Call Her Daddy - Lucy Hale: Sober Doesn't Mean Boring
Episode Date: November 1, 2023Join Alex in the studio for a powerful sit-down interview with Lucy Hale. Lucy opens up about the struggles she was facing behind the scenes and reveals the absolute rock bottom moment that led to her... getting sober. She reflects on how drinking negatively impacted both her friendships and romantic relationships. Lucy tells Alex about what life looks like sober and how she’s been navigating dating and sex without alcohol. Daddy Gang, get ready because this is an amazing and inspiring conversation you won't want to miss!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
what is up daddy gang it is your founding father alex cooper with call her daddy
lucy hale welcome to call her daddy thank you i am so happy that i'm finally meeting you i
this is happening we're here we're here it's i was just saying your room is exactly how i thought it
would make me feel cozy so great
thank you for cozy you also just told me that your mom is a fan of color daddy so I'm immediately
like bow down mama hell hi Julie yeah I was talking to her last night and she was just like
how's your jet lag what are you doing tomorrow I was like I'm actually doing a podcast and she
goes which one it's like call her daddy she goes I love call her daddy i was like mom she she knows she knows all the
cool things she actually like keeps me young i love that for you and i love that for me because
a mother liking the show is the highest compliment so hello you're doing so many things right I want to go back to the beginning because I feel like obviously we've seen you on television
but maybe there are people that are like where are you from I don't know you so
you are you who are you Lucy let's get it still figuring it out yeah so obviously
you moved to LA super young but you grew up in Memphis Tennessee I did can you talk to me about
like what were you like as a child I lived in Tennessee so I was 15 and kind of split a lot
of my time with my mom who was in Memphis and my dad who lived in Mississippi. Very simple upbringing, like two hardworking parents.
My dad's a farmer.
My mom was a nurse.
I was a very sensitive child.
I still consider myself a sensitive gal, which I now view as like a good thing. But growing up, you know, I was having, I just felt
like very emotional and very kind of misunderstood, which is I think why I wanted to become an
entertainer because I felt like, oh, what an amazing outlet for me to ultimately be anyone
other than myself. So I think, you know, as a kid, I was having all of
these thoughts and I just needed a place to put all these feelings. And so I started taking singing
lessons and acting lessons. And my mom and I moved to California when I was 15 and I never left. So
I've been here 19 going on 20 years. Can you talk a little bit about that of
like feeling misunderstood like give me an example. I think you know whether I was misunderstood or
not who really knows but in my little sensitive child brain I was like I felt like an alien. I
felt like an alien amongst my friends. I felt like an alien in my family sometimes and I was like I felt like an alien I felt like an alien amongst my friends I felt like an
alien in my family sometimes and I don't I can't really pinpoint like the moment in my life where
that all started happening but I I do remember having a feeling um at a very young age of being
like I think in this life like I have myself and we're we're gonna have to get through it
by myself I don't know where that came from I have no idea
but um you know I I felt like being artistic and being emotional I couldn't really find a good
friend group growing up and I think that that's where that feeling of being misunderstood started
um I I do consider myself really introverted, actually, which is like,
people are always surprised to say that because of my job, which is like very extroverted. But
my job makes me feel really uncomfortable sometimes. And, and I think that being an actor,
it's, I'm hiding behind a veil of something like the last couple years of my life
because of my job and like finding success pretty early on and doing all these things I didn't get
a chance to figure out who I actually was and if I did I didn't really like who I was so I was like
running away from myself for so long yeah for so long and so the last couple of years I think and this is to tie
it back around I think I was feeling so misunderstood by a lot of people for so long
because I didn't understand myself how can other people understand you if you have no fucking idea
who you are it's so interesting you say that because when I started dating my now fiance I like grew up in Pennsylvania I looked at
actors like gods and I thought that they had the best lives in the world and my fiance being a
producer like I started to talk to him about the industry more and he was like I have a lot of
empathy for actors because what people don't see on the other side of it is like we fall in love
with you and your character of like who you play on a certain TV show or whatever it is or in a movie.
But what you guys are dealing with is like you're handed a script that you're told to like get into character of this person and you can really lean in.
But like there's a lack of like autonomy of like actually having control in a lot of these ways so people are falling in
love with something that like you tried to bring to life but it's also not you so it's kind of a
weird thing of like it is weird it is weird and then also being a part of something that lasted
for so long and being a part of that while I was figuring out who I was I was like I don't even am I this character or am I me like
and and then seeing people fall in love with this experience and fall in love with that character
I'm like well maybe I should be more like this character because I don't I don't really know
who I am and I can only obviously speak from my my experience but I do find that a lot of actors
feel similar in the sense of like I think we fall
into this line of work because we're kind of filling some sort of void it's like on some level
where we're all like a little broken or like a little or a lot insecure in my case I was like
I think this is gonna make me feel like I'm whole if all these people like me and I book these jobs
and I look a certain way and um does it temporarily
feel great hell yeah I'm not gonna lie like it does feel great I love my job I love certain
aspects of it but that doesn't fix what's broken in you and it makes it worse I was gonna say it's
almost like you can like hide even more behind it and also go down a trail of like oh my god I can
imagine you're so young and you're like is this my personality like am I like this like yeah do
I like this type of man like I was even dressing like the character off camera and of course I'm
like you know I started that when I was 20 years old so but still like yeah I would be fucked up
being like first I also want to know because obviously Memphis is so wildly different than Los Angeles yeah and so before you move at what age did your parents
get divorced I think I was four and I have very vivid memories of like the conversation
um and somehow knowing at that age that it was a good thing why did you feel that way did you
see them fight a lot yeah okay yeah it wasn't very calm
I think there was a lot of chaos in the house and as we get older we start to realize like even when
you were saying like I was introverted like I felt misunderstood as I've gone through therapy I'm like
so much of why we are the way we are it's before even peer dynamics it's like what was happening
in your house well don't they say that you are who you are
between the ages of two and five?
Yeah.
Well, holy crap.
Right, right.
You know, like that was when things really blew up.
And I think at a very young age,
that is when like my desire to please everyone started.
Like I just wanted everyone to be happy.
I wanted mom to be happy.
I wanted my dad to be protected. I've mom to be happy. I wanted my dad to be protected.
I've always been like fiercely protective of my dad.
And I think as a kid, everything is personal.
You think everything's your fault.
So you're like, okay, if I just act a certain way,
then maybe mommy and daddy will be happy
and life will be perfect.
And I find that a lot of women feel similar to
me in the people pleasing I think it's holy moly we could do a whole episode on that I mean and
undoing it I'm in like the process of undoing being a people pleaser because it's so hard for
my brain to accept that I can be nice and set boundaries because all of my 20s I was like you know what if I'm
the nicest one people will like me more and it's like well that's just not that's a complete
abandonment of self so you're just like I'll just take it and I'll just yeah be quiet on that or
whatever but then you start to be like okay wait why am I getting taken advantage of like all the
time yeah and it's difficult to like start to do something and go
against something that like you have done your whole life the opposite way yeah I think at a
young age I just realized I just wanted people to like me I always felt like life would be fine if
you know everyone was happy and people just accepted me and I'm like god that's sad that
at a young age I felt those things.
But even you saying like when you're in your house being like,
if I'm the peacemaker, like maybe things will calm down.
Like I think that's like it can weave into then like your peer dynamics.
I feel like you're just like keep the peace.
