Consider This from NPR - The lessons author Kelly Corrigan took away from a challenging year.
Episode Date: January 1, 2025So much can happen in a year. While we all wish for a happy New Year, that's not always the case. We talk to author and podcaster Kelly Corrigan about the lessons she learned from a challenging year.L...earn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Happy New Year! It's Mary Louise Kelly. I hope you are ringing in the New Year on a
good note. We want to start the podcast today by thanking all of you who joined NPR+, or
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Thanks again. Here's the podcast.
The year has come to an end, and as that happens, no doubt you will hear a few bars of this
classic. Should old acquaintance be forgot on days of old life?
What does this song mean? My whole life I don't know what this song means.
I mean, should old acquaintance be forgot? Does that mean that we should forget old acquaintance?
It doesn't mean that if we happen to forget them, we should remember them, which is not possible because we already forgot them.
That is Billy Crystal in the Nora Ephron classic When Harry Met Sally. His character, Harry
Burns' question, is one that more than a few of us have probably pondered around midnight
on December 31st.
["For old Linesine, my dear, for old Linesine"] The lyrics of Auld Lang Syne pose the question, how do we best remember the people and the
experiences of a year that's ended?
What memories do we hold onto?
What do we take away from those experiences, both good and bad.
Consider this.
For some of us, 2024 was a great year.
For others, not so much.
And for most of us, it was some combination of the two.
Coming up, we talk to author and podcaster Kelly Corrigan about challenges she experienced
in 2024 and the lessons she'll take from them.
From NPR, I'm Mary Louise Kelly.
It's Consider This from NPR.
As the song from the musical Rent goes, there's 525,600 minutes in a year.
Some years fly by, others seem to last forever.
A lot can happen in those minutes.
Wonderful things.
Awful things.
We asked listeners to tell us about a bad year and how they got through it.
My name is Taylor McKenzie. My most difficult year was between March of 2022 and February of
2023. During that time, I experienced a kind of a medical mystery. My twitch, as I call it, manifested in a way that just for 24-7,
my right arm would jerk around consistently and my head would bob up and down uncontrollably.
Mackenzie says she no longer has emotion disorder, but
we are all just really just one weird twitch away from having our
lives changed forever.
In 2016, Bruce Cox took a serious fall while on vacation. He survived but suffered a number
of injuries, including cracked vertebrae and a traumatic brain injury.
I fell off the edge of an infinity pool into a rocky beach and woke up approximately two
months later.
When I say wake up, my first conscious thought was about two months after the accident.
I was in acute care for weeks and then transferred to an inpatient rehab locally and have no
memory to this day of any of it.
The TBI caused memory gaps and changes in his emotions.
It was a long road to recovery, but Cox says he was determined to do whatever he could,
not to get stuck in, woe is me mode.
I've always said how we choose to deal with adversity defines us.
And I absolutely believe in that quote and embrace that in my recovery.
So for me to find joy in, hey, there's not much traffic going to work today.
That's fantastic.
I find joy in that.
I tend to try not to take for granted anything.
This seems like a good place to bring in Kelly Corrigan.
She is host of the podcast
Kelly Corrigan Wonders, also host of the PBS show Tell Me More, and the author of four
memoirs. Kelly Corrigan, I'm so happy to speak to you again.
KS. Always, Mary Louise, always.
LS. So you just did a podcast on this very subject, two-part podcast. You looked back at 2024 and you called this
undertaking Happy Crappy. Start with the crappy. Would you give us just a little taste of what
this year has brought you? So this year for me on the crappy and then also weirdly happy side, my mom died on May 25th.
I'm sorry.
Thanks.
You know, I had known that people die.
I'd lived through it with my dad nine years before.
And so I was aware that these things can go any number of ways,
most of which are prolonged, painful, tragic. And then every now and then there
is such a thing as a good death. And my mother had a great death.
