Call Her Daddy - How To Stop People Pleasing
Episode Date: December 21, 2025This week, Alex breaks down why we take criticism so personally, and how to stop letting other people’s opinions dictate how we feel about ourselves. She explores how to tell the difference between ...constructive feedback and someone else’s projected insecurities, and why people-pleasing can slowly ruin your sense of identity. Finally, Alex dives into how to handle family drama at the holidays, what to do if your friend is a pathological liar, and when it’s the right time to break up with your therapist. Enjoy! Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, Daddy Gang. Welcome back to another Sunday session with your father. I am so excited for this
episode today because I have finally finished reading the book that I have been talking about,
the courage to be disliked. And I have so many thoughts that I am ready to dig into with you
guys. So first of all, how did I even find this book? One night at 2 a.m., my brain was,
doing what a lot of brains do, which is, of course, during the day I'm just going about my life.
And then all of a sudden I lay down and I hit the pillow and I'm like, oh my God, what is my
career goals? And what am I doing with my life? And am I being a good daughter and sister and wife?
And all the, and I'm like, oh my God. And so then I was like, I need a book that's going to put me to bed.
So I thought that this book, because it's like a very, very like intellectually stimulating book
would hopefully be like more educational and let me go to bed. I ended up reading seven chapters.
and I could not put this book down and then it got to 5 a.m.
and Matt woke up and he was like, what are you still doing up?
I'm like, baby, I've never gone to bed because I became obsessed.
When I went into this book thinking, oh, it'll be fun.
I'll learn like the courage to be disliked and social media and this will help me.
And it's so much deeper than that.
I thought, what if I just start highlighting and I start taking notes on the book and then I can
distill it down to you guys because, you know, we're all busy.
and maybe you guys don't have time to read this book, but I'm going to make you feel like you
did. So let's get into it. So when I think about being disliked, it's definitely a concept I feel like
a lot of us avoid engaging with. I mean, just on its surface, it's obviously painful to think
about the people who don't like you, right? But at the same time, I think our society has become
more and more vocal about when we dislike something. And we sort of live in this,
chamber of feedback right now, whether it's online reviews or hate comments or even just posting
an Instagram story. We've all kind of become vulnerable to external critiques. And if you think about
it, like how many times have each and every one of us posted in Instagram, overthought it,
checked how many likes it has or not enough likes or we've deleted it and we've reposted it because
we're like, oh my God, maybe it will do better at this time and like analyzing who's liking
it and like, why didn't this person like it? What does that mean? Do they not like me anymore?
And like, we get so in our heads about something that seriously no one else is really thinking about, right?
Like, even let's say if you live in the most private life ever, the fear of being negatively perceived by
others affects all of us on some level or another. Yes, the extreme is social media. But like,
for the most part, you can be at the grocery store. You can be at your job and it's still affecting you,
even if you're a non-online person.
And so maybe you have found yourself ruminating for days, let's say, right, over a friend
who you made a joke, too, and they found it more hurtful rather than funny.
And obviously your intention was like to be funny.
But now you're like sitting at Christmas dinner and your grandma's like,
sweetie, pass the fucking peas.
And you can't even hear her because all you're thinking about is the comment that you
made to that friend and how it was misperceived and how they now think you're a bitch and all these
things. And so it can be a lot because it's like you can, you, you are perceived and then you're
perceiving how they're perceiving you. And that's just life, right? I also want to be clear,
criticism is not always a bad thing. Like when everyone on the internet yelled at me to stop
bleaching the shit out of my fucking hair and just go like a little darker, Alex, just turn to tell me
like a little, that actually was really helpful. And so like, thank you guys. Or like when I had
eyebrow blind list. Those are things that I need to know. But in all seriousness, what reading this
book and thinking about being disliked has shown me is that we really need to learn what
criticism is ours to take on versus what is actually just someone else's shit that they're
projecting onto us. And so, yes, some feedback is helpful and it's important. But a lot of it
I have found is an external projection of someone else's insecurities because the truth is
like no one actually gives a fuck that much about you to actually give you constructive criticism
half the fucking time. You know what I mean? No one's actually being like, God, I want Deborah
to fucking win today. I'm going to give Deborah a grade A good advice that's going to get her
to that next level. No, people are fucking selfish and they don't really give a fuck and they're not
thinking about how you're going to succeed in life because everyone's worried about themselves.
And so half the time, if not all the time, a lot of this is projection, right?
So I found an article from the Atlantic because obviously it's book club, you guys.
So I want to read a section from it.
And it is called How to Take and Give Criticism Well by Arthur C. Brooks.
We all love to criticize.
Unfortunately, we also hate being criticized.
Fortunately, though, each of us can change how we give and take criticism.
Criticism is intrinsically hard to accept because of the ways our brains process it.
When someone says your work isn't good enough, your natural,
first thought may be, they must not like me, rather than what can I do to improve it?
