Dear Chelsea - Life is Lifey with Sarah Shahi
Episode Date: February 26, 2026Sarah Shahi (Sex/Life, Paradise, Red White and Royal Blue) joins Chelsea to talk about life after divorce, finding yourself in your 40s and beyond, and how to give the best blow jobs. Then: A ve...ry-therapized ex-boyfriend wonders how to get past cheating. A naughty niece gets no more presents. And an undersexed wife wants a threesome, but it falls on deaf ears. * Need some advice from Chelsea? Email us at DearChelseaPodcast@gmail.com * Executive Producer Catherine Law Edited & Engineered by Brad Dickert * * * The views and opinions expressed are solely those of the Podcast author, or individuals participating in the Podcast, and do not represent the opinions of iHeartMedia or its employees. This Podcast should not be used as medical advice, mental health advice, mental health counseling or therapy, or as imparting any health care recommendations at all. Individuals are advised to seek independent medical, counseling advice and/or therapy from a competent health care professional with respect to any medical condition, mental health issues, health inquiry or matter, including matters discussed on this Podcast. Guests and listeners should not rely on matters discussed in the Podcast and shall not act or shall refrain from acting based on information contained in the Podcast without first seeking independent medical advice. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
Hi, it's Jill Wintersene, host of the Spirit Daughter podcast, where we talk about astrology,
natal charts, and how to step into your most vibrant life.
And today, I'm talking with my dear friend, Krista Williams.
It can change you in the best way possible.
Dance with the change.
Dance with the breakdowns.
The embodiment of Pisces intuition with Capricorn power moves.
So I'm like delusionally proud.
of my chart. Listen to the Spirit Daughter podcast starting on February 24th on the IHeartRadio app, Apple
podcast, or wherever you listen to your podcast. I'm Nancy Glass, host of the Burden of Guilt Season 2 podcast.
This is a story about a horrendous lie that destroyed two families. Late one night, Bobby Gumpright
became the victim of a random crime. The perpetrator was sentenced to 99 years until a confession
changed everything.
I was a monster.
Listen to Burden of Guilt Season 2
on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Clayton Eckerd.
In 2022, I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor.
But here's the thing.
Bachelor fans hated him.
If I could press a button and rewind it all I would.
That's when his life took a disturbing turn.
A one-night stand would end in a courtroom.
The media is here. This case has gone viral.
The dating contract.
Agree to date me, but I'm also suing you.
This is unlike anything I've ever seen before.
I'm Stephanie Young.
Listen to Love Trapped on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
What if mind control is real?
If you could control the behavior of anybody around you, what kind of life would you have?
Can you hypnotically persuade someone to buy a car?
When you look at your car, you're going to become overwhelmed with such good
feelings. Can you hypnotize someone into sleeping with you? I gave her some suggestions to be sexually
aroused. Can you get someone to join your cult? NLP was used on me to access my subconscious.
Mind Games, a new podcast exploring NLP, aka neurolinguistic programming. Is it a self-help miracle,
a shady hypnosis scam, or both? Listen to Mind Games on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts. Okay, guys, I am officially on my
high and mighty tour. March 13th, Cleveland, Ohio, March 14th, Columbus, Ohio, March 15th, Cincinnati, Ohio,
and then March 20th is Denver, Colorado. March 27th, Portland, Maine. March 28th, Providence, Rhode Island.
March 29th, Springfield, Massachusetts. April 10th is Chicago. I'll be at the Chicago Theater.
April 11th, Indianapolis, Indiana. April 12th, Louisville, Kentucky. April 16th.
15th is Albuquerque, New Mexico. April 17th is Mesa, Arizona. April 23rd is Kansas City, Missouri.
April 24th is St. Louis, Missouri. April 25th is Minneapolis, Minnesota. April 30th, Nashville,
Tennessee. May 1st is Charlotte, North Carolina. May 2nd is Durham, North Carolina. May 6th,
I'm doing Netflix as a joke festival. I will be in Los Angeles. That is a new announcement,
along with Atlantic City. May 15th, Saratoga, California. May 16th, Montefiardugia. May 16th,
Ray, California, May 17th, Modesto, California. And then June 4th, Portchester, New York. June 5th is
Boston, Mass. And June 12th is Portland, Oregon. And then Seattle is June 13th. So suck on that,
everybody. Go to Chelseahandler.com for tickets. Okay, hi, Catherine. Hi, Chelsea. Where in the world are
you. Oh, today I'm in Toronto. I had a show last night in Ontario. And I had a weekend full of shows
kicking off our tour. Well, this wasn't a kickoff. But I had a really fun weekend. Megan Galey
opened for me. Not kickoff, but still early. Yeah, still early. The tour's been so fucking fun,
as usual. And we're having a great time. And I'm about to go meet my cowboy at the airport because
we're going away from my birthday. Oh, yay. Oh, yeah. See, I thought the Jamaica trip was the getaway.
This is a different getaway.
No, that was his birthday.
That was his birthday.
Girl, I'm not going to Jamaica for my birthday, okay?
That's for someone else.
Is it bad to date another Pisces?
Is he also a Pisces?
No, he's an Aquarius.
Okay, well, right?
That's probably fine.
I don't know much about it.
I don't know much about it either.
I mean, honestly.
But luckily, enough people in this world keep telling me about it.
Great.
So, yes, we're on the beginning of a very big adventure.
So I am ready to rumble.
Yeah.
I'm happy for you.
All I've done the last two weeks is watch a live.
So I don't have much to tell other than it was such a good one.
Oh, yeah.
The Olympics have been good.
It was such a good one.
Yeah, it was.
There was so much like women supporting women.
Did you see the slalom where the Italian woman won?
And there were two people who had been tied for gold, two women who had been tied for gold.
And when the Italian woman won by almost 0.7 seconds, the other two women like came in, fell to their
knees and were like, we're not worthy.
We're not worthy.
It was such a beautiful moment.
I was like, of course women would do that.
That was just wonderful.
That's nice.
It was definitely, definitely great vibes.
Great vibes for this Olympics.
So many wins.
So many exciting things happened.
Yeah.
It was really, really heartwarming.
And a perfect time in our country where we can remind people of the good stuff about America rather than that stuff.
Absolutely.
Minus the fucking U.S.
men's hockey team celebrating with cash batel like a bunch of toxic assholes.
No.
Minus that part, okay?
I honestly, oh, also I just want to add, I have about two weeks off, and then I have March 7th in Vegas, and then I have three shows in Ohio.
So I want people in Ohio to know I am coming to Cleveland, Columbus, and Cincinnati.
That's March 13, 14th, and 15th.
So I will be back stateside.
Amazing.
And this is all new material, right?
Somebody was asking me, I was like, I think it's all new material.
Of course, it's all new material.
It's a new tour.
Yeah, it's all new.
So if you saw her last time, go see her again.
Exactly.
Anyway, we have a very fun guest today who is from Sex Life on Netflix and the L Word.
She's got a new book.
It's called Life is Lifey, the A-D-Z's Navigating Life's Messy Middle.
And you can also find her in the upcoming season of Hulu's Paradise and the upcoming sequel to Red, White, and Royal Blue.
So please welcome actress and author, Sarah Shahi.
Hi, Sarah.
Oh, my God.
Hi.
In stereo, all together now.
Hi, ladies.
Hi, cutie.
How are you?
I'm well.
How are you?
Where are you right now?
Because that background is heaven.
I'm in Whistler, Canada.
Oh.
That's where I have my winter chalet.
Oh, I love that.
Yeah, where are you?
Not in a winter chalet.
I'm in the Oaks of Sherman.
Oh, that's so romantic.
Isn't it?
It sounds like something out of Hamnet, the Oaks of Sherman.
