canoeing.
Okay, are you ready now?
No, let's play card games or something.
So this was like the last day of the trip.
Five minutes before you get picked up.
And he's like, so are we ready to talk?
And I was like, I think I'm.
I'm ready.
And he said, to talk.
I said, no.
I think I'm ready to get married.
Oh.
To be with you.
Oh, how sweet.
What do you say?
He was very happy.
He loved to.
I love this story.
Oh, I love it because you had such an idea of where your life was going to go and what you could have and what you couldn't have and you got to have it all.
Yeah.
And then we got married like six months after November 2021.
That's another.
That piece that's in the book.
Everyone should read it.
It's more mom stuff.
Yeah.
I'm shaming him for not at.
You know, moms and daughters, we do it.
She needs to read.
I have a copy.
The book?
I'm going to send you with it.
Yeah.
What is it called?
Oh, let them.
It's up there.
Do you know about let them?
Yeah, no, I've come across it, yes.
Oh, your mom needs this book.
You need to give your mom this book.
No.
No?
So we don't know my mom and my dad's actual, actual birthday.
But I asked my mom, if she has heard.
anything about her birthday from her family members.
And she said it was Ramadan time around like 1969 to like 71.
So I looked those years up on Google, looked up Ramadan time, which is based on lunar calendar.
It was around October, November.
So my mom is a Scorpio.
Is that explain a lot?
Yes.
Okay.
I love Scorpios.
I mean, my mom is a Scorpio.
But you can imagine, you cannot argue with her.
She's always right.
Yeah.
See, you want her to read, let them?
Malala is already letting them.
She doesn't need to read it.
Well, exactly.
But her mother is suffering out of her fear of what people think of her and her family and her friends.
She's actually suffering.
And I have compassion for her.
She really needs some tools to let go of what everyone else thinks.
Yes, but also you can just be like that her.
It's hard to unlearn if you have experienced something for decades.
And you have seen the consequences of what women and girls have to go through.
Oh, I have tons of compassion.
for her and no judgment.
And because that, and I don't dislike her, I think she deserves relief.
And I think there's techniques to get relief.
This is my last question.
Have your parents read the book?
No.
They haven't.
They have not.
Are you sure they haven't?
If my daughter writes a book, even if I say I'm not going to, I'm going to.
I actually chose not to share this book with my parents.
Yeah, that's fair.
This book has not been shared with anybody, friends, family members, brothers.
You know, my parents are very supportive right now.
I'm sure we'll have some disagreement.
or something, they'll be like, did you really need to talk about this?
You really need to bring this up.
We'll talk through it.
I know.
I decided not to share this book with my parents because I wanted it to reflect my feelings and my emotions.
Without having to think about theirs.
I think this is you claiming your autonomy.
I think you're very immersed with your family and your parents.
And I think that this book is kind of a declaration of, no, I'm going to be a full person now.
Yes.
I'm not just going to be the person.
at the UN, you're going to have to accept, I'm multifaceted and I'm a full person and this is it.
And that's brave.
And I hope liberating for you.
It's really hard to experience these different human emotions because sometimes you feel
weaker and more vulnerable.
When I fell in love, I felt more vulnerable.
Oh, yeah.
So scary.
Emotionally, I was like, oh, love can make you feel so weak.
Ew.
I felt broken and so vulnerable when I had flashbacks and panic attacks.
I was like, I'm failing.
And now I'm more open to accepting emotions.
And I am embracing them as part of my growth.
I do not believe in this old version of me
who felt that there's only one emotion
and that is just being strong,
staying so firm in what you believe in,
but that means you cannot cry,
you cannot feel weak in any way,
you cannot be heartbroken.
All of those emotions are not used.
you're only just supposed to be strong.
But now I'm like, true bravery is when you go through the lowest and you still stand up
and do what you believe in.
That's true bravery.
That is true courage.
To anybody out there who might feel that they are failing themselves or if they have any doubt,
just know that for as long as you keep your work going, you are brave.
You are courageous.
Yes.
Finding my way.
I really hope everyone reads it.
It's so fun and cute.
Like I said, it's like a complete departure from the other side we already know.
And it's so human and relatable and just really well written.
And it's wonderful.
So I want everyone to check out finding my way.
And Malala, I hope we get to do this again.
Yes, come back.
This was so much fun.
I really enjoyed it.
Oh, good.
Stay tuned for the fact check.
It's where the parties at.
Hello?
Hello.
Did you use that towel?
Yeah, I did.
You did.
Yeah, you can tell.
It's crazy you don't use the hair towel every single night because every time you use the hair towel, you get a compliment on it.
Thank you.
I know, but I can only use it on wet hair and I only wash my hair once a month.
How often do you wash your hair?
Once a week.
Once a week, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it's a lot of hair.
It's a big job.
It's a big job.
It's expensive.
Probably got to use a lot of shampoo.
Yeah, and it gets dry, like, it's not good for me to overwash.
Yeah, it gets dry.
Brittle.
Yeah, brittle bones.
I do need a haircut really badly.
Osteo-haresis.
But one thing about the towel that's interesting is when I use it, you know, my hair gets a little, it's very naturally curly.