When we receive criticism, we take it personal in two ways. First, we may naturally analyze
the critic rather than the criticism. Second, we tend to consider the criticism a judgment
of our inherent abilities rather than our objective performance. The solution is to set up an
internal affirmation such as, I don't care what this feedback says about the person giving it,
and I choose not to see it as a personal attack on me, I will assess it on its face about the matter
at hand, nothing more, nothing less. This won't save your feelings entirely, but it's a helpful
approach, one that moves the focus from emotional to analysis. That enables you to judge the
information on its merits, or lack thereof, as you would if it were about someone else.
Once you depersonized criticism in this way, you can start to see it for what it is.
okay when i read that i was like i need to read that again and again and again and i can also
link the article for you guys the concept of depersonalizing criticism i think is really really important
and i genuinely believe daddy gang like if we are all able to implement this more into our lives
it is going to change our lives so say you're getting negative feedback from someone
how does the way that you receive that feedback change if you were to have those exact same words
said to you by your best friend or your mom or your partner instead. Like every single person,
if they said the same thing, you're going to feel differently about it, right? Because you have
different relationships to these people. You have different history with these people. You have
different projections of these people. And so the way that we take feedback depends on our
perception of the person dispensing it. But that shouldn't necessarily be the case always. And again,
I know this is all so much harder said than done, but I feel like when we be,
cognizant of these things. Like I've already started doing it since reading this book where I'm like,
oh my God, wait, I was taking that too personally. That person was literally not, that wasn't meant to be
personal. And so it's like just to start to train our brains, right? Like we need to learn to take the
person out of the note and separate our interpersonal dynamic with that person from the actual
critique that they are giving us. Let me give you an example. Okay. Back when I was working at my
magazine job in my early 20s. I had a boss pull me into her office and give me a note along the lines
of, you're not working fast enough and you need to be more focused. Little did she know. I was like
literally writing YouTube ideas. And she's like, how many ads have you sold for the magazine?
Alex? And I'm like, on my way, girl, never sold one. So she was right. Actually, she was completely right.
There was no projection there. 100%. I was working slow. If anything, I wasn't working at all.
Okay, babe. I was doing fucking jack shit. Okay. I was on my way out. I was just like there for the
free heat and the free snacks and a little bit of the paycheck. It wasn't much, but it would do.
But at that time in my life, you guys, even though if I'm like, if I looked inward, I could have
been like, that's the honest truth. I wasn't able to take that note on its face. I completely
spiraled. I started stressing about how my boss must hate me or think I'm lazy and I crashed out
worrying that I was about to get fired, which I absolutely should have. But I probably honestly went out
that night and took like 20 fucking tequila shots to try to make myself feel better and I was
like so awkward the next day when I saw her and I was avoiding eye contact and I was like in my
fucking head and I let that one comment completely destroy how I felt about myself in that moment
the one thing I didn't do was actually just like hear the note and be like you lazy piece of shit
like yeah she's right Alex you aren't doing your job you're taking nudes in the bathroom
you're literally taking news in bathroom you haven't sold anything babe like lock in but instead I just
started to overanalyze everything. And so now I will share that I am on the other side and I'm
running my own company. And so I think about my boss at that point. And like, she had no idea what was
going on in my life. She didn't even know I was writing YouTube ideas. She was just like,
hey, you're not doing this. We need this better by. And then she probably never thought about me again.
Now as a boss myself, I have a totally different perspective. And I kind of want to share this with you guys
because now having been an employee and now being a boss, I want to acknowledge I know it can be really
stressful to hear something that you need to improve on at work. That is your livelihood,
that is your career, and we're trying our best, right? But I want you guys to hear it from me when I say
trust me. It is usually not a personal attack when your boss gives you feedback. So if you're the girl
crying in the bathroom for hours after one constructive comment like me from your boss, I see you
and I just want to acknowledge you, but I'm basically saying we got to talk. Because what I've learned from
my experience is your boss wouldn't give you feedback if they didn't think you were capable of taking
it. And so in my opinion as a boss, and there may be people with differing opinions, but in actuality,
getting a note from your boss means that they believe in you and they think you're able to actually make
changes. Like Matt and I have talked about this. There are people that we are constantly pushing at our
company because we can feel it's like, oh my God, they just need a little bit more of this and
they're going to fucking thrive and they could take over that division or whatever it be.
And then there are some people, if I'm honest, where you're kind of like, they're at that max
capacity and there's no point to try to give them that feedback because I know they can't do that
thing. You know what I mean? And it's like, so feedback a lot of the times is good, you guys.
Now, obviously I want to acknowledge, if you have a boss that is just like constantly moving the
goalpost and doesn't know what they want and they're constantly coming out, you being like,
well, you didn't do this. And yes, that's not helpful. And then that is probably on them.
but most of the time your boss is actually just making a comment just to help you, and they
didn't know if you were having a bad week.
They don't know what's going on in your life when they're giving you this note and this
constructive criticism.
And they aren't sitting there actively trying to make your day worse.