By the way, I saw you at Critics' Choice, and you are so fucking funny.
I know I'm like the millionth person to tell you that.
But I was so excited to do this, A, just because I've been an admirer for a long time,
but especially after seeing you at Critics' Choice, I was like, this is just going to be wonderful.
Thank you, Universe.
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
And you can imagine my surprise when I was reading your book and came across a chapter opening
with one of my quotes.
One of my favorite quotes of all time, actually.
I read it and I was like, oh, this sounds.
And then I saw my name.
I'm like, this sounds very familiar.
That's so funny.
Yeah, you know what?
I'm like a walking bumper sticker.
I love to talk and just like a little bite-sized phrases.
And I saw your quote.
And I loved him.
And, you know, you've been so open about your journey with heartbreak and relationships in the past that listening to you talk about that really warmed me up and opened up a side of me towards you that I hadn't felt before.
So I've just, like I said, I've always just followed you.
And then whenever I was using quotes and I saw that one.
And then this came through, I was like, oh, my God, she's my new best friend.
I know.
I love it.
I really enjoyed your book because.
I think, first of all, it's going to be great for all of our listeners because we have so many women that are listening to this.
And they're on, a lot of them are married. A lot of them are in marriages that they probably are thinking about getting out of.
Just taking the temperature of the world that we live in today.
So this is a really beautiful book that talks about these changes and how to handle them with grace and a plum and how not to beat yourself up about the decisions you make.
and as a great stark reminder that you are the most important person in your universe,
and if you don't take care of yourself, nobody else is going to.
So, like, a lot of these themes, I think, you know, I know, I've written books that cover
a lot of these themes from a, you know, female perspective, but not necessarily a marriage
perspective.
So I want to talk to you first.
I want to talk a little bit about, you know, you talk about leaving a marriage, your ex-husband,
you filed for divorce or asked for divorce.
like right when the lockdown started for COVID.
Yeah.
And you have, and you have three children, a set of twins and another child.
So tell us, did that impact your decision, first of all?
Because obviously when you're thinking about divorce, as you say in your book,
you're thinking about it for a long time.
It's not something you just blurt out.
But when you did blurt it out, I felt such a relief in the way you described your relief.
Like, finally, you've said it.
It's out there.
You can't take it back.
and it feels so good to just unload.
Right.
It was like a big exhale.
Yeah, you know, it's tough.
I feel that there are a lot of unhappily married women out there.
And we are so used to this rhetoric where we have to come last, where we have to put everybody else first.
And if we want something that's larger than the life that we're living that we should feel ashamed or we shouldn't want that.
And, you know, for me, having children, you know, this is another thing.
It's a lot of people they stay because of the children.
And then they get a divorce when the kids are in college.
And I've spoken to so many people like that to which they always say, we knew our parents were
unhappy.
We wish they would have gotten it sooner.
Staying in it for the kids.
Like you think you're doing the noble thing.
But at the end of the day, what are you modeling for your children?
You know, it's like wanting to go after the life that I wanted for myself.
and also seeing what I was modeling for my kids, I was like, this needs to give me strength.
And it did give me strength.
I pictured my daughter in my situation.
And I was like, would I be okay if she were living out this version of my life?
Would I be okay if my sons were in a relationship where this is how love was modeled and reciprocated?
And the answer was no to all of it.
So as much as it sucks, as much as, you know, nobody gets married.
married thinking about their divorce, it was something that I was like, I owe it to my children
to show them a mother who was happy, who was thriving, and who has the guts to go after her
dreams. So, yeah, if anything, the kids kind of propelled me into it. And, you know, like you said,
this isn't a decision that comes overnight. The demise of a relationship is never just one person.
it's two people and it's you know it's a downward slope for a while so i i tried to use the
justification of let me stay in it for the kids or maybe i should do it tomorrow after dinner you
know what i mean it's like you just you try to find those excuses but at the end of the day
there just comes a point where it's like a switch gets turned on and you're like i cannot
keep doing this to myself anymore the pain of staying is greater than the pain of leaving
Well, and we do get questions like this a lot from listeners. I think it's almost harder in that sort of situation where it is the slow descent into unhappiness than like he's a monster, right? The decision to leave as much more difficult when it's not a monster. You know, it's just you're not as happy as you could possibly be. And also, there's a lot of love there. You know, when you're married to somebody for a long time and you build a life and children and a home and memories and, you know, there's just there's a lot of love.
And that love doesn't just go away, you know, even if you want a divorce.
It just, that was the other thing that was really interesting to me to explore when all this
happened is where does that love go?
Where do the pictures on the wall live?
What do I do with the ring?
Like all these things that you don't think about, right?
Until after the fact.
So, yeah, I'm happy that I get to sort of share my experience with everybody.
Yeah.
And I think it's very, I love what you said about.
the kids because that's everybody's excuse. Oh, we're staying together for the kids. I can't tell you
how many people say that to me, men and women alike. Yeah. And it's like that's not,
you're saying, if that was happening to your own kid, you would not want them to tolerate that
situation or stay in that situation. And I mean, something else that's, I find fascinating,
and I'm sure you did too, being yourself, is that you were filming sex life at this time,
which was a mega hit on Netflix. I watched three episodes of it yesterday. And the fact that
this was coinciding in like the parallel to the character on the show who's unhappily married
and kind of reminiscing about, well, not kind of, but totally reminiscing about an ex that she had.
First of all, you're having so much sex on the show. So congratulations on that.
I mean, what a victory.
It's been so long now. I've been single for about a year. I don't even remember how it works anymore.
I'm like, do your arms go off? Like, what do you do? But yes, I did have a lot of sex on that show.
How fun. Like, how fun. It was fun. It was fun.
It was so much fun. It was, you know, it was one of those opportunities that, you know, it really was lightning in a bottle with that show. And we started filming that show. Let's see, it was, it was COVID. So it was about five to six months after I had filed for divorce. We started filming that show. And as the world knows, I ended up with my co-star. And, you know, the idea for the book really came from the fact that when the show came out, it co-star. It co-stander.
coincided with the news of my divorce and women from all over the world. Like I didn't, you know,
expect to be on this platform, but because of the show's topics and not only was it about a woman
finding the courage to go after what she wants, but it was also very sexually empowering for
women to speak up. There were so many women that wrote to me and they were just like, I've never
had an orgasm before or how do you be vocal? And I was like, wow, that's sad because that's a
God-given birthright that we all have to experience this kind of pleasure.
You know, meanwhile, Viagra is something that makes a limp dick hard, like just flies off of
everyone's tongue like it's everyday vernacular. But if we talk about sex, orgasms, uterus,
progesterone, you know, hormonal differences, it's like we have to do it behind closed doors.
And I really want to be part of the movement to change that. But yeah, people wrote to me from
everywhere, like, how did you have the guts, you know? And also how did you bag the like hot young guy
on the show, you know? So it was just a space I found myself in and I was like, let me put all of
this somewhere that it can live and it can serve as like a Bible for women who want a second act.
That's maybe better than the first. And I think that's one of the best, best parts of the book
is talking about how the second act can be so much more rewarding than the first act of your life,
especially if you're a mom with children, especially if you were in an unhappy marriage.
I know it's certainly true for me and I don't have children and I've never been married.
Just really smart decision making on my behalf.
But especially with regard to my personality, like that just wouldn't have been a good fit.
And I can't tell you how much more joyful and confident and happy and the sex that I'm having is so much better than the sex I was having in my 20s.
It's like all women, hold on tight.
I promise you we are here to send a message that life gets better.