Sure.
Hitting its natural stuff.
Don't brag, but yeah, just tread lightly, yeah.
Well, no, people like straight hair.
Well, that's the funny thing.
Exactly.
You like grass is always green.
Always.
But when my hair is curly, if I brush it, it gets poofy.
Uh-huh.
So I haven't been brushing my hair lately at all.
And do you get, you're so blessed your hair, right?
Because you don't get knots?
I do sometimes get knots.
And I just love it.
Now, when I had long hair and I'm talking only like a little bit past my shoulders.
Yeah.
Every night it would get like a dreadlock in it when I slap.
Oh, yeah, I don't have that.
Yeah, I had to really, every morning with fucking conditioner and a comb, like, get knots out.
Because you have fine hair.
Thin.
We call that fine hair.
Yeah, yeah.
Beautiful fine hair.
Okay.
So, yesterday I went to a restaurant.
And next to it was a bar that was playing the Dodgers.
Like, it's in the area by Dodgers Stadium.
So a lot of people go to watch the game.
Sure.
And...
Not the shortstop.
No, it's called...
Little Joy?
Yes.
Wing stop?
You were at quarter sheets?
Yes.
Okay.
Good job.
Rob put it all together.
Um, Little Joy.
Really cute.
Yeah.
Anyway, they sell these chips, voodoo chips that are really yummy.
So in best case scenario, we go there, we have voodoo chips.
What are voodoo chips?
Um, it's...
Tortilla chip?
No, they're potato chips.
Yeah.
But they have, let's see how they're described.
They're so good.
Zapp's kettle potato chips voodoo, sweet, spicy, and tangy flavor, known as people chips.
Oh, New Orleans kettle style voodoo.
They're so good.
I'm intrigued.
Oh, I'll get you some.
They're really good.
Okay.
And they sell them there, so you have a little voodoo.
Uh-huh.
And then you go over to quarter sheets, a really good pizza place.
Now, we were watching the game, and then we went over to Quarter Sheets, and when we were leaving...
Can I ask who we is?
You want to ingest?
Yes.
Okay.
I just look on the website for the next reservation, and I just book it because it's really hard to get in there.
For the pizza joint.
Yeah.
You wouldn't have noticed probably, but do they have a gluten-free cross by chance?
I mean, it's L.A.
They should.
They must.
I don't think they do a lot of modifications.
Also, if they don't, good for you guys.
Don't accommodate to us.
Like, make your real thing, and don't.
Fucking accommodate.
Yeah, because they only have, like, a certain amount.
Okay.
It's not like a huge.
Scarcity.
So good, though.
Yeah, and you love it because of the scarcity.
Because limited it did.
Yeah.
So anyway, we went, we had a great time.
So I have a couple alter egos.
That you make res with?
No.
They just appear.
Like, Sonica is an alter ego.
She drinks a lot of water.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Because she's in the sauna so often?
Oh.
Wow. No. She just is thirsty. And so, like, every now and then if Sonny takes over and then I'm just drinking a lot of water.
Okay. And then it's like, oh, Sonny's here, you know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then there's another one named Flani, and she's feisty. Like, she's, like, loopy and corky.
Uh-huh. Slapsticky?
Yeah, exactly. Pervy?
Um, sure. But I think, I think they're all pervy.
Okay, okay, great.
Including Monica.
Okay.
So something, I was like, it was like that movie split.
Like, Flonnie came, Sonny came.
Okay.
I was there, you know.
It was a carousel of characters.
It was a big night.
Yeah.
And then we left and we were walking back by Little Joy.
And it's open.
So we were, we peaked to see how we were doing.
And it was six one we were not winning.
Yeah.
And we were all like, oh, God, that's bad.
Yeah.
And then this guy was standing on the street and he was like, yeah, you saw it?
Those guys got run over?
Oh, what?
I know.
And we were like, what?
And he said, yeah, the two people just got run over up there.
And it was so, it was definitely, oh, it's a ding, ding, ding to an upcoming episode.
There's an expert we have on morbid curiosity.
Oh, yes, yes, yes.
And it was a real, it was such a ding, ding, ding, because he was, like, you know, out there and you could tell he was, like, scared talking about it.
You know, he was like, they got run over.
I think they were homeless, but I don't know.
And they screamed.
And then Jess was like, oh, I don't want to hear anymore.
No, that.
He kept saying they were homeless, which was, it was an interesting piece of it.
Because I could tell he was kind of saying it so that he felt better about it, I think.
Yep.
You know, and he was like, they ran out in front.
But, yeah, he was just like processing it.
Yes, yes.
And we did, this feels, we did not want to hear it, you know.
This is very similar to like if a stray dog got hit by a car or someone's family pet.
I think that's what's happening.
Oh.
Like, you're trying to comfort yourself.
And so you're like, but they were homeless being like, you know, they're running around and they're already crazy.
You know, like somehow.
Somehow it's better.
It's like it's not the big threat to the world because these people are already living on the fringes and doing wild stuff.
Right.
But I don't even think you know you're doing that, but you're trying to go like, well, this, I shouldn't feel so afraid because it's not a normal person.