They're like, okay, Cassandra didn't hurt her numbers this week.
Just going to go over and tell her.
Meanwhile, you're like, my boyfriend broke out with me and now my fucking boss hates me.
And it's like, no, he was just like giving you the update.
and so I think in a normal work environment trying to understand it's like they don't hate you
and they don't think you're the worst person to ever exist they're not thinking about you
other than you are an employee and this is what I need you to do period so that's a perfect
example where it's really recognizing like feedback isn't personal a lot of the times it's just
a necessary part of every job right now that's work but let's say that your boyfriend
gives you the note that he, like he didn't feel like you were there for him when he recently
had a shitty day, okay? And taking something like that so personally and spiraling about all
of the ways that you're not a perfect girlfriend, that isn't productive to actually fixing
the one thing that he needed from you in that moment, right? So take yourself out of it.
How would you judge that information if it were about someone else, right? Like this is always
thinking it from a third POV. It's like, imagine your best friend having this convo with her partner.
What would you to say to her as advice, right? You'd be like, wait, it doesn't even seem that bad.
So now flip it on the other side. How can you apply that mindset to yourself? If you know you're
always going to give your friend that advice, I'm like, babe, he just wanted you there from it.
He loves you. It's not that deep. How do we apply that to ourselves? As I was reading this article,
I recognize that deconstructive criticism is almost always based on.
on someone else's insecurities, right?
So these are comments that are truly just intended to undermine you or to hurt you.
So right now we're talking about there's either deconstructive criticism,
which is like, yes, this is a piece of shit asshole that's trying to fuck with you.
Or there's actually like constructive criticism where it's like, guys, stop taking it personal.
This is just a note that you needed to be given.
I feel like a good example of this is we all have, we all have that one beloved friend, right?
the one who says just like a little backhanded compliment like oh my god you're so brave to post
that picture holy shit wait candis that's like crazy i'm so proud of you and you're like what
or they're like oh my god i could never spend that much time putting on makeup every single day like
you're so dedicated and you're like and you want to be like okay well you're busted like and so it's
like yes we've had that friend that just has little things that make you feel like shit about
and you don't understand why are they doing this? And then as you grow up, you're like,
oh, I know why they're doing it because it has nothing to do with you. It's all about them.
Right? What's really going on with deconstructive mean criticism is it is just a representation
of someone else's personal shit. This person needs to be purposefully hurtful to feel better
about themselves and their inability to restrain themselves from making these just like
asshole dig comments about other people, it's not your problem. I also think something that I've
been getting better at is like, if you met me in high school and someone said something rude to me or to
my friend, I would snap back immediately. Now, as I've gotten older, when someone says something like that
of like, oh my God, you like the makeup, blah, blah, blah. Yeah, you wear so much makeup. When I was younger,
I would have been like, oh my God, well, you're a dumb, ugly cunt. So do you want to borrow some? Now,
and I think I've said this on another episode.
Most of the time, my answer is always, and this is shout out to my father.
He always used to say this, say this.
Whenever someone says something that you can feel they're trying to put you down,
I'm always just like, what's your point?
They're like, oh, well, it's just like crazy.
Like I would never do that much makeup.
No, for sure, what's your point?
Is your point to make me feel?
You know what I mean?
It's like, where are they going to go with that?
And I think it's like that's where if you turn it on them,
when they and again if you asked a boss that oh you're not doing your job what's your point
I want you to hit your Q4 goals Alex and I want you to do you see the difference it's like when
there actually can be a what's your point and there's an actual fucking understandable answer after the
what's the point that is constructive criticism when it happens with deconstructive criticism
deconstructive criticism equals aka you're dealing with a fucking asshole bro and that ain't
your shit to fucking carry and I think a lot of times it's hard
to discern like, oh, should I take this personally or not? Because we're all dealing with
our own shit, right? And so it's hard not to personalize everything because we're all living our
own world. So when someone does say something about you with your makeup, imagine if you were having
a bad skin day. You're going to take it personally and think that she was actually kind of making a
jab about your skin and all these things. It's really not about that usually, right? But you
personalize it because you're not feeling XYZ. And so the more that you can do self-work, it does actually
become so much easier to depersonalize these things and be like yeah i don't know man i don't know what your
point of that common is but like i'm gonna go eat a sandwich like literally don't care and then it
kind of leaves them also holding the bag there's nothing better and i'm sure daddy gang you've had it
where you're someone is being rude at a lunch or whatever and when there's that one person that
kind of has the balls to be like that's like a really weird thing to say or or the best it's like we
sorry what did you say can you repeat that and then they say it again you're like wait
no, sorry, I'm sorry, I, everyone's being so loud.
What did you say again?
And then when someone says something rude and you ask them to repeat it three times,
they start to get so insecure.
And so it's like, yes, it's nice in those moments when it's,
you can call it out for what it is, but it's rare.
Because especially as women, we're like, I don't want to be called a bitch.