I mean, it is kind of hard to take a self-help book seriously from somebody as a high.
as you. So, I mean, I would say, oh, wow, how people would look at, I mean, people might think,
oh, wait, what does this woman know about? And I want to say, like, it's like when people say,
oh, you're a celebrity, you have nothing to worry about, you're rich, you don't, you know,
none of that matters. We're all going through the same shit. All women are experiencing the same
experiences. Yeah. And I think it's really, it's nice to hear from a whole different spectrum of
women about their experience in this life. Yeah. And, and,
And I also feel, too, it's like, you know, I feel like everybody comes to the next chapter of their life based on where they were last.
And also childhood trauma, like I know for me, you know, it's like being single for the first time of my life this last year and also throughout my relationship dynamics, my childhood trauma really played a part in it.
I mean, I thought I was healed, you know.
I thought I had been through the therapy.
I sat with the shamans.
I meditated for five hours.
I went into the desert.
Like, I have no more problems anymore.
And it's fascinating the way these issues, you know, and I'm somebody who believes that you
attract partners that will help you achieve your highest growth, whether or not you look at
it as an opportunity like that and you learn from the lessons is up to you.
But being able to look at the impact, my childhood, my abandonment issues,
my self-worth.
Like, it doesn't matter what somebody looks like on the outside.
It really is the inside.
And that's why I feel this stage in my life, and you probably feel this too, it's like you've
done so much work.
You're so confident.
You know you're worth.
Like, you know how you take up space on this planet.
And you feel so good about that that you're not willing to compromise for someone else.
And you come to the realization that the right people are going to appreciate.
that and who you are and who you've grown into, the woman you've grown into, you stop selling
yourself and you start realizing that anyone worth their salt will recognize how great you are.
You know, like, we're not performing anymore. I'm not performing my personality for a guy that I want
to like me. I'm asking myself, do I like you? Right, right. And by the way, the other thing that I've
come to is if it doesn't work out or they don't reciprocate, fine. Like, it doesn't mean I'm not good or I'm not
worthy or I did something wrong. It's just not an alignment. And then you become open for somebody
who is an alignment. So yeah, it's just so much more rewarding to be at this space in life than
the one before. Celebrate your pride with the station that's as bold, vibrant, and diverse as you are.
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Hi, this is Joe Winterstein, host of the Spirit Daughter podcast, where we talk about astrology,
natal charts, and how to step into your most vibrant life. And I just sat down with a mini driver.
The Irish traveler said when I was 16, you're going to have a terrible time with men.
actor, storyteller, and unapologetic Aquarian visionary. Aquarius is all about freedom-loving and different perspectives, and I find a lot of people with strong placements in Aquarius are misunderstood.
A son and Venus and Aquarius in her seventh house spark her unconventional approach to partnership.
He really has taught me to embrace people sleeping in different rooms, on different houses and different places, but just an embracing of the isness of it all.
If you're navigating your own transformation or just want to chart side view into how a leading artist integrates astrology, creativity, and real life, this episode is a must listen.
Listen to the Spirit Daughter podcast starting on February 24th on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcast.
What do you do in the headlines don't explain what's happening inside of you?
I'm Ben Higgins.
And if you can hear me, is where culture meets the soul.
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Each episode, I sit down with people from all walks of life,
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and we go deeper than the polished story.
We talk about what drives us, what shapes us,
and what gives us hope.
We get honest about the big stuff, identity when you don't recognize yourself anymore,
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some guests have answers.
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If you've ever felt like there has to be more to the story,
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Listen to if you can hear me on the IHeartRadio app,
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The nurse who should have been in charge of caring for tiny babies
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history. Everyone thought they knew how it ended. A verdict, a villain, a nurse named Lucy Lettby.
Lucy Lettby has been found guilty. But what if we didn't get the whole story?
The moment you look at the whole picture, the case collapses. I'm Amanda Knox, and in the new
podcast, doubt the case of Lucy Lettby, we follow the evidence and hear from the people that
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No voicing of any skepticism or doubt.
It'll cause so much harm at every single level of the British establishment of this is wrong.
Listen to Doubt, the case of Lucy Letby on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Something else I really liked was you talking about, you know, you're acting, getting offers for the kind of same types of roles and you were kind of over it.
You're like, very prescriptive, I don't want to keep doing this.
And so you stopped auditioning and you told your agents like, I'm not doing, I'm not going out for these roles anymore.
And you even got offered things that you turned down and said, I'm not doing this. I'm just going to wait until something that is right and that serves me comes along. And I really like, I love that because I think so many people need to hear that, that you have to do things that make you happy in order to have a magnetic attraction to the things that are there that you're supposed to go through in life. Like when you are focusing on the negative, then everything does become negative.
And when you choose to make yourself happy by doing the things that make you happy for me, that's skiing, it's reading books, it's spending time with my friends, and it's also getting time alone when I know that I will infect others with my negative attitude if I'm around them, you know, to retreat. Like I've learned all these things about myself that make me a happier person. And you speak about that, like, finding out what it is you like about yourself and what makes you happy to do. And in the moments where you're not feeling it to actually exercise your right to practice.
the things that bring joy to your life because that is going to up your frequency and up your
vibration. Yes, you are, I feel like you're probably like me in a sense that you believe in
energy and frequency. You've used that word a couple times now. And, you know, and I've done so
much research in this space, as I know you probably have too, to know that it's not even woo-woo.
It's just pure science. It's quantum physics that you will only attract that which you are in
the vibrational state of. So when you're doing things that make you happy,
you will continue to attract things that make you happy.
When you are doing things that, you know, make you feel sort of less than or not so great,
you're just going to keep attracting things like that.
And I did, and, you know, it's interesting because I'm now in this, I know I've said it a
couple times now, like I'm single for the first time in my life.
And there was a period of time where I was just like chasing.
I was chasing dick.
I was just like, somebody tell me I'm hot and tell me I am worth it.
I'll tell you you're hot.
I'll tell you you're hot right now.
I second.
And I was constantly, and nothing was working out.
And it was because I didn't have the self-worth.
I was coming from a place of insecurity, not wanting to sit with myself.
And when I started, this is another thing in the book I talk about, which is follow
your happy.
Like instead of putting attention on the things that you don't have, start chasing the
things that make you happy.
Follow your happy one by one, step by step, even if it means hanging out with your
friends.
even if it means canceling on your friends in favor of like a night alone, having the extra cookie.
Little by little, the past starts to appear.
And the things that you want to draw in, the things that are aligned with you, it's just science.
You'll just start attracting all of that stuff in.
So that's something that I still have to remind myself of to this day.
It's gotten easier.
But yeah, follow your happy.
When in doubt, when you don't know what to do, stop focusing on the things you don't know
because you're not meant to know it right now.
that's why you don't know the answers, and instead focus on the things that bring you joy,
no matter how small they are.
And let's talk about the transitional period.
Like, once you admit to your partner that you want out of the relationship, and I think
a lot of people, women especially, get very consumed with that piece.
Like, what's it going to feel like?
We're not going to have a partner.
And it's like, it's kind of like a scarcity issue more than an actual, like you're not
looking at the big picture.
You're not looking at six months down the road.
You're going to be so grateful you made this decision and that you were strong enough to make that decision.
So I think that transitional period is a real kind of hiccup for a lot of people that they can't get past.
So can you speak a little bit about your experience and when things started to feel aligned again
and when you started to really feel grateful and happy about that decision that you made?