It was a homeless person.
Yeah, in quotes.
Yes.
100% yes.
It's like I would never be in that position because that's a different type of person.
Like if a guy guy hit by car and you were like, he was a drug addict.
There's something about it.
He was, like, slumped over.
Yeah, and you feel.
Yeah, and there's, like, more culpability.
I know.
But it's all made up.
We're all making it all up in our heads.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so.
Although we don't even know if they died.
Yeah, that's what I said.
I said, well, maybe they're okay because our friend Eric got hit by a car and he was okay.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, he's.
Who knows what he's like before.
We met him post tag.
He got blasted by a taxi cab.
Yeah, in New York.
But again, no, but what's funny is it's like it was Eric and you go, oh, well, it was
definitely his fault.
Right.
Because he's so absent-minded.
He was probably looking at his phone.
But if someone's really alert and they get hit, you're like, oh, no, then that could
happen to me.
Yeah, I know.
And the truth is everything could happen to all of us.
Anyone could get hit by a car.
Yeah.
Jess said something interesting.
He was like, yeah, it also goes from if you hit someone, a person.
that's just walking across the street, if you hit them, like, you're a murderer.
Uh-huh.
And if it's this homeless person who jumps out in front of you or you have a bit of the collateral
catastrophe that that is homelessness in L.A.
Right.
Yes, yes.
It's like a part of a bigger problem.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's, we really categorize things to make ourselves, like, feel better.
Yeah.
Anyway, so that was a crazy thing that happened.
Mm-hmm.
And I don't.
But you didn't really get many details other than that the people were potentially homeless.
Screaming and potentially homeless.
Okay. Ambulance come and take them away?
Yeah, a lot.
There was so many police cars.
Rescue.
Yeah.
But I'm really glad I didn't see it because that is the type of thing that is like that lady in the mall who had to get out of the wheelchair and let or the husband had to get out of the wheelchair and the lady had to get in the wheelchair.
and it was the whole commotion, and I was, like, really upset about that for the rest of my life.
Uh-huh, yeah, yeah.
I think this would have made a similar mark.
Yeah.
So I have to say, I'm glad I did not see it.
Well, what I'm hearing, which sounds like good news, is you are more affected by that than the loss, the World Series loss.
I was.
Yeah, yeah, that's good.
I think that speaks well to your character.
It also is so human, like, he's a stranger, this person.
He's a stranger on the street, and he really wants to connect over this bad thing.
that happened. Yeah, yeah. It's really interesting. Well, he's, he's alone in this. Yes. And he needs
a little connection. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, man. Yeah. I have such a warp. So again, we're talking so
much about this expert, but yeah, this morbid curiosity topic, which is great. And there's,
there's categories, this person broke it into four categories of different curiosities you could
have. But one is violence. Yeah. Now, one is my great curiosity. But,
Yeah, as we were going through some of these things, and I was like, yeah, I just don't even get scared.
I don't have any emotion during a scary movie.
Right.
And, yeah, I'm like really desensitized.
Like, I could see that people get hit by a car and I would be kind of fine.
I could walk over and get involved.
Right, right.
And it wouldn't.
Yeah.
And I don't know.
And I don't know.
I want to know if it's born that way.
I want to know if it's nature or nurture.
That's like, I mean, probably some combo.
Oh, yeah.
But probably more nurture, I would say, for that.
Well, this guy was saying like when you show people pictures of violence, there's like these different levels of which if it's like if it's a two guys high fiving and you're seeing a photo, you'll first notice that they have contact with one another.
So your eyes go to the high five, but then your eyes go immediately to their faces.
Whereas if it's like a punch to the stomach, your eyes will go to that violence and it won't come.
But then if you see it on the street, you might, you don't want to look or you're repelled
by it.
Yeah.
And I only have the attracted to it part, you know.
Yeah.
I mean, I think that's nurture probably because you're around violence, but also you have a
need to help.
So like, you're not going to be like, I got to turn away.
You want to go towards it to see what you can do.
Yeah. So that would be like a good reason. And I'm not even willing to give myself that pat on the back. Even more like when Nate and I were in Afghanistan and the base we were at got bombed and everyone was running in a very specific direction. They were running to all of the bomb bunkers, which were all around the base. And I was feeling, I was fighting this huge compulsion to run from where everyone was coming, run towards where everyone was running away from.
And knowing that I'm a guest here and we have this liaison that's,
and I start moving and he's like, no, no, wait, whoa, wait, where are you going?
I'm like, I got to see, I have to see what they're running from.
Oh, interesting.
It's like I can't, like almost, I need to see what the threat is or the degree of it.
Huh.
Before I can possibly feel calm.
I got to first know what we're up against.
Oh, that's interesting.
Huh.
But yeah, I just want to run at everything.
That's not good.
It's not a good instinct.
Yeah.
No.
Yeah.
I mean, I do think, I think something like this, like someone getting hit by a car and you going towards that is nice.
Like, I sometimes feel like I'm really bad because I don't want to go help.
You want to pretend it. It's not happening.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And, you know, sometimes I'm in my bed and I think I might have heard like an accident.