Everybody like me.
Like I just want to like be here.
Be quiet.
Like don't speak up.
Exactly.
It's the quiet thing.
But I do think it's really
relatable especially I think it's women of like wanting to be noticed and seen and heard and then
also feeling deeply insecure when you are being seen and heard because yeah we're we're basically
taught to doubt ourselves like it's different with men like as girls it's like be polite sit
down be lady like it's like like what am I doing it right and
I think it can create a lot of like division in your brain of like what you want versus like what
your natural instinct is which is like and then what society has taught us like of how to be
so I am with you on that girl I vividly vividly remember a moment in my life I was upstairs I was with my karaoke machine I think
I was like singing something from pink love it and I remember thinking my life will be different
my life is going to be different I don't belong here don't you think that's like a normal human
instinct though that like when you're in such a situation like I felt that way with my catholic
school upbringing of like so Catholic every Sunday
we had to go to church we had to do this when you're in like a system that is like forcing you
to like be a specific way your brain can't help but be like what if I just went that way yeah but
you can't help but be like like is it I'm just completely agree I'm just laughing because I love
Kelly Clarkson and there's that song breakaway I was like that was the moment yeah I'm just completely agree. I'm just laughing because I love Kelly Clarkson and there's that song Breakaway.
I was like, that was the moment.
I'm like, we're getting out of here, baby.
Like, and we did is what's crazy.
Right.
And so this moment, I remember it was like I was sitting on this like crazy shaggy carpet
we had upstairs and I was like, no, we're going to do some things.
And of course, I didn't know what that meant.
I just intuitively knew that I wanted something special and different for myself dude I'm dying thinking
of you up in your bedroom like and break away also I thought I was gonna be Kelly Clarkson 2.0
didn't we all back to Lucy anyway back. Okay. So you say you moved to LA
when you are 15. Okay. And what I read, your mom had to take out her retirement money to get you
guys there. Did you feel like excited, guilty, pressure? I'm was going to work out.
I think as time went on, I did feel a little guilt of what my mom actually sacrificed.
And I often am like, that was truly unhinged that we drove across the country and you,
you know, she was a nurse and she would work nights,
she would drive me to my auditions during the day and sleep in the car.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, she's amazing.
My mom moved back to Tennessee when I was 17 because by then I was doing little jobs
here and there enough to, you know, go spend my money at Forever 21 and have a shitty apartment.
But things started moving like relatively quickly when we got here. Enough for my mom to be like, okay. Yeah. But it's also really
interesting because when I look back at that experience, it, instead of, like if I'm completely
transparent, instead of thinking of all the amazing things, which I can now like hold so much
gratitude and space for that, I look back on that and I think of all the things things which I can now like hold so much gratitude and space for that I look back
on that and I think of all the things that were happening behind the scenes and how I was feeling
and the things I was dealing with and things I was running away from and the pressure of
being on this show that was so adored by people and and so I think it's okay for like to hold space for how amazing it was but also to know that like
that uh was very painful and challenging for me to navigate because I think what was going on
behind the scenes were things I would have no doubt dealt with whether I lived in Tennessee
Timbuktu or LA I I know that because like we talked about these things happen when
you're a tiny baby child, you know? Totally. And so I don't know on what end of the spectrum it
would have been on, but I do know that the success and the notoriety and everything happening really amped up ramped up the the intense feelings that
I was like desperately trying to shove in that emotional baggage trunk when I hear you saying
that too I feel like which I I think this is like the beauty of people and I think it's gotten so
much better in the past few years of like finally people starting to actually speak about things that they experience like I think about Rob Pattinson and Kristen Stewart for so long not
wanting to talk about Twilight and people like because when you have these like beloved projects
that we as viewers are just like I love you we love it this is perfect we are obsessed with you
girls we love you all are you guys all best friends do you guys all love each other is everything perfect there's this like idealization of it that I think
as you guys as the characters in it probably feel this responsibility to like smile through and be
like we love it because you're you're the image like you you are almost responsible for keeping
all these like young girls dreams alive of how much they loved the show and you don't want to be like I was struggling while I was doing this yeah but you're also a human being
and that was your reality and you're talking obviously about how there are things going on
behind the scenes talk to me yes so I will say that I didn't graduate high school and so that's
a little context of you know I was emancipated at 17. It's taken me many years, many breakdowns, many experiences to realize what I was actually feeling in those moments.
I think any young female, no matter where you are, what you do, you feel pressure.
You want to look a certain way. you want to be a certain weight you
like you just want people to accept you and to like you you want not maybe not everyone maybe
there are some healthier minds mindset liars uh but you know you you want attention from guys you just want you just want to be liked simply but you want to be liked
and so I before I had even booked I struggled heavily with the eating disorder uh
and like looking back now it's you know I look at a picture and I don't think oh wow like I'm like
oh I can tell exactly based off of my weight or what was going on what I was going through at the time.
I was not healthy.
I was not healthy.
And it, you know, and it makes me sad almost because obviously no one else knew that I wasn't healthy.
But to know that young women were watching this show and and I of course I
didn't know who I was yet but I was I just want people to know that that what that's not yeah I
was not in a good place and and so I you know I was dealing with the eating stuff and the food stuff, which ultimately is just feeling completely out of control.
Once again, would have dealt with this no matter what I did for a living.
But it's kind of, you know, I chose an industry that like really heightened all of that for me. yeah like I have very vivid memories of watching some of the show and being like disgusted as and
being like well we gotta stop eating we gotta and it was just because I was overwhelmed like I I
don't I'm not sure how I would have done it any differently. I was doing the best I could. And it did, I think, having that kind of control over my body or my weight,
it did make me feel good because I was like, my life is changing.
And I don't know where I fit in in the show with these girls.
At least I have this one thing that I can control.
That's interesting.
You're like, that's the one thing that you knew you were in full control of,
even if it was unhealthy and hurting you.
You were like, I gave me this false sense of security.
And I held on to that for a really long time.
Can you talk to me about that?
Because I think that the dynamic of having these beautiful women on set,
yourself included, we all compare ourselves like I look back to myself in high school and like the jealousy of like the girl that I was like oh
my god she's so beautiful I want to look like her and like it's just how we are conditioned as women
of like yeah who's the prettiest in the group who's the skinniest who's the this like how did
you handle that with all all of you
being so gorgeous and you're all staring at each other I think at the time I would have told myself
like we're not competitive and of course I'm only speaking for me of course there was of course I
felt the pressure not to be prettier or to look better but to like keep up because I did look at Shay and Troy and
Sasha and Janelle and Ashley and I was like what the fuck these are angels amongst me and like
do I fit into that there was often it was often it was more and people always wanted to pit us
against each other and were we all best friends no yeah some of us connected some of us did not
did we have rough patches of course We were in our fucking 20s.
Of course.
Like, obviously.
But like there was always a lot of love.
I feel like.
But yeah, there was a lot of nights where I'm like, OK.
I don't know.
I don't know how to keep up with this.
I don't know if I want to keep up with this.
And it like would eat away at me. Yeah. And I don't know. I don't know how to keep up with this. I don't know if I want to keep up with this. And it like would eat away at me.
And I don't know how.
I've actually never talked to them, the other girls, about this.
I don't know if they felt the same way.
I also think that it's different now where women are more supportive of each other.