You know, I feel like the reason, you know, people don't speak up or women don't speak up is because we've been
condition from the time that we're very young to not experience pain or that pain is bad. You know,
I talk about this in the book. It's like when you scrape your knee as a child, your mom gives
you a double-scooped ice cream cone, you put a band-aid on it, kiss it, make it better. Don't cry
anymore. And so we have this, you know, story running in our minds that we are not supposed to
experience pain. So that keeps us from doing the hard stuff sometimes. But as I learned, you know,
especially when the most painful thing that I did was get a divorce was pain is just an emotion
like joy. It's just an emotion like happiness or sadness or grief. And we don't normalize it
enough. And we try to escape it when really the only way out of that is in. So each day for me
look different. One day I couldn't stop crying. And I would be playing a game with my children and all of a
my cheeks would flush and I would get really, really hot and tears would start like prickling in my
eyes and like, what is happening? What is happening? And I would sit with it and I'm like,
okay, what is this? What is this? And it was me mourning. And I had this healer tell me one time and I
thought this was so good. Yes, you're mourning, you are mourning the death of a relationship, right?
It is a pure death. It is a loss of dreams. You have to bury. You have to bury all that stuff.
but you're also mourning the old version of you that was with that person.
And I thought that was so telling because I was a certain person when I was married.
And I did have a whole bunch of dreams.
And I thought my life was going to turn out differently than what it had.
And so a lot of times when I was crying, it wasn't necessarily because I missed the relationship.
I know I didn't miss the relationship, right?
And we do this thing.
I think we romanticize the person when we break up with them.
I know I certainly have with all of my exes.
where all of a sudden they've got a damn halo on their head.
And you start to forget all the things that got you to that place.
You forget all the things that they did, all the fikes, everything.
And you start missing them as if they were this most angelic presence.
And it's like, no, go back, read your journal, talk to your friends.
You know, for me, my mom, she remembers every single person who ever did anything wrong to me back to the time that I was in kindergarten.
So going back and talking to my mom was like really, really helpful.
And it's like, yeah, you know, you don't want to.
want them to get hate fucked by a shark, but at the same time, it's like you need to remember how
you got there and not just put that aside for romantic amnesia. And just allowing each day to be
different. One day I was feeling frisky. One day I was like, ooh, maybe I can masturbate. And then I would
start crying in the middle of it instead and just have a sore hand to boot. You know, so it was just like
each day looked different. And I had to allow myself that roller coaster. I had to allow the pain to
come in whenever it wanted. Because there were times where I thought I was totally fine. And I would be at
Gelsens and all of a sudden start crying over the avocados. You know, so it was just like, I had to allow the
roller coaster of emotions. I had to allow for every thought to pass through. I had to allow for it to be
hard. I had to allow to miss him. I had to allow these things. And then little by little, it did get
better. You know, one of my favorite quotes is give time, time. And just trust that.
that your heart has been broken.
I'm speaking for myself.
My heart has been broken so many times in the past,
only to put itself back together stronger than how it was before.
And I just trusted, trusted that it was going to get better.
And it did.
Yeah.
I think a lot of times when we're breaking up or we're ending relationships
and we're going through that breakup phase,
we are surprised that it keeps coming up.
Like we think we've gotten through the worst of it
and then it'll hit you.
and you're like, God, I thought I was over this.
And it's like, don't, that is good.
Every time that comes up, you are extinguishing your grief.
Like, you are getting closer to the end of your grief.
Don't fight the grief.
Like, bring it on, go through it, allow those emotions to happen.
Even if a month goes by and you're happy and you've met someone else and all of a sudden it hits you,
that's another step in your healing.
That's not something to his chew and go, oh, God, I don't want to feel any grief.
Yeah, you do.
You want to feel grief.
You do.
You do.
It's a release.
And the other thing, too, is it's like, you know, two things I thought of when you said that.
One was things are only as important as the weight in which we assigned to it.
I don't know if I said that right.
So it's like if you're experiencing grief, grief can be as big or small as you allow for it to be.
Like it's, so the importance of a feeling, like you can be like, yeah, I'm just really sad today.
I'm really, really sad.
Or you can make that the largest thing in the world.
So that's the other thing too, I think, for people to keep in mind is no emotion, nothing is as important as the label that we give it.
And that's really helped me at times be able to take sort of just like a, for me to step outside of my emotions, for me to zoom out and look at it from a bird's eye perspective and be like, okay.
And the other thing is anytime I would have those very overwhelming feelings and I experienced this just last year with my split, instead of making it about the other person and how much.
much we missed the other person and how we wish it could have worked out. Instead of playing the story
that makes it about them, I was trying to look at it from a different perspective where I would make
it about me. So instead, I would say, instead of being like, oh my God, I miss them so much, I'd be like,
oh my God, look at the depths of my heart. Oh, my God. Look how deeply I can love and how my love
makes me feel like I have wings and I can grow and my love is wild and free. Makes me feel like I can
do anything like wow so i would start changing the story instead of it being about them and how much
i missed them about how impressed i was with my the depths of my own heart and that actually helped me
a lot just to change the story that was happening in my head you said this a few minutes ago you said
you're kind of mourning the person that you were in that relationship and i and i think that there's a lot
of that but there's also a lot to look forward to the person that you become after the relationship
And that woman is a cause for celebration.
Yes, absolutely.
You start to experience yourself in a whole new way.
All the things in which you put on hold
because you were putting the other person's needs first.
Or, you know, like, for example, me,
I'm somebody who I'm very flirty with life.
You know what I mean?
It's like I like to carry myself.
I'm in Ares rising.
So it's like I like to carry myself
with a little wink everywhere I go.
Doesn't necessarily mean I'm hitting on the person.
It doesn't mean I want to sleep with the person.
but I will flirt with a woman barista just as much as I will flirt with the hot janitor.
You know what I mean?
So it's like it doesn't matter to me, right?
And I had put that part of my personality aside because it was triggering to people in the past.
And I didn't want to do something that felt disrespectful to somebody.
So I just kind of buried that part.
But now being able to experience my femininity and my sensuality in a way that isn't shameful,
It's just who I am.
Like life just feels so much richer to take a luxurious bath and to put on, you know, a silk robe and give yourself a wink in the mirror because you think you're hot.
You know what I mean?
Like it's just like life just feels so much better to laugh, to just feel that lightness to explore the things that I want to explore.
And I've never had the opportunity to really do this before.
So, you know, it really does feel like I'm coming into myself.
I'm owning the fullness of myself in a way that I never had the opportunity to.
And that's on me.
That's on me for allowing that to happen.
That's not the other person's fault.
But again, every relationship, every situation comes to teach us something.
And I've learned some remarkable things from the men I've been in contact and communication with.
And I'm just so very grateful.
And how's your love life going these days?
Non-existent, sister.
Do you know anybody?
I'm on Raya.
For you? Yeah, I do. She won't recommend someone for you. I'm on Raya and, you know, it's like the amount of founders, I'm like, really, what did you find? I know. I know. It's so, I know. It's so obnoxious.
Good vibes only. Or like, if I do match with somebody, all of a sudden, they text something really weird. Like, I see you like me with my clothes off too. And I'm like, what the fuck? What is that line? And then they'll be like, what's your number? I'm like, buddy, no, too fast. Too fast. So anyway, yeah, I don't, I don't know. But I'm just, I'm also in a space where like, again, like I am not chasing. I chased last year when I was very single. And being single was very new. And then.
I'm just like, my life is really good.
Like, I'm really happy.
I'm really happy with my work.
I'm really full with my children.
Like, I'm traveling a lot.
I'm meeting people.
And if a relationship comes in and like you can make my life better than what it is, like, awesome.
Like, I am ready, you know.
But yeah, otherwise, I don't know, just feels like a waste of time.
Yeah, you have to be an addition, not a subtraction.
Exactly.