And I should go out to see.
and I struggle with this.
I'm like, what should I do?
You should feel guilt for you
because there's so many people like me in the world.
I know, but what if they're not around?
I'm more I have that when I see something
and I'm like, the cops aren't there yet.
Yeah.
And I'm like, do I call 911?
I'm like, I'm sure someone up.
That's the time where I'm sure someone else did.
Yes, calling 911.
It's a big hindrance for me.
I don't want to do it.
And I assume someone else is going to do it.
But if everyone assumes.
But didn't you call 911,
Once for absolutely nothing?
No, it wasn't nothing.
It was important.
What was it?
They didn't pick, they weren't picking up.
Okay, okay.
There was like some guy lurking around our apartment.
Oh, okay.
That's worthy of a nine on one.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And they just kept ringing.
They never picked up.
No.
That's interesting.
It's not good.
We've heard that on Armchair Anonymous.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
Now, back to the, I do think this upcoming episode is going to be one of these ones where it's like I think about a lot or I start noticing.
I think it really, because it happened immediately.
We interviewed this person yesterday and then I'm laying in bed with Lincoln last night and we're talking about, I don't even know what we're talking about, but she just tells me, yeah, she's like, you know, I spend a lot of time when I'm in my room by myself.
planning out scenarios where there's an intruder and they get into my room.
Yes.
And I have a couple different plans.
Like I have this one toy I think would make a great weapon.
And so it's like I have one version where I'm going to, you know, I'm going to go grab that.
I forget how she determined when that's the option.
And then another one is she goes onto her balcony and then hangs over the side and drops down.
Yeah.
And then runs to here.
she's decided she's running into the studio and locking the doors but screaming the whole time hoping we'll wake up right
and then buying some time but i've kind of like like why don't just run run all the way run out the house run to
no because you have to you have to oh oh you mean keep going like she's going to get a distance but she's
going to stay on the property she also has this inclination to make sure everything were alerted like she doesn't
abandon the whole situation but she wants to build a buffer but anyway she's telling me this whole
thing. It was just completely random that she said this. And then I was thinking, I wonder if I
hear this all the time, but I wasn't thinking of it because we hadn't done that episode.
Yeah. But I was like, oh, honey, that's this great gift of humans. We can model out the potential
threats we have. And we can have game plans without ever having experienced it. Yes.
And now whether you'll be able to execute this game plan or not, like you at least have a game plan.
And you have a couple. I had so many game plans. You did. First and foremost, you get under the bed,
but then you Spider-Man, you're not under, you are flush with the...
You're holding yourself up, like a cockroach.
The top of the bottom of the bed, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You know, hair is a little bit of an issue there.
Yes, you got to put up a pony, do a bond.
And then you got to, like, flap it so that it's also flush.
Get your towel, get your nighttime towel.
Yeah, that was my plan when I was a kid.
But my guess is you never tried that because I don't think you could have done it.
I didn't try it, you're not a spider monkey.
But I felt like in a scenario like that, life or death.
Yeah, I could do it.
I think some of us rely a little too much.
I like, we're going to get a big bump once the adrenaline hits.
We'll know kung fu as soon as that adrenaline spike happens.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I also remember in school, they would, you know, we'd be doing like fire safety week or something.
Yeah.
And they would tell you, like, have a game plan, have an escape route at your house, have like a plan.
Yeah.
And so I told my parents, like, we're, we need to come up with a plan and they said no.
Oh.
They had no interest.
They were not going to play that.
They thought it was a silly waste of time.
Now, if we believe there's any power in manifesting, which we do.
Yeah, we do.
It was listening to your first episode of Best Dead.
Oh, thank you.
And they're reading for people who haven't listened to it yet.
You're going through your history, which was you were a fan of their show.
Yeah.
And then you had written them emails.
Yes.
And then they had access to those emails.
Yeah, it was so embarrassing.
Were you prepared for them to that quickly be able to produce these emails from 10 years ago?
No.
He just did a little quick search.
It's so easy to pull up.
It was so embarrassing.
But you say out loud on there, I hope I'm a guest on your show one day.
I know.
Isn't that wild?
Yeah.
And I'm like, I'm caught in the same spot you are, right?
Like I'm thinking if I was reading, like, this was all happening to me, I'd have
the same embarrassment you have.
Yeah.
And then I have like some judgment of people who are forward.
You do?
Yeah, like when people hand people's scripts in restaurants and stuff, I'm like, no, that's
not how you do it.
Sure.
Sure.
It's how you do it.
Like you go through the channels like everyone else.
There's no shortcut, you know.
But then I hear this story and I'm like, well, then also that's true.
Yeah.
You ended up on their show and them on yours.
I did.
That's right.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think it's so, it's funny that that's your takeaway because I, and I do think it's so specific to who you are.
And you know I hate asking people for stuff, like my own hangups.
Yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because Anna and I were talking about this.
She listened and she heard that part and she texted me and said, I almost started crying when I heard that email.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
She was like, it was so sweet and you're just such a go-getter.
Oh, yeah, I thought that too.
And I was like, sending emails and.
Which, yeah.