I think it's kind of ingrained in us as women it's like in
our DNA that like there can only be one yep it's fucking bullshit it's so fucking crazy and it's
not like we've all been conditioned that way and it's like we can all thrive we can all thrive and
look amazing and be amazing and be kind and root for each other there's enough room I just like that
sort of mindset of like there's not enough for everyone is like the scarcity mindset is very
and and I think there was an element of that on the show because realistically like there were
magazine covers they were only choosing one and it's that's just human nature it wasn't that
I didn't want to root for
them I did I love them I still love them to this day like I'm so proud that we maintained
a level of like it felt like family you know you don't always vibe with certain family members but
like your family right yeah yeah but god and i see all these like
new shows with young women and i'm i just i'm like i know i know what it probably feels like
right you were there yeah when you but it's also that's high school too you know no that's what
that was my high school it's so crazy i it gets i get frustrated when i'm not saying people have
to be fighting but like you can tell it's like
there's no fucking way on every cast that everyone gets along like sure we can glamorize like but we
love our show it's our favorite show it's like babe if you put five six seven girls in a fucking
room like not everyone's gonna get along yeah and I think some of the gals really did connect and bond in a big way and I
and I I've always found it tricky to connect with people because I I like to connect I like
this is why we're vibing because we're talking about like the things I love to talk about and I
I just always not only on that show I've found it trickier to find the people that I want to
connect with and so I would kind of just sit in my little corner and like live in my own world and
tell myself you know that I was misunderstood but in reality it's just
certain people connect and certain people don't connect but I did feel kind of a pressure
pressure because I remember sometimes reading online that the fans of the show would notice that I wasn't in pictures with certain people and I think that's where these
rumors started of like they don't like Lucy or and it really wasn't that it was just like
I was marching to the beat of my own drum and I didn't and I knew I knew the perception of it, and I maybe knew how it was coming across,
but I also knew that I wasn't going to force something to happen.
Well, it's very similar to what you described as your childhood.
Exactly.
You're sitting there feeling misunderstood.
You're very in your own head.
You're alone. You're emotional, you're like kind of a loner you're like I had maybe like not as many friends and I
was kind of like introverted that doesn't just fucking change because you get on a cool set with
a bunch of cool chicks and you're like oh my god we're all famous now like you're still the same
Lucy in Tennessee so it's like that I I appreciate you saying that because I do think
a lot of times people are like why can't I be a certain way especially when you're in a room with
women maybe that are more outgoing or more clicky and connecting that's just fucking life I think
that was it yeah I think I've had to accept that I just so desperately when I was younger I wanted
to be have a it wasn't even that I wanted to look
differently I wanted to have a different personality I was like damn it why am I not
more fun I always felt like boring and I felt like I didn't have a lot to say I definitely
because I didn't graduate high school was like oh well I'm not smart people aren't gonna listen to
me I built like all of these narratives in my head where I was like this is the truth I'm gonna
stand by it which is why which I'm sure we'll talk about which is why your girl wanted to drink
right because I could be fun I could be sexy I could be hysterical I could be a bitch I could
be whatever I wanted to be and my brain shut off but like undoing all of these narratives that I
believed and stood by for so long has been
the biggest challenge of my life harder than giving up drinking harder than my career it's
like actually rewiring my brain into believing like no I am smart I do have shit that's important
that I want to say yeah um I'm worthy I am more than the way I look like all of these things that we tell ourselves
and I love it now I love like I have I have an addictive personality but now I'm like driven by
this need to okay I want to know more about myself I want to do more I want to be better I want to
understand all I can learn yeah no I I get what you're saying about like which is
so hard and again I think a lot of women can relate to that of like having something in your
head that you believe about yourself and if you asked your friend or your family member they'd be
like what are you talking about yeah we know like we you're so smart or you're so talented or you're
so this what are you it's like we are
our own worst enemy and if it goes down too far into a like a dark hole like it is just you own
it and you believe it and it's like how do you even begin to like unravel that because you have
to live your day-to-day life you're still going on with your job and your interactions it's like
that's what you're broadcasting to the world energetically i would make myself feel very small
and that my ideas didn't matter because if I walked into a room everyone else's ideas were more important
than mine and it had to I think it had to do with this this idea of not feeling
smart or feeling like people didn't care okay okay let's about, you have talked about your journey with sobriety before.
And I kind of want to just, I've never talked about alcoholism on Call Her Daddy.
I've never talked about struggling with alcohol.
I've never talked about.
I'm the first.
You're the first.
I'm the sober cherry popper.
You are popping it right now, Lucy. let's go back to the beginning of what age did you like first try alcohol in the womb
no i'm just kidding my mother gave me a little taste of tequila.
Okay, the first time ever that I tried alcohol?
Maybe when you started drinking.
I mean, I will say the first time I ever had alcohol,
I think it's important to talk about because I was probably 12, 13.
And I was in Florida on a vacation.
I was like wearing a crop top, halter top thing. For some reason, I remember the And I was in Florida on a vacation. I was like wearing a crop top halter top thing.
For some reason, I remember the shirt I was wearing and we drank green apple pucker, which is a chaser. Anyway, I remember my very first experience with alcohol was exactly how it was when it ended.
I blacked out at 12, blacked out at 12 years old. I couldn years old I couldn't I don't remember what happened I got
very sick I threw up and I remember being so distraught when I realized what had happened
and I was like oh my god my mom is gonna be so disappointed in me like um this is I feel so
scared right and that's at 12 so I didn start regular. Of course I drank here and there from 12 to blacking out a lot of the time I was but
I was drinking it was very clear I was drinking to escape something even at a young age um
and so I I would say around like age 18 when my mom moved back to Tennessee is when
it was happening a lot but but I also you're a teenager. I didn't realize I had a problem until my early 20s
when I'm like, why do I still want to drink after a night out?
Like why can't I just have two glasses of wine?
Why am I thinking about drinking all the time?
Why do I feel so uncomfortable if I'm not drinking when I'm out?
It was like all these questions and I don't know if I ever talked about this before.
This might be a first.
I went to rehab when I was 23.
I don't even think anyone on the show knew.
And it was my choice too.
That was like a very pivotal moment in my life. I like
wasn't ready to give up drinking, which is why I didn't get sober until I was 32. But, um,
there was like deep fear of, of what would happen if I continued acting this way from,
for a very long time. And when I tell you I've tried, I had tried so many different things rehab outpatient inpatient trauma center
therapy medication you name it and I and there was always like a very strong desire to want to stop
but I think just being I don't know how I would have gotten sober in my 20s in LA on a being
successful. Like I, I, which is why I have so much empathy for people in the media that are
struggling. Cause I was like, it's so fucking hard. Yeah. Um, and I, you know, I just was in this very sad cycle for all of my 20s.
Can I?
Okay.
Yeah.
First of all, thank you for sharing that.
Because again, it almost goes back to like, there's like the career that you want to uphold
and you want to like be remembered for something great.
And that doesn't mean you can't also
be open about the struggles you were going through but I do think it's difficult for people to be
like am I allowed to like should I say this about myself like will people want to work with me like
should I even like I can imagine that goes through your head because I know people don't open up
probably for that fucking reason there was no way in hell I was gonna openly talk about this I was so deeply ashamed of myself and my choices
and the person I was when I drank yeah there was no it it is actually mind-blowing like if you
would have told me at that age you know 10 years from now
you're going to be doing a podcast and you're going to be talking about being sober and alcoholism
I would have said you are fucking insane no because these things I'm talking about I'm only
able to speak about them because I have actively worked through and let go of the shame. Yep. That was so ingrained in who I was.