Exploring myself as a single person has made me more excited.
about love than ever. And like, and I didn't think I would feel that way. Like, I was very jaded
after my divorce. And then when I got with my ex, I was like, I love you so much. Like, this is
exactly what I've been waiting for. I want to be buried on top of you when we die. And we can come back
as ghosts and hunt people. Like, my love felt gothic and, like, you know, like deep. And I thought
I would be jaded, but I'm just more excited than ever to show. Because now that I understand,
the fullness, the wholeness of myself. I'm like, wow, how amazing to be in a partnership where
I can show someone my, like, soft and my fire, like the full extent of my growth and to grow
with somebody. So, yeah, like, I'm just, I'm so excited for whenever that happens.
It's also just so empowering as becoming a woman and, like, you know, getting older and
realizing, like, you know, your messiness or the things that you aren't so proud of or hadn't been
so proud of are okay to be on display. Like, you don't have to cover up parts of you. You can actually
be 100% who you are and there is going to be men, not just one man. There are going to be many men
who are attracted to that and like your mess, you know? And like, we've spent so many years
perfecting our image to the man or men that we want to think of us in a certain way. And it's all just
completely convoluted and upside down.
what we come to understand about ourselves is like the more you you are the more attractive you
become yes and the more life just becomes fun and you know and that's the other thing too it's like
i think about i think about death a lot but not in like a morbid way in a way that's like if i were
to look back on my life like am i happy with the chances that i took or am i going to have any regrets
and that's my thing is i'm not sure where i got this but from a very young age i was like i don't want to
have any regrets in my life. So, you know, it's like I will absolutely jump now and ask for forgiveness
later or think later about my choices. But it's like, we're here to have fun. We're here for
such a short period of time. It's like, why not just squeeze the juice out of every moment as
much as we can? And those that don't align, great. Those that do great. Like in the end,
none of it matters, you know? It's just, just have fun. Live your fucking life. I'd like to also say that
the section where you use my quote, I had a guy asked me once, you don't have to drink
to make yourself more fun to be around. And I told him, no, I'm drinking so that you're more fun to be
around. That section is right above sloppy blowjobs. So let's talk about sloppy bow jobs because
you talk about the importance of blow jobs. And I have to tell you, for many years in my 20s and 30s,
I was so fucking scared to give a blowjob because I did not know how to give a blow job. And I never
gave one to completion. So I was like, I don't only know how to start. I was. I was so. I only know how to
start. I don't know how to finish. And then my friend, who you would never believe who this
sport woman is, and she's famous. I won't say her name, but she taught me. She sat me down to
dinner and we were in London and she's like, Chelsea, let me explain to you how to give a blowjob.
And she went through. Did she have like a, like, did you have a device? No, she didn't have
a device, but she described it. And it's very analogous to the way you describe it in your book.
It's just like lots of slobber, lots of spit, lots of tips, action, acting like you're, you know,
just stroking, rubbing,
make it as wet as possible.
And guys are just like,
and once I learned how to do it,
I was like,
I was so empowered.
Not that I wanted.
You're morning and a night.
Yeah,
because I always had this thing like,
I had this thing like blow jobs or like,
that's,
you don't get a blow job from me.
You know,
like I had this attitude.
And it's like,
wait a second.
I don't care if you,
like I want to give a great blow job.
Exactly.
Like I actually think the blow job
is more for me than it is for them
because I've reached a point
where I enjoy the person
that I'm attracted to, I enjoy their pleasure so much and I'm very confident at it that I'm
like, watch this. You know what I mean? So it's like, yeah, open up. Yeah, like many women, you know,
it's like I had zero context on what a penis even looked like growing up. And I had, and I was a big
fan of like dry hunting. And so I had a boyfriend. Let me ask you a quick question. Sorry to interject.
No, go for it.
When dry humping, is someone climaxed during that in their pants?
Is that what happens with dry humping?
You know, have you not dry hump?
I mean, not in recent times.
I think I got off.
Well, I haven't been recent times either.
But like when I was a teenager, oh my God, my mom is going to kill me.
When I was a teenager, I was a big fan of dry humping because, yeah, I would like get off.
Like I would.
Okay, so it's like masturbating over the pants, which I did a lot.
You got to be a teenager.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like the jeans would rub the bits in the right place.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, like a rudder.
Like a rudder.
When you have jeans with a thick seam, that is a good tool to use to masturbate.
I will, yeah, exactly.
Or a corduroy.
Cordy is very effective.
But yeah, so I had a boyfriend who was older than me and I could tell he wanted more than
dry humping.
And I was like, okay.
And at the time, there was this show on HBO.
I don't know if you had ever heard of it or watched it called Real Sex.
And there was a woman named Lou Paget who was like, she wrote a book called The Big O.
And she was older than dirt.
And she just was like her very own porn star.
And she had a class that was in Beverly Hills.
And I don't know how I came upon it, but I was like, oh, I need to take this class.
So I took this class.
There were about eight of us there.
We were each handed.
There was like a plate, like a fine china.
the plate was in front of us and when she went around the room and we each got to pick out our
dildos. So everyone got like a respectable six inch dildo full of veins and everything. They were all
circumcised. And then she was like, all right, ladies, like let's open up the back of those throats.
These dildos aren't going to jack off by themselves. And she just taught us to desensitize like
the gag reflex, taught us like different like hand techniques really broke down the pen. And I'm a very
analytical person. So it's like for me, it was hard to unleash that sexual side of me if it was
just like, because again, I was a lay bloomer, like sex was not something that we talked about
in my household with my mom. So I didn't understand. And so, but when she broke it down like
anatomically and the veins and the nerve endings and the whole thing, and I was like, oh, okay,
now I get it. And then I just love it. I just love it. And, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and,
And the perspective of the book, like again, because the book is for women written through a female lens. It's all about women empowerment. You know, the nights where it's like you could not be bothered with sex. But you know, you know, you want to put something out there. It's the nights where the hands of Tom Brady himself would get slapped away. If you can learn to give a good blowy, it's literally your helping hand. You know, it's like the amount of times you can give a good blow job and in like fucking three minutes flound.
that your husband's asleep, your partner's asleep, and you're back to reading your book.
Like, that's the only thing I care about. How quickly can I get back to my book? So yeah, it's just
like the best thing ever. So I know you say you wanted to live your life without any regrets.
When you think about your life now and like present day, what is your biggest regret?
Or do you have one? Chelsea, I don't have one. Wow. I don't have one. The amount of times I have,
you know, and I talk about this in the book, the failure and fucking up chapters, like the amount of times I, I, you know, fucked up, overreach to a guy, got too drunk, cheated, all of those things. I learned something so valuable from those that I wouldn't trade those experiences for anything. You know, it's like I look back on my life so far. And every misstep, I am so glad that I took it because it allows me to be the person that I am
now, and I really like the person who puts down her head at night. I really like the person
who was mothering her three children. I like the example that I'm setting. I like that I'm able to
look at my crazy because I can be fucking crazy and say, I'm glad for every chance that I took
where I showed my crazy because the right people stayed. And yeah, I don't have any regrets.
I love that. I love that answer. The book is called Life is Lifey. This is Sarah Shahy's new book.
that's out. And we are going to take a break and we're going to be right back.
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Hi, this is Joe Winterstein, host of the Spirit Daughter podcast, where we talk about astrology,
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And I just sat down with a mini driver.
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Actor, storyteller, and unapologetic Aquarian visionary.
Aquarius is all about freedom-loving and different personalities.
perspectives, and I find a lot of people with strong placements in Aquarius are misunderstood.
A son and Venus in Aquarius in her seventh house spark her unconventional approach to partnership.
He really has taught me to embrace people sleeping in different rooms, on different houses and different
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If you're navigating your own transformation or just want a chart side view into how a leading
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episode is a must listen. Listen to the Spirit Daughter podcast starting on February 24th on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcast.