So just like take the rude, rude comment and just like keep it fucking moving.
We know on the surface that these comments aren't actually about us.
Like, especially when you have hindsight, right?
Hindsight's always 20, 20, you get home,
you're laying in bed, you're able to process it. But yet these criticisms can still feel extremely
personal to us. But that's because they are bringing something up for us that we still need to
work on within ourselves. I think when I started on the internet, it's almost weird. It's like
when I first started the internet, I didn't really care what anyone was saying about me because I was
just like get clicks, get views, like build my career. And then as I started to become a little bit more
established with Call Her Daddy, I definitely started to read the comments and be like,
oh, maybe I should change that about my, you know, makeup or my hair or my outfits or my this
or my that. And then I went through a period of time where I just kind of felt like this like
floating bubble where I would just do whatever anyone was kind of saying about me on the
internet because I felt so unsure of who I was because of how much commentary there was about
who I am. And I was like, I don't think that's true, but maybe it is true.
And it's like it was such a mind fuck. And I had imposter syndrome and all these things. But now I think
I don't allow those comments to get to me anymore just because I've, one, I've dealt with it for too
long, but also I've done the work on myself where I'm like, no, no, no, I know exactly when I read a
comment. If I'm like, yeah, you're right, I shouldn't have done that. I was a fucking asshole in that
moment. Or, oh, no, that's not true. But it just takes knowing yourself more. And it's still a journey with
me. I don't like, I'm not 100% there, but I can feel the difference. But it comes. But it
comes as you just continue to work on yourself.
As humans, when we want validation and we don't receive it,
it can mess with the way that we value ourselves.
whether you get passed over for a promotion or you aren't added to the group chat or even
sometimes as small as like not getting hit on when you're out at the bar but your friend does
we start to measure our own value by other people's reaction of us and if we can learn to be
okay with our lives regardless of the external responses that we're getting can you imagine
how much fucking better our life would be I mean we'd be free especially as women
Because we're always constantly saying like, oh, how do I look?
And what do I wear?
And what's my weight looking like?
And it's like, how do you feel?
Who gives a fuck what anyone else thinks, right?
And I'm not saying that you need to like right now today, fully love yourself and be totally
okay with who you are no matter what.
Like that's not even like, I get it.
It's not 100% possible.
But this isn't actually even fully about internal confidence, right?
It's about slowly building your way to it by changing how you choose to engage with
the people around you. Like half the battle is like, yeah, no, no, babe, we have so much work to do
within ourselves. Don't even get a fucking twisted. But the first step could be like,
let's just block out the fucking noise of all these other fucking freaks around us. Step one,
got it? Okay. Because we all have way too much shit to deal with within ourselves, right?
So like dealing with other people's perceptions of us and their judgments, I can't even
fucking take it. I don't want to even hear it. And of course, it's nice to hear when someone has
nice things to say about you. I think that's also where it gets confusing, right? Like,
oh my god and if someone's giving you compliments and all these things it's like i think something we
also need to keep in mind is if we live our lives and this is what i felt like so much of the book
was about that really struck me is like if we live our lives in hopes of avoiding criticism or push
back or critiques and we're so fueled by people's positive perceptions of us that's how you become
a chronic people pleaser that's how you lose yourself that's how you don't have an identity
If you're sitting here and you're like, Alex, this is me.
Like, I am 100% of people, please are.
Like, please, what the actual F can I do about this?
This is me to my core.
I am here today to tell you that I've got you, okay?
Reading this book has really opened my eyes to the idea that trying to avoid being
disliked is really the same thing as changing your identity for someone else.
If you are constantly like, okay, and then to please this person and oh my God,
that person's going to think this of me, so I'm going to.
fix my posture and I'm going to say the thing that I know is going to get them. It's like,
babe, where did you go? What do you want to do? Do you actually want to do that? Or were you just
doing it to please them? Because then it will gain you some social equity because then they'll invite
you to the party. And then you're at the party. You're not even having fun because they don't even
know who the real you is because you haven't been able to be honest with yourself. You're not even
acting like yourself anymore. And all of a sudden you're just like this fucking floundering fish that's
like, I appease these people and this and then you get home at night and you're fucking emotionally
drained and then you start to become resentful of everyone around you but it's like but who's doing was
this you you have the ability to stop it and so i want to finish the this little rant on the courage
to be disliked with some of my favorite quotes that i highlighted as i was reading the book and i just
want everyone to really lock in if you're not driving just close your eyes and listen to these
statements and try to really sink them in and take them in. Okay. You are afraid of being
negated by other people. You're afraid of being treated disparagingly, being refused, and sustaining
deep mental wounds. But do other people actually look at you so much? Are they really watching
you around the clock and lying in wait for the perfect moment to attack? It seems rather unlikely.