I don't feel like I, and I don't really blame anyone for not helping.
You know, the people in my inner circle definitely knew, my friends, my family,
my suite manager, but no one on the show really knew because I didn't talk about it. And so I think there was a lot of maybe concern from people.
And people also are like, how did you maintain a job?
Well, my drinking was very, it was binge drinking.
So I wasn't drinking every day.
But when I would drink.
You would drink.
She was like, bye.
That's what I was going to say.
Can you take me to like what would a typical night or day of drinking be like for you back
then?
So it usually would start and I was because I because my job was very important to me.
Like I.
I think maybe only I never let it come interfere with that because like I knew if I lost that
I would not be OK.
Yeah. because like I knew if I lost that I would not be okay yeah um it doesn't mean it didn't seep
through the cracks sometimes because like yeah I did show up to work hungover sometimes yeah I did
I can look at pictures of my eyes and I'm like oh you hung over bitch like I know what you were up
to last night exactly and so I think it was maybe clear to to people yeah yeah people aren't dumb
that's the thing about like addicts alcoholics you think you're being so secretive so and I can
I feel it in a room I can I know I know and like in a non-judgy way I'm just like oh I think they're
struggling you know and isn't that so interesting and then you probably walked in being like no one knows
no one knows and maybe they're like yeah lucy you reek or like lucy you like your eyes are
bloodshot or did you sleep but okay a night of yes you know kind of looked that that was a scary
thing is it was a wild card and i was always well, this could be a really fun. Because some nights don't.
I also like in hindsight, I look back, I had some great memories drinking.
Super fun.
But you never knew what you were going to get.
So some nights would be, you know, great.
I'd be home at a decent hour.
I'd, you know, chug some water before bed and take some Advil and I'd wake up and feel fine or it
would be a night that turned into a Saturday that turned into a Sunday where I'm like
why are there drugs on the table like who are these people why are these people in my house
like it would just be all over the place yeah and I think I was also attracting people in my life that were also
really struggling and I think one thing and also I just think that anyone who's listening to this
I get really emotional Lucy don't cry I cry all the time you can cry I just think something that
really something that really I struggled with a lot growing up is like I remember people, people, some people I worked with, some people in my friend group that just thought I was a wild child and thought I just like to party and like, ooh, it's going to be or like people wouldn't invite me places because they knew how it would get.
And I just want to say that anyone who behaves that way, it's clearly coming from a place of pain.
And so anyone who may or may not be struggling with this, like I think it's so important.
And what's really helped
me is like you have to find the people who get it find people who understand and that you can
connect with because you're not fucking alone in that feeling and like I think I felt that for so
much of my life I was like it was the misunderstood thing right and then it was like actually being
reflected back to me because I was being misunderstood because I was like I don't just like to chug tequila or I did but like right but I but
I'm also like in pain I'm in pain and I also remember vividly I will not name names but I
remember vividly hearing someone who was in kind of my inner circle at the time saying
god sober people are so boring and I was like you know what sober people
at the time I was like sober people are boring am I boring and I also want to say to anyone who
might be struggling I remember Miley Cyrus said one time she's like there you can say a lot of
things about me too it was like because I think she's she she was talking about sobriety she was
like but I am not boring I find some of the most interesting, complex, beautiful human beings that I know struggle in this way.
And that is your gift.
Don't let anyone ever tell you.
Like your mistakes don't define you.
Like your sensitivity, because I find that a lot of sensitive people
turn to alcohol turn to drugs because you're trying to numb down your gifts
oh can you tell I could talk about this no it's really powerful because I number one I feel really
I have seen it too like I've had people in my life that I'm like oh my god like I know you're struggling but it is hard
to be with someone that is blacking out that is a liability like it's difficult it's hard but it's
it's obvious they're struggling and I think that's the thing that you're right people don't have any
fucking grace or time for it in moments and I think yeah you were clearly struggling I guess you kind of having this
like binge moment and then being able to get to work like I relate a lot and you don't even have
to be someone that like struggles so much with alcohol to the point where like I've been in
moments in my life where like staying out late and partying nothing ever good comes from it and I remember like no I remember the
the moments in when I was living in New York I'd gone through a really bad breakup and I was really
struggling with like party culture just felt like I wanted to be a part of it because I felt like I
could I don't know I felt like I I felt really alone at that point in my life I didn't my friends
weren't in the city I I was like I have no one and so I found this really alone at that point in my life I didn't my friends weren't in the city I
I was like I have no one and so I found this group of people that were always partying drugs and you
bond over that there is like a there's there should be a whole conversation about the people
you bond with when you're partying yeah and so I remember like I had never I had never done drugs
I had because I'd played soccer my whole life like I'd never done that and I remember getting into a phase in New York where like I tried drugs and like yeah I would be at an
after party and there were drugs on the table and I and it was also because I'm drinking if I was
sober I'm not doing the same way right yeah all of a sudden you find yourself and I wonder if
if you're comfortable talking about that of like how you can also slip into like when you're drunk anything goes baby and anything
you're like is that cocaine is that a cigarette is that what are we doing what is yeah and what
is who who is that yeah you know and you have no idea where it even came from girl and you're not
gonna be smart you're just gonna take it girl I it's so interesting because I, yes, just what you said.
Like, I would have never, I would have never thought to do cocaine if I weren't drinking.
But, but I think alcohol was just this gateway into being whoever I wanted to be.
I didn't have to be sweet.
I could be sloppy.
And yeah, I could do cocaine if I wanted to. You know what?
I could sleep with that guy if I wanted to. And maybe his friend, you know? It's like,
not that I'm, you know, I look back and I have compassion because I was like, oh babe.
But it was just, I didn't have an outlet in my regular normal life to like release this wild
side and release this bad side because ultimately like I still
have those elements to me right that doesn't go away your shadow side is fucking cool I think
and so I've had to learn how to be friends with these things that brought me shame and that people
and the other thing was like I knew people were talking shit about me. I knew people were, were not even spreading rumors.
It was the truth.
And I just tried to cover it up for so long.
And, and that even fueled more drinking.
So it was like, how do I get out of this cycle?
It's going to kill me.
Literally.
Oh, well.
Did you ever have like a moment where it was like you're in the hospital and you wake up yeah I you know I was never I never wanted to die but like
the way I was acting sometimes I'm like wow it's a I would wake up and be like well it's kind of a
miracle I'm here um I did have moments where I would have to go to the hospital and get IVs.
Yeah, you know, it got really dark.
I'm not even going to lie.
It got really dark.
I was very sad.
I was very scared.
I think ultimately I was like, okay, well, we have some options.
I'll be sober.
I'm almost two years sober.
Congrats.
Thank you.
And it feels great.
Like I feel so stoked to be able to talk about these things
and to know that I'm good.
And I think there are so many times in my career
where I'd wanted to talk about it,
but I knew I didn't have a grip on it. And the and the thing is like, I, this is something I do, I work on every day. I choose
myself every moment of every day because I have to, because I want to be here and I want to live
a full life. Yeah. Um, but when I decided to get sober at 32, I was like, okay, we have some options.
I can keep doing what I've been doing for the last 15 years.
Um, there's the risk of something really bad happening.
Or we can get sober and we can actually do it because I would always kind of half-ass do it.