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And we're back with Sarah Shahi.
So you know Sarah from sex life.
You know her from the L word.
You know her from Paradise, Person of Interest, right?
And now she has a new book where she talks about getting divorced, growing into her best
version of her womanhood and living life.
I think living life out loud.
I like saying that.
Living life out loud.
Because you kind of have to, you have to, I want to, I always wanted to have a loud
life when I was little.
and, you know, I didn't know what that meant other than big.
I just wanted a big opportunity and big adventure and to say yes to things that really are scaring, you know, that scared me.
So, and I think that's a lot of, you know, that's a big theme in your book as well.
I'm like you.
I grew up in a small town in Texas where I, from a young age, I knew I wanted more than what my little town was providing me.
I knew there was more out there even though I wasn't exposed to it.
So I also was attracted to this idea of just living this larger than life lifestyle.
And that's what I was meant to do.
And it's really beautiful because I feel like now at 46, I am living that version of my dreams.
I love it.
We're going to take some callers.
Are you ready to give some advice to women?
I'm so ready.
Or gay men?
We sometimes have gay men calling.
I love it.
I love this.
Well, our first question comes from.
Kendra. This one's just an email, but I felt like it was very appropriate for you, Sarah.
So Kendra says, Dear Chelsea, I'm a 42-year-old mother of two teenagers who's divorced from their dad.
We were in a 15-year unhealthy and sexless marriage. I have a new partner of five years who is so
kind, fun, smart, thoughtful, and great with my kids. We live together and are having a commitment
ceremony this fall. The problem is, our sex life is lackluster at best. I brought this up to him
many times and it seems to fall on deaf ears. At first, he was very offended when I suggested we
spice things up and said he was happy with our sex life. He claims I'm just more sexual than him,
but I feel so confused. What man doesn't want to have a threesome or do literally anything he wants
to me? The relationship itself doesn't feel very sexual. I feel like I'm in my prime and I want
to have fun in the bedroom and explore. He's the only man I've been with since my divorce,
so two men in 22 years. I'm starting to feel a bit ripped off and I'm wondering if I can live
with this type of vanilla sex for the rest of my life. I'm starting to understand why some people
have affairs, which is horrible to say and I never would, but I get it. Help, Kendra. Oh, Kendra,
girl, I feel your pain. Oh, man. I understand. There are a lot of good things there, but then also
you feel like you're not getting your needs met in some way. I wonder in those moments when
you did bring it up to him, I wonder if instead of
of making it a verbal communication, can you just start doing it? Can you, in the act,
can you just start directing the sex in the direction that you want it to go when he is turned
on as well? Like, I wonder if that's a possibility if you've tried that or not. And I also feel
like at the end of the day, the good has to outweigh the bad. And I don't know your relationship
other than the fact that he sounds like a very safe, warm presence, which is beautiful.
But I'm also somebody who, and this is me personally speaking, I don't believe in lack.
And I do believe that there is somebody out there that can check all those boxes.
I'm not telling you not to have your commitment ceremony.
But at the same time, I do think you have to really get quiet with yourself.
and ask yourself, is this about the lackluster sex or could this lackluster energy also be translating into other areas?
Like, is it just about the sex isn't fun or is this a person who could be missing some kind of that vitality in other areas as well?
But maybe you just notice it more in the sex.
And is that something you can live with?
I think when you have these kind of concerns before you're in a serious, like you're about to make a commit,
you know, have a commitment ceremony. I think these kinds of concerns, like if you're a sexual being
and his reaction to that isn't, oh my God, let's fix this. Let's get this figured out. Let's work together.
Let's get a sex therapist or let's figure it out together alone. Like, what can I do to make you more,
give you more pleasure or be more sexually active or initiate? Whatever your things are like,
if someone isn't open to that, I don't think those things.
things get better as you stay together. I think that, you know, commitment leads to laziness a lot
in relationships. And I'm not saying this is applicable to every relationship. I just think things
become easier and you get used to someone and you try less and you don't try as hard. So if that's
an issue for you now and you are a sexual being and you're talking about potentially thinking about an
affair, like, then if you're, if you want to go and have an affair and do that and you're okay with that,
then do that.
But if you're not,
which it sounds like you're not,
then you should really think about
making a commitment to this person.
Because that is a major...
Sex is a major component
of a relationship for so many people.
Not for everybody.
It doesn't sound like it is
for the guy that you're,
you know, committing to.
Yeah, exactly.
But for a lot of us,
it is important.
For me, that is the number one thing.
Like, I am there for sex.
It's not the number one thing,
sorry, but it's up there.
It's like when the sex is not good,
it's like when the sex is not good,
good, the other problems become so much more heightened. So it is, it is an important part of the
dynamic. And Chelsea is right. It's like if there are signs already, like those red flags only get
redder after marriage. You know, they don't, they don't go away. And you should be in a
relationship where you can talk about the hard things and it's received with curiosity and
interest and and you know I understand if you are criticizing a man's you know sexual appetite how
they might at first get a little flustered by it but at the end of the day like if there isn't that
interest to get on the same page maybe he doesn't want to do a three way maybe his answer
would be something else you know but you're right Chelsea like the the interest to explore
together should be there if this is a man that you're going to make a commitment to yeah yeah
And I think take steps, like do the therapy Chelsea talked about and also like get his levels checked because this could be something as simple as like he's got some low T going on or whatever and his libido is low.
Yeah.
So like, but I do like what you say, Sarah, but like he should be responding with curiosity.
But like just take all the steps.
Like see what you can see.
See if it's fixable.
And if it's not, then you've got, you know, some decisions to make potentially.
Yeah.
And don't ignore the fact that you're second guessing right now.
Like that's, that's, that's a part of you.
That's your higher self.
That's somehow, that's communicating to you.
So don't brush it under the rug thinking it's going to go away because it won't go away.
Right.
As a 50 year old woman, like your sex drive only increases as you get older.
So if you're already somebody who is interested in sex, it's going to get more and more, you're going to be more and more interested.
So.
I've changed my underwear a couple times a day.
And I'm not, and I'm not even with anybody.
So.
And I'm always.
than you, Kendra.
Oh my God.
I got to send that to my friend,
Ange.
She doesn't wear underwear.
And I was like, listen,
that is so,
she goes, why?
I go, because I need Annette to catch whatever is coming out.
She goes, what's coming out?
I'm like, all sorts of stuff.
What are you talking about?
Nothing's coming out of your vagina into your underwear.
I'm like, she's like, I don't see anything.
I'm like, that's because it's on your jeans.
You're so disgusting.
Oh, my God.
But I mean, yeah, there's things, guys,
coming in and out of our vaginas.
Hopefully more in than out.
But listen, that's what happens.
That's hilarious.
It's natural and it's nature.
Yeah, and it's beautiful.
I love it.
Yeah, it is beautiful.
That's a great way to look at it.
Yeah.
Well, our caller today is Wyatt.
He says, dear Chelsea.
A month ago, my relationship of nearly three years ended.
I pride myself on my intuition, but what often gets in my way is empathy,
giving people the benefit of the doubt, especially those I invest deeply in.
My ex and I had a 19-year age gap.
I'm 29.
He's 48.
Unconventional, but it worked in many ways.
As the child of a therapist, I'm emotionally self-aware and have spent years working on myself.
Over time, it became clear that my partner wasn't at the same level of emotional development.
I've learned to meet people where they are without judgment and show up fully.
He came out at 26 after growing up Catholic and nearly becoming a priest to avoid being openly gay.
Knowing this made me patient with his struggles around communication, commitment, and unhealthy patterns like alcoholism.
I saw him fully and still chose him, even knowing I might deserve someone who had already worked through those issues.