And then it was a weird sim because earlier that day, Jess and I were talking about hustlers.
And is that learned or is that who you are?
Is that like nature or nurture, basically?
Yeah.
And we were kind of talking about the group, our group of friends, and who is one and who isn't one.
Uh-huh.
And he was like, you are one.
And I was like, I am.
I am.
I think that's right.
And then this was sort of like a weird confirmation.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I think being a hustler is as cool as it gets.
I think that's one of the, that's a descriptor of me.
I'd love to have someone say.
I think it's just like I don't, that's the only option.
Like, I think that's the only option of getting anywhere.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Waiting around is just not going to happen.
I think there are very specific lines.
that I feel I know not to cross that are just in my gun.
They're the ones you decided.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They happen to be other people's lines.
Like, that's all life is.
Like, you know, you run into someone and that to them is also the line.
Yes.
And it jives.
Yeah, and there is.
Because there isn't a right or a wrong line.
No, there's no right or wrong.
It depends on who you're talking to, who you're connecting with.
And I do think there's a, for me, I do think I also have a level of self-awareness.
Uh-huh.
And awareness of others.
There's a heightened awareness about this.
So I'm kind of like that person probably is a no, this person is a yes.
But even like even with writing the letter to Jen Ann, like that is just like I'm going for it.
Because why, you know, why not?
I have other domains of I'm going for it.
But just like reaching out and asking is so hard for me.
Yeah, I know.
I'm doing it more and more and more.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I have to say I just, I don't have a problem asking.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's a good quality.
Yeah.
But anyhow.
But anyhow, how we get that?
Manifest.
So, like, you manifested that whole relationship.
Right.
It's in writing.
Full circle.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I manifested a lot of relationships.
And I was just like, and you, you explicitly state it.
But while I'm listening to her response to you, I'm like, well, no doubt she's going to end up
in a murky situation.
Oh.
Elizabeth.
Yeah.
Because, and by the way, I.
These are my favorite kind of people.
Yes.
No boundaries.
Yeah.
Like her third response is to you is like, will you marry me?
And I'm like, yeah, this is like I'm so much like her.
No, you're, I think you are boundyed.
You're good at that.
Yeah, maybe more the kind of BDP, like I fall for people.
I love people pretty quickly.
Sure, sure.
Yeah, yeah.
Which lacks some boundaries.
Sure.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But you would not have.
I wouldn't have gone for the...
I found yourself in the situation she ended up fighting herself.
That's true. That's true.
Um, but it just, it's like, it's all right there in the intro of this kind of innocuous
inane backstory and you're like, well, of course Elizabeth's going to end up in something
in a situation.
Yeah.
There's a lot of things being examined.
A ton.
And I applaud her honesty and lack of any kind of, she's just very honest about it.
Like, you're like, how did your ego like getting these letters?
And she's like, yes, loved it.
Yeah.
Loved.
Yeah.
It's the most complicated journey for her, definitely, by far, of the three of us.
And she does have to confront a lot of personal things and personal behaviors throughout because it's about parasycial relationships, but both ways.
Yeah, yeah.
And it is, it's a tricky, it's a tricky world.
It is, it is.
It's a tricky world.
I just was on a hike with my brother, Peter Krausea.
Oh.
And Larry Trelling, our father, our directing father, it was the sweetest hike a couple days ago.
And yeah, we were talking about, between the three of us, we've all been close enough to several people who have gone to the absolute top of the status mountain.
And, yeah, it was our kind of our conclusion that, like, even the level Peter and I have is a lot to manage successfully and to not become a narcissist and an asshole and all this stuff.
Yeah, it's slippery.
And honestly, Peter and I have only experienced, like, really up 25th of what's out there.
And we all kind of concluded that we certainly know a lot fewer people that manage that successfully than we do.
Successfully, it's such an abnormal experience for a human design to know 100 people to have tens of millions of people love them.
It's unnatural.
And good luck.
And I'm not judgmental of anybody who doesn't manage that.
that well because, like, it's so bizarre.
Yeah, I know.
And confusing, I think.
And ultimately, ironically, lonely.
I think that's where all these, most of these cases lead to really a lot of isolation and loneliness,
which is the opposite of what your fantasy was.
I know.
And I also think it blurt.
It gets confusing.
Who you're servicing in life gets confusing and who your close people are versus who is
everyone versus like I do think it's lonely and scary and hard hard to manage I mean thing I can
relate to a lot is I think for many people it's like they don't enjoy it and they're afraid it's
going to go away which is the weirdest mental space to be in because it feels like you've lost
something that you've lost which but then it doesn't feel like love when you're engaged in it
No, and it seems to be the outcome of the goal you set.
So it's like, well, if that goes away, then the thing I was chasing, I must also say goodbye to.
Yeah, I guess.
My hat's off to the few that have like are somehow completely normal after that bizarre human experience.
Yeah, really strange.
But there's, they're few and far between.
People who have handled it well are the most evolved people on earth because,
you have to do the hardest thing, which is really fundamentally understand that what anyone
else says about you doesn't matter.
And choose to chase the validation that's hard to get and not the one that's right there
and easy to consume.