Yeah.
And I truly, there's no other way to say it other than it was like a spiritual intervention.
Like I literally felt the presence of God like actually telling me,
you don't have another chance.
Like I truly felt it in my bones that like this is it yeah what are we gonna do with it and I remember I was flying back from Austin after a whirlwind
New Year's Eve trip like shaking I was eating a gross ham sandwich like trying just to get food
in my stomach because I hadn't eaten in like two days I have my dog in my lap I was like okay
we're gonna do it we're gonna
do this and then I ended up the week I got sober I actually got COVID too and I think without that
I would have made excuses I think because I was forced to stay home I was forced to call these
certain people connect with certain people put myself in these rooms and groups of people that truly saved my life I think without having
COVID I might not have gotten sober or committed to it and I I don't know man like I feel so
strong in my path right now and I
I don't know every day is changes like I was just traveling internationally and like air
airports and airplanes are are always make me a little edgy I'm like because that's where I
loved to drink put me in a lounge put me right right I was like I'm 30,000 feet away from
everyone that drives me crazy yeah you know so so. So it's really just like, okay, being gentle with myself
and really having a plan of, okay, I know I'm going to be on a couple planes coming up.
How are we going to take care of myself?
Being sober is 100% the best thing I've ever done for myself.
It does not mean that it's easy.
I think I have talked about it publicly and
I think it's been portrayed as like life is great life is amazing has it made my life better 100
million percent but it's deeply uncomfortable and is deeply painful but it is so worth it yeah
dude yeah that's what I think is you're so right it's like when you come out and say like I'm sober
everyone's like oh my god she has it together yeah like she's great and you're like this is
something that you have to wake up every day and make the choice to not have a drink to not have
a drink and it's and it's made me realize like how much I was escaping in other ways too like
your girl will do anything to avoid an uncomfortable feeling. Uh-huh. Like let's go.
I'm on Amazon.
Like I do need this new blender.
I already have 10 blenders.
You know what I'm saying?
Spend money.
Men.
Like I have avoided my shit for a long time by being with people I didn't really want to be with.
Just like complete avoidance.
Can we talk about that for a minute because something that really hit me and I
oh this is like so dark but I remember this is I've never loved you more okay so I don't know
if I've ever said this on the podcast but I was in this relationship where I was in it for the wrong reasons it was so off like just
in ways like emotionally abusive and just like really not healthy and I was staying for the
wrong reasons but I remember there would be nights that I knew he would want to have sex
and I did not want to have sex with him yeah so before he would come
home I would go into the kitchen and take shots by myself and I would drink so that I could have
sex with him yeah and what's so crazy in that moment is like I knew like what the fuck am I
doing like why am I hiding quickly drinking then going and brushing my teeth
so he doesn't know so that I'm fucked up so that I can have sex with this person like yeah so
fucking sad but I'm and I'm thinking about you and I'm like can you talk to me a little bit about like
this sexual aspect of being drunk or being on drugs while you're drunk and like being in this situation which is like
pretty unsafe like yeah what sexual situations did you get yourself into that like you'd wake
up and be like oh my god I and this is definitely you know I've talked about
my sobriety story a little but I've never talked about um that element of it and I think it's a really important
thing to talk about because I think a lot of people can relate to that whether you're an
alcoholic or not totally um and also like being sober and dating and being sexual was like a whole
new thing I had to learn because a lot of my most of my relationships and my the people I had slept with like I was always
fucked up I and I felt so deeply uncomfortable in my body and in my skin and whether you struggle
or not when you drink you automatically feel a little bit sexier. You're like, I look amazing.
You're like, I'm ready.
At least I would have like a 10-minute window where I was like,
we've got it together and then the dark thoughts would roll in.
But I mean there's definitely been – I think that's where some of my shame still lies is in the people I've allowed to,
the people I've allowed myself to be with.
And I know for certain I've potentially,
I don't even know if I want to say that.
I actually know.
Maybe I've been taken advantage of.
Not to say that these people, no, I'm not making excuses for people. I've been taken advantage of not to say that these people no I'm not making excuses for
people I've been taken advantage of uh yes I was the person drinking but I there are certain things
I don't quite remember um but then it's also yeah so I've slept with people I regret sleeping with of course you know yeah but I also think like in the relationships I was in um I really relate to what you're saying about
like needing to drink to be physical and for me it wasn't like I wasn't attracted to these men I
I was but I was so uncomfortable with myself or their perception of me that it was easier
to be in a different state of mind.
And when being physical, I have always, I've always considered myself a sexual person.
And I always had shame about that until recently.
I think that, I think it's so strange to me that we're given the gift of sex.
Like, it's a beautiful, what? Totally. what like what do you mean amazing yeah most amazing thing in the world yeah and we obviously
live in a society that shames us for that when ultimately that's kind of the thing that connects
us all right but I think something that is difficult when you and I know you're like still working on like unpacking everything that happened.
But and that's what I'm like, like we need we do as women especially need to get better.
Like you sitting here and just not being able to fully say and then like, yeah, you were taken advantage of yeah it's so interesting how my brain will try to make excuses
for for things and is it right or wrong I don't I don't know but it happened and I think
basically what I'm trying to say is like I don't think these people are bad people it's just so I'm I'm only pausing because I've actually never talked about this element of it
before yeah and not even really with my therapist this is just like a new top this is like a new
yeah remember I was talking about the trunk and like the emotional I think wow we'll be doing a lot of journaling tonight Alex
no it's good it's good I think I appreciate you talking about it as women and as men like there
is so much shame attached to the type of people we've been with were we fucked up like what actually did happen
was it my fault should I have actually you know
god we just live in a world where we're just like all traumatized people traumatizing people
dude it's well what I appreciate about you is like there's a level of like survival you have
to get to where you're like you have to move on you have
to look back at a point of your life and be like whoa I'm so happy I'm like not doing those certain
things to myself anymore but then there's also a moment where you have to be like our body remembers
things have you read that book the body keeps yes I haven't read it but it's fucking crazy I'm sure
there are moments I have had them in my 20s where I woke up and this
is so sad I remember waking up and being like did I have sex last night and actually physically like
trying to like feel in my vagina like did I have sex I know I I have I can't even tell you. I can't even tell you how many times I've been like, huh. And then I'd make excuses. I'd be like, well, I've kind of always wanted to sleep with him, so I guess it's okay. Or, you know, just like making excuses or, but also like I, for so much of my life, I found I would fill this like empty well within myself with
validation from men so I I was like well if I if I'm if I sleep with them like I get this validation
and and then I'm okay and then I feel worthy for a week and then I'm then I need to do it again and I don't know it was just a habit I
picked up very very early on of like if I got the attention from men I I was okay to show up in the
world yeah even I think something that's really relatable I bet a lot of people are going to
connect with also is like you talked about how when you would drink you would have this you would become the person
you thought you wanted to be you're outgoing you're loud I can be sassy I can fuck like I can