Throughout the relationship, there were repeated instances of him flirting with other men online.
Emoji reactions, compliments, messages.
I raised this many times.
He insisted it wasn't cheating, framing it as a self-esteem issue and a need for validation.
Despite my gut telling me it wouldn't stop, I stayed.
Then I went against my own rule and looked at his phone and saw nude photos from someone who was, quote,
just a friend with my partner actively flirting back. Now here I am, heartbroken, but clear that
something wasn't right. I'm grateful for any advice you can offer on how to get past the cheating,
and more importantly, how I can stop my sense of empathy from allowing other people to
mistreat me in the future. Thanks for the clarity, humor, and guidance you provide to people
navigating uncertainty. It truly matters, Wyatt.
Hi, Wyatt. Hi, Wyatt. Hello. So, lovely to meet both of you. I like that you're
standing up like an audition.
Oh, I'm sitting down.
Oh, you are.
Okay.
I was like, is this a mug shot?
I didn't know what was coming.
It just has a very long torso.
Yeah, you must be very long-wasted.
It's actually a short torso, so I'm glad it's all framed.
Oh, perfect.
It's the framing.
The framing is helping.
You look like a giant.
You are giant.
I love it.
This is our special guest, Sarah Shahi, obviously.
So, first of all, did you, you ended the relationship when you found those photos on his phone?
It was an ending out of anger.
and in the moment of ending it, we had met about 10 days later to actually like discuss in a
healthy manner of conversation, which really wasn't a conversation. It was just him deciding
he didn't want to be in a relationship. So that's kind of how it ended. To me, it was more of a
discard rather than a let's figure this out or what the next step forward is.
Right, right. Well, first of all, it's great news that that relationship has ended. It may not
feel great in this moment, but you're going to be grateful as you move through your life and heal
from this, that that person, it's not a match. You don't want anyone that's being deceitful or that's
looking at nude pictures online. Like, that's not what you're looking for. You're looking for
honesty, openness, transparency, right? Yeah, exactly. So I think, I mean, we're just talking
about this. Sarah just wrote a new book. It's called Life is Lifey. The A to Z,
navigating life's messy middle, which is on the subject matter of breaking.
breaking up in new beginnings, kind of owning your own power. And so while I understand your,
you're hurt and you're disappointed and your heartbroken, like these are all tools that are
going to bring you closer to a person who is going to appreciate you and is going to understand
you. And by moving on through this relationship and out of this relationship, there is going to be a
rebirth. There's going to be a new version of you that you can look forward to getting to know.
And that's the most exciting thing about breaking up that no one ever tells you is that you are going to bloom and blossom in ways that you did not know.
That's just the way the world works.
You're not going to sit here and wallow and self-pity or be upset for years and years and years.
That's just not going to happen.
You're going to meet other people.
You're going to be interested in other people.
And I think the most crucial thing to do is to really not try to push any of it away.
Just experience the breakup, experience the loss, the grief, welcome it.
You know, they say like if you allow yourself to cry and be in pain it lasts for like 90 seconds and then it's over. And it's kind of true. I mean, maybe it's more less than 90 seconds. It's something small like that. It's not over for good, but you move through that, you know? So my, my advice to you is to not resist the moment that you're in and resist the reality that you're in, but to look at it with open arms and have an attitude of love. Like you don't have to be angry at that guy or your ex. You don't have to be mad at him. You have to just.
learn you to understand that certain people aren't meant for us.
And it's a gift when we are separated from them,
even if it's from the other person doing it.
It is a gift.
It's getting you closer to your real happiness.
And maybe that happiness involves you spending some time alone
so that, you know, getting to really sit with yourself
and making sure that you're looking for any of those red flags the next time.
You know what I mean?
So you're not making the same kind of choices twice.
I think that is the best advice in life is to try not to make the same mistake twice.
It kind of redirects what you're willing to tolerate, you know, from different people.
It's like, I don't want to have that.
I dated an asshole once.
I'm not saying your guy was an asshole, but I dated an asshole once.
I didn't want to ever date an asshole twice.
And I haven't.
You know, I've dated different kinds of assholes, but never the same type of asshole.
You know, and like I like to look at that.
I like to look at life through that lens.
like it's if something doesn't work out, great. That won't happen again. The next time I'm going to
find something, you know, I'm going to find something different or I'm going to find something that
does work out. So I would, my advice would be that is to just sit in this moment and, you know,
talk about it when you need to talk about it. Hire a therapist if you don't have one already to
help you work through it and also develop better like, I don't want to insult your judgment because
it's not about your judgment, but you have to know exactly what you're looking for. So like,
Sarah, we've been talking about this, like getting to know what you need, what you want, how to be your most authentic self so that you're attracting the type of person that respects that, recognizes it, and likes it, you know, and wants to be with you. And that all, all that work is kind of what has to happen after each breakup. Yeah. No, I fully agree on all of that. First of all, Wyatt, I'm so sorry for your heartbreak. Like, I know it sucks. And Chelsea said so many,
incredible things and I can tell that you are an incredible human and you have this light that
radiates through your audition looking frame. But on top of everything that Chelsea said,
which is so true, there's a couple things I thought of that I would love for you to think about.
You said that you can meet people where they're at. Per my experience, you can only meet people
as deeply as they've met themselves. And it doesn't sound like,
And it doesn't sound like your ex has met himself very deeply, even though he is, you know, 20 years older than you.
I'm sure the relationship gave you a lot of wonderful things to think on, learn, chew on.
And the other thing I wanted to say is, God, Chelsea, you said so many good things.
Just because you are good for somebody doesn't mean they are good for.
for you. So to speak to the part of you that feels, because I'm very much like you, my heart is so
soft and I have, you know, when you're an empath, you have so much empathy for the other person.
You can rationalize their bad behavior. And it makes you soft and it makes you want to forgive
and it makes you want to take them back. But Kerr, the work that I've done and your mom is a
therapist, so you might be doing this stuff already. What I learned is that that's not a
empathy, that's me trying to prove my worth to somebody. My father left when I was very young
and I spent a large portion of my young adult life trying to prove. And I thought I was the reason
why he left. Like I thought I wasn't a good enough daughter. So every time he came back, I would like,
I would be like a cat in between his legs, like trying to purr on him and sit on his lap and
and just like do whatever I could to make sure he didn't leave again. Because if he picked me, I knew I was
worthy. So I started imitating those same patterns in my relationships. And I would have partners
like that would leave. Again, this is because I want to prove because there's a story in my brain
that in order for me to be loved, I have to prove that I am worthy, that I am good enough.
So I would start doing that stuff and I would not have any boundaries. I would let the person
cheat on me, throw things at me, push me, spit in my face, do whatever. And then they would come back
and apologize. And because I was like, yeah, I can understand. Yeah, okay, well, they were really drunk or they
were high or, yeah, you were just angry and, you know, I'm going to allow for you to be who you are.
I would accept that. I would accept it when it's like, no, because those things, I don't deserve to be
treated like that. Nobody deserves to be treated like that. Or I should say, that's not the type of
relationship that's for me. Maybe for somebody else, they enjoy that kind of thing. That's
That's not what I'm looking for for my nervous system.
And at the end of the day, I think you should be, you know, not that I'm trying to sit here and sell a copy of my book, but hey, why not?
If you can, I do talk about like marriage and breakups and all that.
Well, I know you guys weren't married, but just breakups in the book.
And your life is going to open up in so many marvelous ways.
Like, this man did you a favor.
He did you a favor.
So if anything, it's like, bless him, send him on his way.
And any time you have those feelings like Chelsea said, let them come out.
That's beautiful.
That just shows you the depths of like your love.