It's almost like junk food versus protein.
It's like the real self-esteem comes from the service and the being available to others
and the making yourself suffer and all the things you know basically anything you don't want to do is
going to lead to self-esteem the human parts not the like celebrity parts or famous parts or those
things yeah yeah so it's like what you have this at all times you're at a salad bar and there's
like a humongous dessert bar and then there's a little bowl of broccoli and for the few people
that can just pick that broccoli it's hard i think a lot of it has to do too with how grounding of a
relationship you're in and how like equal footed the relationship is yeah that can help people not
get too untethered like a person i can say who's completely fucking normal and as famous as it gets
is kimmel yeah like somehow kimmel yeah is a completely normal dude he's the same dude i met 21
years ago and i my hunch is he he was the same then as he was 21 years before that right right
And the things that are obvious to me in his life is that, like, he's completely surrounded by his family at all times.
Yep.
He is not, like, at all distance himself from his family.
Yep.
They all work with him.
They're all everywhere with him.
Yeah, he's so loyal.
And a lot of his focus is endlessly on, like, like, his hobbies getting people present.
So he's, like, just endlessly thinking about or noticing someone like this and having something special made.
Yeah.
It's like his hobby is something.
Not self-focused.
Yeah.
And then the family's around all the time.
And then his wife's a gangster and not going to be out leveraged or out-talk.
Yep.
Yeah.
He should write a book, How to Be a Successful A-List.
He really should.
Yeah.
That's why that Best Boy Award, not very many people get it, you know.
It's pretty rare.
Pretty rare.
Pretty rare.
Have you tried Capitol Grill yet?
No, is it good?
You should try.
I want to go there.
I took my mom and Dan.
there yesterday.
Is it in Beverly Hills?
No, it's right next to Warner Brothers.
Oh.
Yeah.
So it's very close.
What'd you get?
And they're not popular yet.
So you can just go in there, which is not going to last long.
Not now.
Probably not now, but I also want them to stay in business because I love it.
It's a steakhouse.
Yes, it's very Houston's adjacent.
Oh, nice.
Yeah, they go like an artichoke and really fresh vegetables and the tomatoes outrageous.
The meat's incredible.
I just discovered it maybe a month and a half ago,
and I've been four times now.
What do you get?
What's your order?
The lamb chops.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
They've got an incredible French onion soup.
We love French onion soup.
Croc or cup.
Crock.
Wow.
Yum.
Beautiful salad, the artichokes.
It's great.
It sounds like it probably has a good martini.
Karen fucking tea.
The bar is 29 feet.
It's longer than that.
Bar is probably 50 feet long.
I want to go.
Maybe I'll go now.
You should go in there and get shit-faced in, like, the middle of the afternoon.
I should.
It looks like a great place to.
That sounds really nice.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm going to Houston's tonight.
You are.
With Elizabeth and Andy because we launched today and then she, that's where we decided to make it.
So it's a full circle.
Okay, great.
All right.
Shall we do some facts?
Yeah, let's do some facts.
Okay, some facts from Malala.
Not very many facts.
Mm-hmm.
Not very fact heavy.
Yeah, what are you going to say she didn't feel lonely?
Well, I did look that up.
Okay.
No.
Okay, so her friend was telling her how to drink tea properly.
Yeah, not hit the sides of the cup.
Yeah, and you joked that she should have been like, bitch, we invented tea.
Yeah, and I also remember you having a moment in your life where you learned how to do tea.
Did I?
Maybe.
I heard the whole don't hit the sides thing, and it wasn't from Aaron Weekly.
It was either you or Kristen.
It was probably Kristen.
Okay.
Maybe when she had lunch with the queen.
She never had lunch with the queen, but...
In her dream.
Maybe, yeah.
I mean, there was a phase.
Tea phases are fun.
I love tea.
I drink tea every morning.
You start pedestrian style.
You get the bag.
Dip, dip, dip.
Lip to nice tea.
Everyone's done it.
Sure.
Classic.
And you can graduate to like raw tea and then the little steel basket.
Yep, the steeping in the basket.
And we were doing that for a minute.
I was like really into English breakfast tea.
That's my tea.
You know why I stopped?
Vanity.
What do you mean?
It's, I think, the highest on the teen's teeth staining spectrum.
Oh, my God.
How are my teeth?
They're still white as fuck.
But you were just, you were blessed.
You've got straight, big white teeth.
No, that, I didn't know that.
That's very scary.
I've been drinking it.
I drink it every morning.
You better brush right after.
I brushed before.
Oh, no.
You got to change the order.
Really?
Yeah.
You should look up the.
list. There's like, you know, between coffee, wine, but tea is like, tea will get you, girl.
Oh, shoot. Have you ever noticed people drink tea? Like, it'll, it stains the cup. Coffee never
stains the cup. Well, is it, but do you think maybe, maybe mine's not as bad because I put a little
milk in there. I drink it like the English. No, it's probably just put that sugar. So you're just
adding an adhesive to the, the dye. No, I don't add sugar, just milk. Oh, you're saying the sugar's in the
milk? Yeah, the lactose is sugar. Okay, but it makes the color much more diluted. Sure. It's like a very
light.