be hot like you can do all these things and I I know people in my life that are like I'm introverted
and I'm a little anxious or I'm shy and having a couple drinks like I think brings me out of my
shell and I'm able but it's like then there's
that line where it's like you shouldn't need anything like that is a substance like that to
make you feel like you can be yourself because we're not ourselves when we're drinking right but
then sexually also all of us are gonna feel way more free having sex if we're fucked up on
something yeah but it's like you don't actually
know if you don't feel in tune with your fucking body i'm even willing to say that
sex drunk is not enjoyable at all sex with strangers is not enjoyable
point blank yeah it's just the truth maybe and that's just my experience but and that's why like
the last two years of I mean I was like celibate for a lot of it but right but but I think like
feeling so comfortable in my skin and like learning to love my body in new ways
like being sexual like it's still a little uncomfortable yeah for me I'm learning how
to be really present and um you know and choosing the people I want to be intimate with and
not everyone deserves to touch your body you know facts facts and like you can't make that
decision as easily when you are fucked up no I'm like everyone
can touch right they're like let's go girl guy oh let's go I just appreciate you going there with
me and us unpacking the themes of just being like oh that's interesting next like well I mean that's
a testament to you you're so good at what you do and you really create with all of your guests like
you know the right questions to ask but you do it all with like a very well because it's like
it's your very warm people are like so talk to me about your fucking drinking problem you're like
okay so here you're a slut right literally like who'd you fuck or you're like oh my god people
said shit to me about like craziest shit I'm like that's
rude thank you yeah um okay no this is great okay relationships your relationships yeah I had many
relationships I I don't think I I've not had a relationship really since I've been sober, I dated, but I, but throughout all the, you know, teenager to,
to now, like my last long-term committed relationship was like six years ago and it
ended, I mean, we were very, we were not compatible with each other at all, but, um, it ended because
of my behavior and like a lack of him not really understanding and not knowing how to be
there for me we're now him and I are now friends and it's it's nice to god it's the best feeling
to like reconnect with people in a different place in your life and I'm finding that's happening a
lot to me lately like people I've had embarrassing or shameful experiences with like I've run into
them on the street there was someone I ran into in Vancouver
on the street and it was someone something happened and I didn't really remember what
had happened it was a night and I had always wanted to apologize and I randomly ran into
him in Vancouver and not only did I get to apologize he was like Lucy nothing happened so I had like built so in
my life I've like built these things up in my head all I say all that because it's just interesting
the universe is like we're gonna give you an opportunity to hold yourself accountable and
apologize and it's like the best thing to be clear-eyed and feeling good and and to get to
reconnect with people when you were in these type of relationships did a lot of your partners also drink heavily or were you hiding it
so my very first boyfriend ever that I had for three and a half years when I was a teenager
um I remember him telling me I had a drinking problem my boyfriend after that and he wasn't really a drinker uh my next boyfriend after that
he also was like you this is worrisome I'm like I'm breaking up with you bye me problems
you're the problem you're the problem bye babe
cut two you were right you were right um my boyfriend after that god we were it was the
most passionate relationship of my life and the most toxic he was a drug addict he was an alcoholic
i learned habits from him we were a perfect storm
but there's also a lot of love there that was also um a deeply scary time in my life I was like oh
can you share some of those habits uh day drinking drinking a bottle of wine before bed every night
he uh at that point I had never done a drug and that was like when I was like oh I kind of like how that feels um yeah it was a lot of just self-neglect and it was like
the day drinking thing that was when I was like oh you can drink the day after huh I never really
thought about that but but also you know those types of relationships are the most exciting
like the most passionate like whoa like I this person I think I'm like if I were ever to
be in a room with him now it's still one of those people where I would be so I'm equal parts
terrified of him and attract like deeply attracted to him so crazy I had one of those where it was like he was definitely into drugs and there's like
a thrill element of like the the instability like this person does not have their shit together and
it's like every day is fucking different and it's this like exciting rush and it's also what you
don't realize is it's like uncomfortable fear that like you are thinking is like attraction.
But you're also like this is you're my body telling me like I shouldn't be doing this.
Yeah.
And it's exactly that.
Like my nervous system the whole time I was with him was like I did not regulate my nervous
system for a full year.
But I also loved that because I told you I loved chaos.
Um you don't have to answer this but I'm just thinking again because we're having we're kind of tying things. Because I told you I loved chaos.
You don't have to answer this, but I'm just thinking, again,
because we're kind of tying things. Like, when you look at your life, you –
I think sometimes in a positive way you can be like,
oh, that helps it make more sense.
But, like, a lot of how we are is because of our family.
Like, does anyone in your family struggle with alcohol also okay
okay yeah I mean it's it's I think it's just helpful to say because sometimes people feel
really fucking alone and it's like girl you're not alone this isn't also I don't know if it
helps to be like it's not your fault this is like a genetic thing that like, yeah, that's life. But it's also
interesting to me that, you know, my sister doesn't struggle with alcohol, but we grew up in the same
home. Obviously our lives are very different, but it's just interesting how people latch onto
something. And I think if I would have found cocaine at 16, that would have been my thing,
but alcohol was your thing. That was my was my bestie for a long time.
When you said that you went to rehab, when you got back,
talk to me about like reintegrating after rehab.
And then like when did you have another drink?
I'm laughing because I – so before I went went into rehab I was talking to this guy that
I was obsessed with I stayed in rehab I got out the day I got home he flew in to see me I picked
him up and they he asked me to stop at a liquor store for him no and I remember him getting a
bottle of Jack Daniels and mind you I still didn't drink for like three months after that so I was
like what talk about not integrating right talk about
I just had this like spiritual amazing experience and this guy who that was that that in itself is
was my life for so long putting everyone else on a pedestal for so long I'm like why am I taking
this guy kissing him and he tastes like Jack Daniels just but I'm just laughing because that was my first
memory of getting out of rehab solid yeah damn yeah crazy and then when did you relapse three
months after yeah it was always typically that it was like three months after I went to Vegas for a
of course I relapsed relapse in Vegas um for a award show because what would happen was I'd I'd
be sober for a long time and think you know what I think I have a I think I have a really good grip
on my alcoholism now and I think if I just have rosé I think I'm gonna be fine and you know what
I'm gonna have a rosé and a water and then maybe I'll have like a little Adderall just like bring me back down.
And like the one thing about like alcoholics that I love is like the rules that we, you know,
only beer, only wine, only on weekends, only every other week.
But yeah, I'd get stuck in the cycle of I'd be sober for a month or two and then I'd relapse.
Then a week, then I'd relapse.
And I was like a chronic relapser.
Yeah.
Yeah.
When you talked about that like New Year's moment when you got on the plane,
was there something that happened that was like rock bottom?
I mean, in hindsight, like a lot of things that happened in my life would have been labeled as worse.
But I think I was at a point in my life for this New Year's trip where I knew my drinking career was coming to an end.
And I almost, I think subconsciously, I knew that this New Year's was going to be the last hurrah.