this book, the way, so basically the entire book is set up where it is a philosopher having a
dialogue with a young adult. And the young adult is skeptical of, wait, the courage to be
disliked. Like, I want people to like me. I don't want people to dislike me. And the philosopher is
essentially saying, no, no, no one wants to be disliked. But to relinquish the feeling of I have to be
loved and I have to be liked, then you can just sit in your truth and enjoy your fucking life. And if
people don't like you. It rolls off your fucking back and it's okay. And so I love this quote
because it's kind of such a good point. It's like, guys, we're in our heads about how much other
people are fucking thinking about us. We're all in some capacity a little narcissistic because again,
we're living on our own bodies. We're living in our own world. So actually ask yourself the
next time someone gives you constructive criticism or even deconstructive. Is it that deep? Or are you
making it seem that deep? Do you think this person actually was sleeping all night?
dreaming about this moment they could be like, Bob, the work hasn't been up to, to top tier
lately. And you're like, they literally hate me. And they're like, no, Bob, maybe the work has
just not been up to top tier. And then once you get up to top tier, they'd be like, yo, Bob, great work.
Like, it's that simple. It really has nothing to do with your personality. Next quote that I highlighted.
Wishing so hard to be recognized will lead to a life of following expectations held by other people
who want you to be a certain kind of person.
In other words, you throw away who you really are and you live other people's lives.
Again, I know I kind of hit on this, but like as I read this book and I read chapter after
chapter, it started to dawn on me.
And, you know, this is a thing for me because I have like more of a public life.
And it also can relate to anyone that doesn't.
But for me, just to share, like, I think for so long, whenever I saw a narrative on social media
about myself. I had such a hard time, like, separating myself from it. Because when you see people
misunderstanding you, you're like, well, you know, that's not true. Like, I want to fix that. If they're
misunderstanding me, it's because whether they saw something and it stuck with them and they don't want
to understand me or whatever it be, that's okay. But I can't now lose sleep over that. That's not my
problem. What other people think about me is not my problem, nor is it should be yours, right? Okay,
next one. It is true that there is no person who wishes to be disliked, but look at it this way.
What should one do to not be disliked by everyone and anyone? There is only one answer.
It is to constantly gauge other people's feelings while swearing loyalty to all of them.
That is fucking exhausting to everyone listening to me right now. What this person is basically saying
is if you are constantly trying to appease everyone around you, you then have no identity
and you lose yourself and you are no one to yourself. And so would you rather spend your
entire life appeasing everyone in front of you or live a life of freedom? Because I genuinely
believe to have the courage to be disliked, not that you want to be disliked, but to have the
courage to have not everyone love you, that is true freedom. That's when you find yourself in your
life being like, oh my God. I have the people that understand me and love me and the people
that don't. That's okay. But I'm good no matter what. And you see these people, right? You see these
people at work. You see these people in your friendships. The people that are so hellbent on,
no, listen to me. This is who I am. And this is. And you're like, oh my God, chill, chill.
No one really fucking cares. No one really fucking cares about anyone truly other than themselves.
so to exhaust yourself trying to prove all these things to other people.
Babe, they're paying attention for fucking two seconds and then they're going back to their own
fucking life.
So who's really winning in that?
You appeased these people, but they're not actually paying attention to you.
And so then you're home at night and you're like, okay, so now Marty likes me and,
um, you know, Chris likes me and Cassandra likes me and fucking Franny is now like more liking to me
and blah, blah, blah.
And I'm like, and you were fake as fuck all day.
You're exhausted.
let it fucking go.
Another one, we're almost done.
When one does that, for the time being,
one will have succeeded and not being disliked by anyone.
How incredible most people online would probably think, right?
What a concept.
But at this point, there is a great contradiction looming.
If one is living in such a way as to satisfy other people's expectations
and one is entrusting one's own life to others,
that is a way of living in which,
one is lying to oneself. Freedom is being disliked by other people. It is proof that you are living
in accordance with your own principles, not other people's opinions and other people's
principles. There's a cost incurred when one wants to exercise this freedom. And the cost for
freedom in interpersonal relationships is that one is disliked by other people. And you guys,
I'm in this era of my life. That's fucking okay. I am more than okay. I am more than
okay if someone dislikes me because they don't know me or they are, you know, determined to
misunderstanding me or they don't like me because my hair is this color or, you know, I have a
certain, you know, way I talk or my mannerisms or my husband or whatever the fuck it is that
they want to do. If someone doesn't like me, that's their own fucking prerogative.
And it's really fucking freeing to be like, I don't care. It doesn't mean you're being a bitch
to all the women listening because I know our first reaction is like, wait, oh my God.
everyone's going to think I'm like a fucking horrible person. No. No, because the more women that start
to act like this, I genuinely believe it'll be a domino effect, ladies, where it's like all of a sudden
if more women are bold and direct. No, I don't like that. Thank you so much. I don't need that. Thank you.