It's like, we'll just imagine great.
If your teeth were the color of your tea after you put milk in it, would you be happy with
that?
No, but I also have been doing this for like five years.
Like I don't, and that's so far so good.
Do you think they'll ever learn to tattoo teeth?
And do you think people ever reject white teeth?
Like it's like white teeth, what is, why?
We're all so drawn to white teeth.
I guess it looks clean.
Yeah.
It looks healthy.
Yeah.
Like it's clearly some evolutionary signal we're getting that we all are universally, like
we'd prefer the teeth white.
Yes. You can't see it's just like, oh, marketing got you. That's not it.
You're right. It's like an indicator that your body is healthy.
Yes. It's like the whites of your eyes.
Right. How are mine?
Always great. I'm envious.
But I have to add drops.
Oh, yeah. That's because you don't sleep well.
I'm an allergy machine. I constantly got something.
Yeah, but your teeth are white.
Well, I brushed the shit out of them and I did stop drinking tea specifically because.
That sucks.
I don't want to drive down the tea market.
I hope it thrives.
Let's do, I mean, it's, you are a negative and I'm a positive, so that evens out.
Okay, so it's neutral.
Yeah.
But I do think you should look it up.
I don't want to do that.
What if, like, if you start noticing people's teeth are, like, brownish, I guess you should just be like, do you drink a lot of tea?
You just go like, oh, cool, I love Inggy Brecky, too.
We should have a glass.
What?
How do you know I like English?
because your tea, your color of a fucking bottom of the lake in the fall.
Oh, man.
Okay.
Wow.
Do I brush my teeth before?
You should do it after.
I think it depends on the day.
Yeah, in your time schedule.
Exactly.
I guess I should do it before and after.
Although I actually, I know.
I don't like drinking something right after I brush my teeth because, like, you know,
toothpaste taste.
It funks it up.
But I also do kind of fundamentally not want to.
put anything in my body until my teeth are clean so you know what i do maybe this and so i wake up
and i brew my coffee it sits next to me while i meditate as you already know but before i'm
done meditating i'm like okay i get to have my coffee but first i take a big sip of really clean
fresh water right and i even kind of just a little bit i want a nice clean palette for this coffee i'm
about to receive. Okay. So maybe just have a nice, heavy glass of a mouthful of fresh. It's got to be
fresh good water. Like Tahoe. Don't for a moment. Tahoartisan.com. Shut, bro. Shut up. The issue is I don't
want what's in my mouth, the down my gullet. That's crazy. It came from the gullet. But yeah,
now it needs to come out. Okay. It needs to be clean. The germs need to go away. Okay. Here's my pitch.
Okay. I have a spittoon.
that I ended up getting him for Christmas the year I quit dipping.
Yep.
It's a bummer.
It breaks my heart.
I know.
Get a spittoon like the one I have.
Okay.
Big, fresh, clean mouthful of water.
Gargle.
Spit it in your spittoon.
Okay.
Then consume your tea.
Then brush your tea.
Okay.
I'll consider.
There's a lot of stuff to have this tea.
It is a lot of stuff.
Or switch to coffee.
I'll think about it.
Okay.
But, bitch, we invented tea.
Actually, technically, China is the country that invented tea.
I'm not shocked, but the Indian, wasn't the Indian spice trade also tea and spice or no?
I mean, the tea.
The English went down to India and they wanted shit.
They wanted the spices and I thought the tea.
Me too.
Darjeeling tea.
Yep.
Yeah.
I don't know.
Enough about the history of tea.
I don't, except it is saying here.
China. But the issue is, I do think you're right. We think tea is very Indian, but I actually think
it's British. Okay, you know what? This is an old fact I've said in the past. And you're not
going to believe this. Okay. Well, this is so fascinating. Do you know how many different kinds
of tea there are? Oh, one. There's only one. You told me that. There is only one. That makes no
sense. It's how you dry it, which turns it into English breakfast or green tea or anything. Like,
Green tea is really fresh.
It's not been dried out a bunch.
Yeah.
But it's all the same bush.
So the black tea versus the green tea versus chai?
Yeah, it's all the same.
So what my guess is that the bush is probably originally from China.
And they were probably doing green tea.
And then the Indians got their hands on it.
And they were like, fuck, hold on.
Let's drive this to high heaven and see what we get.
And I think they must have invented the third one you said.
Chai.
Chai.
Well, chai.
So this is one of the chai.
And chai means tea.
It means tea.
I know.
People like that.
So it's t-t-tie.
K though.
People are really mad when I say chai tea.
Like, they'll correct me.
No one is to get mad about it.
But it's also okay that it is, it does mean tea.
Yeah.
That's great.
It means tea.
But chai has more spices.
Like the Indian tea has more spices and stuff.
Yes.
My mom makes me tea when I'm home.
And she always asked, do you want?
like the spices and stuff in it okay i normally say yes you know in italy they say
chaibello and bellissimo as you learned um okay yeah so china uh well good for them i did
watch the history of tea on the history of channel which is how i learned that it's all one bush
yeah and i kind of wish i remembered why india is so connected connected to it yeah me too so there's
two main varieties of the plant.