You sound at peace with this, which is a huge thing to say about one of the biggest losses
well as human beings we're ever going to carry in our lives. I was so impressed. I mean, I felt like I was watching a tiny 100 pound general
call the shots from this prone position.
I mean, doctor after doctor after doctor came in
and made her reconfirm her wishes.
And they were all tall and male and authoritative and she was a shadow of herself.
She was skin and bones and she was not afraid. And so I think I followed her lead. I think I
was not afraid for her. And in fact, she said, Kelly, I know
what I want. And I started crying. She said, Don't cry. I can't do this if you cry. And
I said, Well, I'm going to cry a little bit, but I'm not going to try to stop you. I'm
not going to obstruct this. And so I'm going to help you get what you want, which is to
just be left alone to be detached from the equipment
and the machinery.
LS.
Would you just describe how the loss shows up in your daily life, in little places where
maybe you weren't expecting it?
KS.
Every sore throat, I think the only person on earth that would care about this is my
mother.
If I was talking to my mother and I said, oh, I think I have a little bit of a sore
throat, she would call me the next day and say, how's your throat?
And I'd think, God, you're the only one.
That's amazing.
And then the other time that I miss her is when I feel this loss of self where, I mean,
per the story I just described where it was like, I'm gonna, I'm not gonna obstruct
your wishes.
I attuned to her during those 10 days.
And what makes me miss her, Mary Louise, is that I want to say, did I do a good job?
Is that what you wanted?
I have.
Is there a grace note you'll take from this past year?
Maybe the grace note of 2024 is look harder. Like there's something inside everything
that might leave you weirdly better than it found you.
And in ways that you might fail to recognize
at first glance, which is why maybe you'll be rewarded
if you look harder.
Are you thinking about your mom or something else?
I'm thinking about how weird it is to not have parents.
And then how it turned on me.
My first reaction to not having parents
was like a foot stomping,
I don't like this kind of feeling.
Like a little fit that a four-year-old would have.
Make it go away type thing, yeah.
Yeah, I wanna talk to them, like bring them back.
I did a good job, I was very grown up
and we handled everything just right
and now I want them back.
And then I don't think it's fair
that I never ever ever get to talk to them.
Like, what if I could just talk to them once a year?
You know, like I'm sort of bargaining with who knows what
to just get like an ounce.
Like there's just the the the absolute-ness of it is so hard to get your head around.
But it cleared the way for me to be the parent.
And of course, I've been a parent now for 23 years.
But it clarified, this is what you're doing now. This is what your role is. You're the giver
now. So give. Let me ask that question in a slightly different way. The reverse way. Does there
always have to be a grace note? I've been thinking on this one, whether it is okay for something just to suck, to just richly, resoundingly suck
and be unmitigated in its suckiness.
I think it is essential.
I think it is absolutely essential
that a thing is allowed to suck top to bottom, side to side.
That it can be entirely and absolutely crappy.
I think it'd be so tedious if all of us went around saying,
oh, I know, but like, isn't there some kind of silver lining in that?
Like, that is just a horrific bar to try to clear time and time again.
And it cheapens everything.
Like, it's okay, that's just, of course, some things absolutely suck.
Some things are utterly crappy. And we should not force each other to poke around until we find something good to say about
it. There might be something that happens next. That's all. There might be something
that happens next.
Okay. That's a nice way of looking at it. You can wallow in the suckiness, in the crappiness,
but understand that
it will end and there may be something else on the other side. Yes, yes, and the something that comes
next might be weirdly related to the crappiness. Zoom out, zoom out, just keep zooming out until
you find it. That's a great way to end 2024 and look ahead to 2025.
Kelly Corrigan, thank you.
Thanks for having me, Mary Louise.
Always loved talking to you.
It's author and podcast host and PBS host, Kelly Corrigan.
Happy New Year.
Happy New Year.
This episode was produced by Brianna Scott,
Connor Donovan and Catherine Fink.
It was edited by Jeanette Woods and Courtney Dorning.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Mary Louise Kelly.