No, I'm good. Thank you. No, I don't personally like that. I'm going to do without it.
like if you can actually just say how you're feeling again not being rude but being direct
instead of adding all these fucking flowery languages as a woman that we feel like we need to do because
oh my god what if i hurt someone's a little guys we're going to live a way fucking better life
and so i think the courage to being disliked ultimately what it does is it gives you the ability
to stop taking things so personally while also exploring the parts of yourself that you actually
want to work on without it being under anyone else's
vision or wants or needs of you. And it kind of is so fucking freeing. If you bend too much to
other people's ideas of how you should be, then how much of your identity is just going to be
molded to what other people think. And that's why I talk a lot about this with the creators
at the Unwell Network, where I'm like, guys, I've been doing this for a while, so I'm now
able to step away from it, but I can see when young creators are like, but they said this and
this is like, who are you anymore? And that's why you see the difference in creators at the very
beginning of their career to then when they hit that like okay now people are paying attention when
they start no one's paying attention so no one has anything to fucking say about it right they can be
themselves 100% because they're just hoping anyone will watch and then when some people start watching
and actually giving criticism to who they are as a human being all of a sudden they start to placate
to the audience they start to be like okay wait i am going to dress the way that they're telling me or
i am going to fix this and all of a sudden you're a fucking puppet and then everyone says you're not
relatable and you're not genuine anymore but it's
It's like, yes, because you were listening to all these people in their commentary.
Turn it the fuck off.
I always say to creators, and I've done this about myself sometimes, go back and watch some of the first videos you ever uploaded to the internet.
Scary as fucking hell.
Scary as fucking hell.
But go look.
Same thing to people who aren't online.
Do you have pictures from Facebook or Instagram, how you used to post all the time?
Or do you have friend groups that you felt like you used to do things with.
But now maybe you're in a more judgmental friend group.
Get out of it.
Get out of it.
And just do what the fuck you want.
life is really fucking short.
Like I'm sure all of us know someone that passed away this year,
whether old or young, whatever it is.
Life is so fucking short.
And I know that's corny to say,
but it's literally our reality.
We don't know how much time we have here.
And imagine if your whole life you spend it fucking trying to appease other people
and you never actually learn who you are because all of yourself is given to all other
people.
And it's built around what all other people want of you.
Engaging with the world around you from a place of authenticity is actually sure may lead
to some people not like you.
you, that's okay. Them disliking you has no real effect on your life if you don't let it.
If you don't need their validation because you have your own validation, bitch, you're fucking good.
I hope this can be almost like a 2026 goal of all of us, Daddy Gang, of like we are not going
to fucking live to appease other people and we are going to live for ourselves this year.
And at least that's what I'm going to do. And I hope that this could be at all inspiring for
anyone that needed this. And again, I know I'm obviously in one profession and I hope you guys
feel that like I'm all, I understand we're all in different life phases and places and we all
different careers and we're all, maybe some people are single listening to this in relationships,
whatever it be. I understand that. But there is such a commonality between we are all so fucking
exhausted by trying to please all the people around us. And what if we just fucking stop?
what if we just didn't do that this year? Let me know if this was helpful and I'm going to start
reading my next book. I don't know what it's going to be yet. I started reading this book from
the 1950s that is all about feminism and it's about 1,700 pages. So I'll probably finish that by
27 and that may be a little too heavy right now, but maybe we'll get into that one day.
yeah but for now i love you all and i hope that was helpful so let's do a little pivot we got to do a
little pivot because now let's apply this to your actual life daddy gang let's go to fucking
french bishops questions of the motherfuck and we
all right question one hey alex i listened to your episode on handling the holidays and i need
advice my hopefully future in-laws insisted that my boyfriend and i spend christmas with them i wanted
to ask if i could bring my mom since she's recently divorced and has lost several family members
around this time of year the holidays are really hard for her my boyfriend offered to ask for me
because his parents can be complicated they politely declined saying it wasn't personal
but they just don't feel comfortable and would rather meet her another time.
I'm really hurt and now don't know how to move forward with his family.
How should I handle this?
Okay, this is, in my opinion, beyond inappropriate.
I 100% understand that when it comes to holidays,
there's so many politics involved with like new family and mother-in-laws and extended
family and all this is so confusing.
But the fact that it is your mother, that's it.
you're not asking for your aunts, your uncles, even if it's like, I don't even, I wouldn't even
even if it was your mom and your dad, that's still okay. It's like, it's your one immediate family member
that is alone on the holidays. I, my advice is I would then politely go back and decline going to
Christmas with them, leaving your mom alone on the holidays, right, as she was going through a divorce.
like I just, again, do what you want, but I kind of would politely decline. And I think your mom really
needs you right now, obviously, and going through this divorce, losing family members during the
holidays. This is one of the hardest times of year. Um, I think it's also just like a really
eye opening for you. And you should now kind of reflect and look at the rest of your interactions
with these type of people because I don't know what type of person would deny someone on a major holiday
like this. Listen, I understand if it was your boy.
boyfriend's mom's birthday party. Let's start there. Your boyfriend's mom's birthday party. And you asked
if your mom could come. And she was like, I'm literally only doing my immediate family. Like,
I'm so sorry. Still kind of weird because it's your literal mom. But like maybe because it's like her
terms, whatever. It's fucking Christmas. We're spreading cheer up in this bitch, motherfucker.