One is in China and one is in India.
Ooh.
But, yeah, it's the oxidation process that makes the teas different.
Now, on Wikipedia, it has like nothing.
Rwanda's gone all in on tea growing.
Uh-huh.
And I stayed at a place that was in a tea plantation.
Oh, cool.
And they're gorgeous.
Like, the field of tea leaves is beautiful.
It was very enchanted.
Oh.
Yeah.
Do you think I should at my house do a tea bush?
Yeah, I do.
If we have the climate to support that, which I think we might.
I don't know if it's moise enough here, but...
I mean, according to my dad, it's the same as India.
Well, Santa Barbara's the same, isn't it?
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, the movie, Yes, Man, yet.
That was a year that I needed to say yes.
One whole year.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Great concept.
Yeah, it is.
I liked that movie.
Okay.
Famous Wonderkins.
Oh, great.
Mozart.
Oh.
I thought it was a bug, but it was actually my mouse.
That was embarrassing.
You're bringing up a really, you're about to do vundercans,
and I was in this really complicated dilemma.
Oh.
Delta was reading me a story she wrote.
Mm-hmm.
It's awesome.
She wrote this, like, five-page story about leaving Arizona to go to college in Cleveland.
Oh.
And her uncle's, like, looking out for her and encourages her to plant in this empty lot
where people grow things and then her mom gets cancer and she has to come back to Arizona and it's just a
great story and the details are incredible but she there is a line that said like I was 19 and in my
third year of college and I was like oh do I tell her she would have to be 16 when she entered
and people generally enter at 18 and was she a funderkin and I thought like oh is she maybe I could
ask gently like oh is she a vunderkin and then I was like who gives a flying yeah just enjoy that story
And I did.
Good.
The better angels of my nature prevailed.
Yeah.
But, like, as a parent, you're constantly like, do I need to teach them this?
I know.
And I would also be struggling with that.
Yeah.
I think I chose right.
Definitely.
Who the fuck cares?
If it's an issue, I guess her teacher will say, like, hey, PSU would have been.
Also, it's like we could just fill in our own gaps.
Like, I guess she's a wonder kid.
She's a wonder kid.
Or maybe she did two years of, like, community college while she's going to high school and entered with the credit.
She just had a lot of credit.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, a lot of credit.
She was technically her third year of college, even though it was her first year of university.
I don't know.
Yeah.
But I was just like, it took over for a minute.
My cousin's son, he started college when he was like 15.
I don't think it's a good idea.
He's a Wunderkind.
These Wunderkids never.
I just read this terrible.
There was a headline about like this.
There was a Wunderkid chess champion who just died at 29.
He was like a chess grandmaster in his teens.
But I just was like the whole Vundercin thing is scary.
These prodigies, it's like, I'm impossible to live up to.
It's really hard, and the pressure's too much because they're still a kid.
Yeah.
But he's giving up his career to run for city office, city council.
Who is?
My cousin's son.
Oh, really?
Yeah. So it's panned out for him.
Yeah.
I mean, he's running for the city of Redmond.
Okay, Mozart, Marie Curie.
I didn't know she was a wonder kid.
I didn't either.
I thought she was old as hell when she.
What did she invent penicillin?
She's discovered something.
Yeah, I think discovered antibiotics.
Radioactivity.
Pioneering research on radioactivity, which created.
Okay.
I also thought maybe she did the Red Cross.
I think that's.
What is the point of going to school?
Like it's like a Joan of Arc name, I think.
Okay, let's see.
It's obviously not Joan of Arc, but I think it's like.
Clarissa Harlow Barton.
Barton, maybe she's really...
I'm Dave Buttons.
Okay, well, I don't know why anyone goes to school.
Because I remember doing a report on Marie Curie.
Yeah.
And obviously, I remember nothing.
Me too.
And I think she invented penicillin.
And I think she invented the Red Cross.
I was thinking of Florence Nightingale.
Who's Florence Nightingale?
She's a joan of archetype.
Is it Florence and I can't get something about medicine and medical?
English statistician.
Oh.
But the founder of modern nursing?
Maugh, there we go.
Founder of Ma Modern nursing.
Modern nursing.
Oh, my God.
Okay, well, there's a lot of other Picasso.
He was a runner cat?
It says.
It says that.
Your favorite guy, Von Neumann.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, but he's like the definition of a funer kid, like solving math problems.
No one can solve at 12 years old.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But he fucking delivered.
He's like one of the rare ones that delivered.
But he also died.
Janu Kvonne Neumann.
Mm-hmm.
And Bobby Fisher, speaking of chess.
Yeah, that's a crazy doc.
Yeah, I want to watch that.
I need to remember that.
There's some other people, Doogie.
Douglas Hauser.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, Ronan Faro.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Ronan. Famous Wonderkin. All right. Well, that's it. Okay. Well, that was fun. We asked more
questions than we answered, which is my favorite kind of factor. Yeah, that's always good.
Okay. Love Malala. Love Malala. Yeah. Love Wonderkins. Yeah, Vundercins are great.
Bye. I love you.
Love you.
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