And it certainly was but I think it was so
scary to start drinking one night to wake up um
like a day and a half later and have so much blank memory and be like and I remember asking my friend I was like
what are we doing tonight for New Year's Eve and he was like it's the first and I was like
what do you mean I was like what do you mean what do you mean there's a whole day of my life I don't
remember and like blacking out was a very normal thing for me here and there
whatever but I'll never I still like I have a physical reaction to hearing him say it was the
first and I was just like this can't be my life this can't be my life I refuse to let this be my life anymore. And I was so sad. And like, it was just
more like, and nothing really, you know, I don't even know if I left the hotel room, like nothing
technically bad happened, but it was just that feeling of,
how did I get here? I have everything I could ever want and I'm gonna blow it all and it's a miracle that
I didn't yeah I think I did I fucked up friendships I fucked up relationships I hurt
my family I you know I did lose out on career opportunities but like
I talk about guardian angels like talk about knowing I'm supposed to be here yeah and so
you know I so whatever happened in Austin like something resonated it was this feeling of like
maybe let's do maybe let's try it a different way uh and I did I'm so proud I'm so proud that I did that um
yeah and I and I often don't sit back and relish in the like whoa babe like you did it you did it
I yeah thank you for sharing that I literally got chills because it's like we we as
humans are just judgmental like we either compare ourselves but like or we'll judge people because
it's actually an insecurity of ours or we'll judge because we don't understand something
I appreciate you sharing all this because it's so fucking hard to talk about something that you
have any amount of shame over and also something that like you've as much as maybe people in your
life have talked to you about it or told you or you've broken up with boyfriends about it like
it's on you like it's and and also you've dealt with this alone. So it's like you were going through this alone because when you woke up you were alone.
Sure.
Even if there was a body next to you that you're like what are you doing here.
You're alone.
And so it's on you to find your way out of it.
That's fucking hard.
But that is the key to life is like the second you start taking accountability of I'll just say it from my point
of view the second I was like okay why am I in this weird fucking hotel room a day and a half
later why am I sad why am I angry it's I have to take accountability of my life yep no one else is
gonna save me and I can't keep blaming other people for my own shit it doesn't mean
people can't help me but ultimately all you have is yourself like yeah you have to fight and
advocate for yourself I just love that we're talking about that it's like even if people
are listening and it's like it's not alcohol it's just like your life whether you're unhappy
wherever the fuck you are if you're unhappy about something like it really is, it sounds so fucking simple, but it's hard not to look
around and try to blame others or blame your circumstances.
It's like there is something so powerful about you sitting on that plane ride and just being
like, yeah, it's got to end.
It's got to change.
Yeah.
And I think that's fucking amazing that you're sitting here today and you clearly
now are like again like we said it's not easy it's never gonna be easy no but life is not easy
and it's not supposed to be easy that is what we signed up for as human beings being a human
is hard it's hard to navigate yeah we all numb out in some way we all try to escape
but there's something beautiful about not what if we didn't
what if we didn't what if we were just uncomfortable we'll get through it can you talk
to me about obviously like recovery is not linear like it's an ongoing process in these past two
years trying essentially like you're finding a new version of yourself because for so long like you were going off of
like certain habits and routines and a lifestyle and now it's all different can you talk to me
about like how it's been things that you've struggled with things that you're like loving
about yourself yeah I mean certainly not linear and there is no right or wrong way to heal
um you know there's so much advice out there.
There's so much on the internet of like how to heal.
And I think that's great.
And I think that's when the internet is really beautiful.
But I think ultimately like the only person that's going to know what feels good in your
body and your mind is yourself.
Yeah.
So for me, it's like I've kind of had to like block out a lot of the noise and really get quiet with myself and like really figure out what
actually makes me feel good because I had to have a moment where I was like does my career make me
feel good luckily it does luckily because god that would have been a shit show. It's like I'm sober and I'm changing careers.
I'm yeah.
Who knows what I have done?
What would I have done?
But I, you know, just like, yeah, getting crystal clear on like the friendship.
For me, it's like when you heal, you expect other people to heal with you.
But like you're on a different path.
You're on a different journey.
And so certain things don't fit your life anymore yeah and so obviously like the places I was going and
day to day that shifted a little um but people don't prepare you that like some friendships
don't won't be the same that's the hardest thing is like we talk about
romantic breakups all the time but like friendship
breakups are hard and so i've had to deal with that a little bit and um family dynamics have
shifted boundaries girl boundaries boundaries you know i was talking about being at peace
and how that felt uncomfortable.
That's really what a lot of what my life has looked like. It's like, okay,
am I, am I bored or is this just really nice? And like being okay in stillness and not needing to fill my days with stuff just to avoid. Because what I, what I found when I was newly sober was,
okay, I'm going to work out three times a day. I'm going to, you know, read a book.
I'm going to whatever.
It's like, well, why am I filling my days with all of these things?
What if I just didn't?
Right.
What if I just didn't?
And so it's like I'm in this interesting place now where my relationship to my body and to food and to exercise has is like the next thing for me to
work on I think just like being really gentle with all of that I think that not to like go
back all into this but I think the eating disorder fueled the alcoholism and they kind of fueled each
other and so like now that I'm sober it's like okay now let's like really unpack this. And so, you know, my life is very simple.
They're like, okay.
I'm just a simple girl.
I'm a simple gal from Tennessee.
But, you know.
No, but what I mean by that is I find joy in simple moments.
I want to simplify my life.
I'm trying to simplify my life.
My circle is small.
I spend a lot of time with my dogs.
I am on this whole,
this will be for when I come back for part two of the podcast,
we'll talk about spirituality
because I do want to say that the spirituality element
is what keeps me going.
And it's brought a lot of clarity to my life of like,
oh, but why am I really here?
What is my purpose?
How can I help leave the world a better place?
So it's like my priorities have really shifted
into broader scale, I guess.
And I think that that was maybe why I was also drinking is because I felt
like I didn't have a purpose yeah I love that you just said you know like it's okay like is it
boredom or is it just like you're just be still and I feel like there's so many people that can
relate to that moment where you're like trying so hard to just keep moving and keep going and keep doing and
going here here here here and it's like when you're uncomfortable in the silence and being
alone with yourself that's the first indicator you've got shit to work on shit to work on because
there's nothing better than when you are like so super cozy with yourself and you actually
would a hundred times over choose yourself to be alone and like not go out and not right literally the best I'm at the point now where I you know I'm
single I don't know when this is airing but as of now I'm single and I have to I have to get a
boyfriend in the next two weeks um I don't know should we have a dating show and uh but but my
point in saying all that was like, I love my alone time.
I love my life.
I love my schedule.
But I also do you know, I do want a partner and I want a family.
And and I do have to put myself outside of my comfort zone because it is it does feel
so cozy and safe in this like little world I built for myself.
But he ain't gonna come knocking on my on my front door.
Maybe he will
I was about to say I love how you're like when is this coming out I'm like are you do you have
someone in mind I'm like is he I do have someone in mind but but but we're not dating okay you've
gone on dates we're supposed to we'll see we'll see and now that I've said it out loud it's
happening well I don't know we'll see so you've texted a little okay and
you're gonna potentially go this is me putting expectations on something no this is what I do
all the time I'm like okay how is he gonna be as a dad like it's like no just like calm down but
this is my extremist brain yeah you know I get it but I also think that I'm at the point now like I
don't want to casually date I'm'm looking for something specific. Okay. And not everyone is looking for that.
Mm-hmm.
I don't know.
We're just trying to manifest that into my life.
Do you have any like dating rules for yourself that you're like this has to be?
Like is there anything on the list you're like this is like.
Don't be a raging alcoholic.
You're like don't.
Don't be.
But also I do love an edge
no no no no i don't i don't have any like don'ts but i think it's more just like
this place i'm at in my life where i'm at the woman i've become it's not for everyone and i
know that but it is for some people and so it's more just like being completely in alignment with someone emotionally mentally physically spiritually
it's tricky it's very tricky to navigate and I'm not willing to alter anything I will comp you know
compromise this is a very different thing but I think we're not settling anymore. We're not settling. No, I made a song out of it.
We're not settling. And break away because we're not going to settle. Okay. We don't need an album.