And you can't allow this poor divorced woman to just slide in. She's probably going to be like meek and
sad and lonely. And she's going to sit there and just eat a lamb chop. And she's going to be like sitting there
drinking gin like the fuck she just wants to like be around people and like here's some
fucking christmas carols and these people are the grinch being like no this is a very like
intimate whatever okay well if it's that intimate maybe you shouldn't even be going right because
you don't have a ring on your finger yet so peace the fuck out dude holiday shit with families like
i just oh god bless and good night question number two hi daddy how do you deal with a friend who is
a total pathological liar um
All right. One of my best friends from college has been making up stories about guys and, quote,
boyfriends for the last two years. We're four years out of school and she still comes up with these
wild detail stories about men. No one has ever met. I know she's, she'd react. I know she'd react
badly if I confronted her. And honestly, she probably needs therapy. But she constantly calls and
messages me with updates. And I don't have time to listen to stories that aren't even real.
What do I do? Okay. Wait.
there's a couple things. Number one, my, like, initial reaction is like, I get you're just out
of college. I'm like, wait, hold on to this friend because there's something like so funny
that when you get to your 30s and a lot of your friends are like getting married and having kids.
Like, I would love for a friend like this right now. Make up the stories all you want.
Give me the fucking psychotic tea and I'll just listen to your problem. The only thing I will say
is I don't do phone calls, send me a voice message. That's what you need to say. Babe, I need to hear
the tea on Girard like I can't even wait oh my god this like he's like a Russian oligarch like
dead tell me more oh my god wait like tell me more just voice note it to me I think you could start
telling her to voice note you because you can either listen or not listen but then sometimes as
you're like cooking dinner that night honestly could be a funny story time to like listen to your
fucking psychotic friend she's like so then we traveled through the candy cane forest and then
you're like no way no way like you fucking crazy bitch like you fucking crazy bitch like
It's kind of like a podcast episode that you get to listen to it.
Like just pretend.
I get it though.
If you're like, babe, like I don't have fucking time for this.
And you're going to tell me again, like, okay, so then I met up with the backstreet boys.
And then I met the backstreet boys' best friends.
And then me and Justin Timberlake, we're having sex.
And then I'm like, what is happening?
Like that could get a little tiresome because you're like, it's not story time.
I think you can just be supportive and you can just start to like maybe not take the calls as much.
To be honest, I think when it comes to friends like this, it's one thing if she's lying about you.
She's just kind of living in her own world.
And also, what if the stories are true?
Maybe you've never met the men, but like maybe she's got this secret life.
And you're just privy to these dope stories.
I don't know.
As long as she's not talking about you, I think, like, if she ever continues and you've caught, catch her in a lie, is it really, I don't know.
It just seems like some of these are, none of these are nefarious.
Like, they're kind of like, whatever.
But I get it as you're out of dinner and it's like fifth night in the row.
And she's like, so.
Christoph took me to Italy last night.
You're like, babe, we were literally in the Lower East Side last night.
How the fuck were you in Italy?
And she's like, oh, right.
Christoph took me to the Upper East Side last night.
And you're like, okay, this ain't fucking tracking, Deb.
I get it.
Can be confusing.
But I don't really think it's like that intense.
If it's not hurting you, let her fucking have her moment.
Okay?
Okay, next question.
Hi, Daddy.
I need help.
One of my closest friends is a boyfriend who constantly,
constantly flirts with me.
I, like, men.
At this point, I'm like, I hope no men listen to this podcast because you all
discuss me except for my lovely husband.
Hi Matt.
Okay.
At first, I brushed it off as his personality, but it's gotten weird.
He compliments my outfits in a way that feels dot, dot, dot, pointed.
He sends me memes on Instagram at like 1 a.m.
Oh, my God.
And last weekend, at a group hang, he made a joke about how,
if he met me first, things would be different.
I've never encouraged it, but it's making me uncomfortable,
and now I feel awkward around her.
Do I tell her?
Do I distance myself?
Am I overreacting?
I don't want to blow up their relationship, but it's getting messy.
Okay.
So your natural first reaction as a human being would be like,
you have to tell your friend.
But in my old age, in my old age, I've realized that a lot of times when people have
relationships like this, they know. They know. They doggone no. Sweetie, she knows Burt's in and around
you. And because you're not the only one he's in and around. Okay. And so Stephanie's like looking
the other way when Burt's fucking feeling up Auntie's fucking leg at Thanksgiving this year,
because she's kind of just like, it's all right. That's my Burt. And she kind of dissociates and
she kind of pretends that Bert's not finger-banging everyone under the table because she's just
going through her fucking shit, okay? So my first reaction is, if you asked me in college, I'd be like,
you need to fucking sit her down and tell her. If you asked me now, I'd be like, you're probably
closer to losing a friend if you bring this up. The only way you could bring this up in my opinion
is if you do it in a way that's like, hey, like, I just wanted to like be honest with you.