What I love about what you just said though, is like how great you're now at a place in your life
where you are so clear on the things that you need for yourself and so if someone comes in you're going
to be able to be like check check oh I can compromise I know I know I know immediately
yeah usually but before you probably and as we all go through that where you're like
you almost become the partner that walks in the door you become the guy that's the drug addict
you're like oh I guess I'll just like yeah when we go, we all go through that where we're
so much more, like, we are so much more susceptible to just becoming that relationship.
A little sponge.
And being independent of, like, this is what I bring.
Can you meet me here?
Also, and people talk about this all the time, a lot of people are filling a void with the person they
choose or the relationship they're in because it's a lot of people settling or a lot of people
trying to figure out their shit within a relationship and that's not saying you can't
you can grow as a couple yeah but I think I'm so grateful that I now feel more whole and can enter into a partnership now because now I know how to treat people because I know how to treat myself.
I can show up for someone.
I can respect someone.
I'm ready to love, you know, and I don't and I wasn't always that way.
Right.
So do you have a type?
Yes.
Physically, no.
Although my friends would be like you love tall dark and handsome
i love a musician bad boys lucy but i don't know if that's a lifestyle that's good for me
i don't know but i but there's something about musically inclined men that really get my heart
rate i get it just turn on spotify and listen to a song. Like I feel like that girl, the touring and the drinking and the –
it's a lot.
It's a lot.
It's a lot.
But I do think I would love to end up with a creative of some sort.
I don't really set rules for like –
I'm not saying, oh, he has to be in the industry
or he has to not be in the industry.
I think like having that level of understanding,
it would be nice to be with someone who gets it yeah um but type i'm more of a vibe
gal i need i have a very like a specific sense of humor not needing to be in the spotlight but
quick i like i like going deep with people if you can keep up with me in conversations like that sexy awareness is the like I will drop my panties for that immediately like a self-aware king I you know I
just I've been dating for the first time in my life and a lot of it is like these people are
not asking me questions uh-huh why am I the only one asking questions?
Right.
I was talking to someone about this the other day,
and they were like, the dates I've gone on,
I'm getting to the point where I'm like, I'm just going to stop.
I've been asking you questions the whole time,
not in like a weird interrogative way,
but like I'm asking you questions, being respectful.
Are you curious about me?
Yeah.
Do you even remember my last name?
Yeah. Like, where are we at?
I think it's a universal thing.
And men, I love you.
I do, but I think it's a universal thing and men I love you I do but I think it's
not I'm always taken aback when when someone asked me a question and not only that a good
question I agree that to me I'm like oh to feel seen and heard have you had any nightmare dates ever but I definitely had one recently where
I just knew immediately I was like oh no no wait why why why because it felt like a rehearsed
date oh it felt like he was saying things that I think I had
verbatim said in an interview before and I'm like okay on one level that's sweet like he did his
research but also he wasn't in my industry and I always feel a little weird when it's someone not
in my industry because like I don't know people's motives oh my favorite thing
though is I'm on a specific dating app and um when you're on this dating app you can click on
someone's name and you know you go to their Instagram you know who they're they are if you
connect with someone you're gonna obviously google who they are of course but this has happened a few
times where guys actually they don't know what I do for a living or who I am and I'm like okay you
might not have seen my work but I don't believe that I do for a living or who I am and I'm like okay you might
not have seen my work but I don't believe that you connected with me and haven't googled me it's
you're asking me what I do for a living like just stop that's the crazy am I crazy because I'm like
this is really this is very bizarre you're not crazy because what's crazy is social media everyone
has it at this point I'm like I know what your mom's sister's
dog is doing right now let's keep it real yeah and even if you're not going to bring that up
you're not going to pretend you don't know what the dude does like it's so silly but I think it's
like a way of them being like I don't care what you do I'm a normal guy who wants you for all the
right reasons I'm like yeah but that is showing me that you want me for all the wrong reasons
right if you're being phony right like imagine how much harder it is for the guy to be
like oh I respect your career I respect your career this is so cool like obviously I don't
know if I've watched everything you're in like what was your favorite project like yes that was
like when I went on a guy in New York City I went on a date and he was like um what do you do for
living and I was like this is what well you're engaged no but this was like right before I got
engaged yes and I was like oh like I have a podcast and like you're like the number one most successful
and at the time he followed Dave Portnoy he followed Barstool he fought like I'm like you
know you know thumbs down dude and I'm like oh I have a podcast he's like oh like what do you talk
about and I'm like meanwhile you go look at his search history. He's listed every episode.
I just, yeah.
No, I agree.
I think that in this dating world with social media, it's better to be up front.
You don't have to say like, oh, yeah, like and go too deep of what you've stalked.
But there's a level of like, let's keep it fucking real.
Let's be transparent.
Because then if not, you're like, this is what are you hiding?
Yeah, exactly.
OK, if your fans and my fans can take one thing from this interview what do you want them to take from this okay fuck where do we begin okay okay okay okay okay okay okay okay
one thing yeah fuck that's a lot okay i just think for me I didn't really have any women at least that I had found that were
going through similar experiences and I know that a lot of the things we talked about today
were heavy, heavy hitters and make a lot of people uncomfortable.
Like a lot of people will not and do not want to talk to me about my sobriety or sexual encounters or trauma or whatever but I guess like the one thing is I just
if anyone's listening like just know that there's nothing to be afraid of there's nothing to be
ashamed of um and you're just you're not alone i think like you and i have both mentioned many
times during this interview that we've felt alone or misunderstood um and i think it's just always
nice to know that very simply you are not yeah you are not and i think that i'll end it with this
i i watch very niche documentaries and i read very weird books and just like I'll find something
like the other day I was looking up crop circles.
But the other day I was I was Googling fingerprints.
I was like, how fucking amazing is it that there are no two fingerprints ever in the
history of ever that are like if that doesn't tell you
everything right there there is only one you there is only ever supposed to be one of you
and that is so fucking cool to me look at your finger like yeah it's it's and so that to me
just like wraps up what i'm trying to say is that life is tricky, baby.
But you're not alone and things might not make sense but they will eventually.
Because I felt that for so much of my life where I'm like, what the fuck is happening?
And things eventually find their place.
They do.
Be gentle with yourself.
Be kind.
Please be kind to yourself.
God. I cannot thank you enough for coming on because like you said I think it's so important to have conversations that may make people uncomfortable because it's not what we're saying
that should make them uncomfortable. It's because in some way we've been raised to think like
showing any weakness and talking about things that you've gone
through is a sign of weakness and it's completely the opposite you're so fucking strong for sitting
here knowing millions of people are going to listen to this and watch you talking about something that
so many people will relate to and I think it's just the beginning of people actually realizing
like damn if she can just talk about this and overcome this and also recognize like it's a struggle, it's okay. If you're relapsing, if you're like, it's all,
it is all going to happen. But by talking about shit, that's the most powerful thing.
And the most beautiful thing is, and also thank you for, this was so fun.
This was, right?
Yeah. And you just really made me feel safe and it was very easy
to open up about these things. Um, cause I don't always share this with everyone. And, um, and I
do think it is maybe a part of my journey now to talk about these things and, and I, and I hope it
resonates or that something I've said that might wake something up inside someone. I don't know,
but honestly, thank you so much for having me. Lucy,
thank you so much for coming on Color Daddy. Thank you.