Burt messages me sometimes at one and I know you guys are obviously always together.
So I just wanted to check like are those memes from you or for him?
Because obviously it's from him like I don't like is I feel like that's like we're not on we're
not that close like I feel like he like or unless you think like what I just want to check
with you Stephanie and kind of give it to her to be like oh no birdie's just obsessed
with memes he's a meme addict like Bert just loves to get people riled up in the DMs.
he sends everyone those memes.
And then you're like, okay, like, what about the hand on the thigh?
And she's like, no, Bert does that to everyone, even my mom.
So, like, you kind of have to gauge, I think, in a very, very light way to your friend that feels non-threatening.
And you're not attacking her.
Be like, wait, oh, my God, Bert always DMing me DMs.
Like, are you the one sending those or is that Bert?
And if she's like, wait, what are you talking about?
You can be like, oh, my God, wait, Stephanie.
I, like, I figured you knew because it's I, but I, oh, my.
God, like, dude, I'm, I, I don't want, like, tell me what to do and I'll do it. Like, what do you
want me to do? If she looks at you and looks at all, like there's one percent of like,
I don't trust you, there's a little bit of venom or like, hey, note, note, shut the
fuck up. Then you fucking drop it. Now, that's on one hand with your relationship. Pivot now to, I think
you said uncomfortable about three times in that statement. This is where friendship gets really
fucking weird because I think as we get older, people hold on to relationships and they're
in unhealthy relationships. And then sometimes it can affect you as you're the friend, right?
If you're feeling uncomfortable because this guy is making inappropriate comments to you about
your body and your outfits and all of this, I think you do have the right to say to him,
Hey, Bert, I don't want you to continue to comment on what I'm wearing, what I look like.
I'm uncomfortable. And can you please stop messaging me? I don't, I do, you are Stephanie.
boyfriend, this is crossing a boundary, in my opinion, and I don't want to be a part of this.
You're putting me in a very uncomfortable situation.
That's fair for you to say, I just want you to know that a lot of times when boyfriends are
doing that type of shit, he's going to be like, oh, fuck, and he's going to run to Stephanie,
and he's going to spin it and tell her something different, and you're going to now somehow
become the bad guy.
I'm not saying that's always the case.
It's just, I don't know.
I mean, girls you can write in, but I've had way too many fucking situations where there's
a creepy boyfriend most of the time the girlfriend fucking knows you guys and so a lot of times
that means you have to distance yourself from this person because somehow if you're somehow if
you're the bad guy it's like how did I become the bad guy in the situation it's not your
fucking fault.
okay next question hi daddy i need advice i've been seeing my therapist for about three years now
and i've grown and learned so much for her but ultimately i feel like i'm hitting a wall
there are some long stretches of silence in our sessions and i find myself running out of things
to address with her even when i have something going on i want to talk through i feel like we don't
just vibe the way that we used to do i need to break up with my therapist okay part of the therapy process
in my opinion, is changing therapists at some point in your life. Listen, there may be people
listening that beautifully have had the same therapist for 17 fucking years and you've never been
stronger. Love that for you. There are some people that get to the three year mark and they're like,
okay, I feel like I did all the work here and now I need to move on to each their own. But I think
it's really natural. And I think sometimes it just feels really horrible to break up with a therapist
because you're like, wait, this person knows so much about me. And I kind of don't want to start
over with a new therapist, but I'm also feeling like we're kind of stacking.
my advice to you is in a beautiful way this is how you know that it's probably time to move on
you need to be pushed in a way that she used to push you and you guys have kind of all the work
has been done here I have broken up with a therapist before and my advice is you are so lovely
and you say hey I wanted to come to you and thank you because so much of my life you have
helped and you have changed and I'm finding myself in a beautiful way having grown so much
as a person since I met you.
And I think now I've kind of, I'm entering this next chapter of my life where I think
I'm ready to try like a new therapy and a new experience and a new person to kind of,
yet again, push me outside of my comfort zone and like go on another journey.
And I think that's so beautiful.
And if it is a professional therapist, they will be like, I am so fucking happy for you,
Amy.
Keep in touch.
I'm always here if you ever need me.
Boom, done.
Moving on.
I love you all.
And I hope that this was somewhat inspirational and I hope you guys took something from this.
And I hope you guys are liking these Sunday session style episodes that we can kind of learn something as our brains fucking rot on the internet, then come to call her daddy on Sunday sessions and learn a thing or two.
I will not see you guys this Wednesday, sadly, because it's going to be Christmas Eve and I will be off for Christmas Eve.
But I hope you guys have the best Christmas if you celebrate Christmas and the best new year.
year and I will see you in 2026, Daddy Gang. I love you so much. Goodbye.
Thank you.