So and as often as you can try to turn it back to that as opposed to being like how much you miss him,
make it more about yourself and what a beautiful human you are and how much you're expanding.
Yeah.
And that's something that we were just talking about that Wyatt before you were on is just,
When you get heart broken or you get your heart broken, your part comes back together.
The pieces come back together and it makes a stronger heart.
Like you become stronger and you become, I just want to circle back because you were talking
about empathy and being an empath.
And like, don't confuse empathy with codependency.
Like those two things are very close together.
So when you're being so empathetic that you're allowing behaviors to exist because of what
they've been through without having your own standards and balance.
boundaries in place, then that's a codependency. That's just allowing behavior and working around
someone else's problems and they're not working around yours. So for you, your next relationship,
I want you to focus on having an equal relationship where you're both equally caring of the other
person. And it can be imbalanced at times, but overall, when you look at like a spreadsheet,
you both have to be putting in the same amount of effort towards each other and towards understanding,
like caring, thinking about the other person, wondering how they're doing.
It can't be ones, it can't be lopsided because that just develops into a codependency
and it's like bad, bad habits.
And those are hard to break after you develop them.
Yeah.
And then one more thing that Chelsea just reminded me up to, I hope this is all helpful.
No, 100% is.
Okay, okay.
And when Chelsea was talking about bad behaviors and choosing differently in the future,
I had a partner actually teach this to me, and I thought this was brilliant.
When someone makes a mistake, right, they do something that is clearly not right, okay?
Or doesn't work, whatever, however you want to label it.
That can be an accident, okay?
I did this.
It's an accident.
I'm sorry.
It's not going to happen again.
That can be labeled as a mistake.
When it keeps happening, when it's repetitive, that's no longer an accident.
that's who they are.
That is chosen behavior
and that is who they are.
And then there's that great, you know,
I don't remember if it was Oprah or Maya Angelou who said it,
but it was like when people show,
it was Maya Angelou,
when people show you who they are, believe them.
Yeah, you know exactly.
Yeah.
So if you take everything we said, Wyatt,
like you have a lot to look forward to.
So be gentle with yourself
in like getting through this period
and then get excited
about what the future has to offer.
You're 29 years old.
You're going to fall in love
probably a few times.
You haven't even suffered twink death.
You look great.
Thank you so much.
Yes.
Like if this is what your torso
looks like, I can only imagine
the second half.
It's all downhill.
Buddy, you are good to go, my friend.
That's so sweet.
Thanks for calling him, Wyatt.
Of course.
Thank you for the time.
in the space to listen.
Yeah, of course.
Aw, what a sweetie.
I know.
So sweet, Wyatt.
You guys gave such good advice to him.
He's going to do great.
He's going to do great.
He's going to flourish.
He is.
Well, let's take a quick break, and we'll be back to wrap up.
Okay.
And we're going to take a break.
Okay, we are taking a break.
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Hi, this is Joe Winterstein, host of the Spirit Daughter podcast,
where we talk about astrology,
natal charts and how to step into your most vibrant life.
And I just sat down with a mini driver.
The Irish traveler said when I was 16,
you're going to have a terrible time with men.
Actor, storyteller, and unapologetic Aquarian visionary.
Aquarius is all about freedom-loving and different perspectives.
And I find a lot of people with strong placements in Aquarius are misunderstood.
A son and Venus and Aquarius in her seventh house spark her unconventional
approach to partnership. He really has taught me to embrace people sleeping in different rooms,
on different houses, and different places, but just an embracing of the isness of it all.
If you're navigating your own transformation or just want to chart side view into how a leading
artist integrates astrology, creativity, and real life, this episode is a must listen.
Listen to the Spirit Daughter podcast starting on February 24th on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcast.
What do you do in the headlines don't explain what's happening inside of you?
I'm Ben Higgins, and if you can hear me, is where culture meets the soul, a place for real conversation.
Each episode, I sit down with people from all walks of life, celebrities, thinkers, and everyday folks, and we go deeper than the polished story.
We talk about what drives us, what shapes us, and what gives us hope.
We get honest about the big stuff, identity, when you don't recognize yourself,
more loss that changes you purpose when success isn't enough peace when your mind won't slow down
faith when it's complicated some guests have answers most are still figuring it out if you've ever felt
like there has to be more to the story this show is for you listen to if you can hear me on the iHeart
radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts in 2023 a story gripped the u.k
evoking horror and disbelief.
The nurse who should have been in charge of caring for tiny babies
is now the most prolific child killer in modern British history.
Everyone thought they knew how it ended.
A verdict? A villain?
A nurse named Lucy Leppie.
Lucy Lepe has been found guilty.
But what if we didn't get the whole story?
The moment you look at the whole picture, the case collapses.
I'm Amanda Knox, and in the new podcast, doubt the case of Lucy.
Lettby, we follow the evidence and hear from the people that lived it to ask what really happened
when the world decided who Lucy Lettby was. No voicing of any skepticism or doubt. It'll cause so much
harm at every single level of the British establishment of this is wrong. Listen to Doubt, the case of
Lucy Lettby on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And we're back
with Sarah Shahee. Her new book is called Life is Life.
The A to Z's navigating life's messy middle.
And you can also find her in the upcoming seasons of Hulu's Paradise and the upcoming sequel to red, white, and royal blue.
Okay.
What do we have to close this out today, Catherine?
I mean, I do have a quickie if you're ready for a quickie.
Let's do a quickie.
Sarah, do you have a minute for a quickie?
Yeah, what's a quick little question?
Oh, oh, I was like, what are we doing, ladies?
Yeah, like not a very complicated question.
We just need you to demonstrate a quick blowy.
I don't know if I'm ready for this.
On your dilldo at your house.
I didn't see this.
I'm in the email.
We'll finish up with our one-drink question, which is, dear Chelsea, last year for her
birthday and Christmas, our niece's response to our gift was, let's just say, less than
enthusiastic.
Plus, she made a rude comment.
She's nine.
We didn't say anything to her, but later my husband talked to his sister and let her
know that her daughter's lack of gratitude and rude comment hurt.
His sister did not take this very well.
She thought we were attacking her parenting rather than asking for her to teach her kid to give a polite thank you.
His sister has asked us not to give her children presents and told us they wouldn't even notice if they got gifts from us or not.
Last time we saw them, his sister was chilly.
We have a family event coming up.
Should I address this with her?
Thanks, Sissy.
I mean, well, it's obvious where she got her manners from.
I mean, her mother.
That's exactly what I was thinking.
She's like, what the fuck.
First of all, please and thank you.
are the first two phrases you should learn.
Please and thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I have a fraud.
Chelsea,
do you have a faunt?
You go ahead because you're a mother.
I always have to think things through
because when I don't have kids,
I have to think about what the right thing is.
You go first.
Okay.
And by the way, I appreciate that
because the amount of times people
without, you know, kids
want to just give their advice
like it's the facts.
So I appreciate that you have that awareness.
I would say,
what are you looking for?
would your intention be for bringing it up? Are you looking to resolve something or get a different
way of behavior out of her? Or are you wanting to just express something from yourself?
So I would get really clear on what your intention is if you did bring it up. If you're bringing it up to
try to adjust her behavior, I'm not sure if you would be successful at that. And if anything,
you might just create a really bad situation for everybody, whereas if you just chose to be neutral,
maybe the energy would be a little bit better. But if it's something you feel like you need to say,
regardless of what her response is, I am more aligned with that kind of stuff because then it's for you.
It's not because you're trying, you don't have an expectation of the other person. So that's a tough one.
But again, I'd be like if you're looking to change her behavior, I don't know if it would be
worth it. But if it's something...
I just based on your last interaction or the last interaction when she was confronted with
her child's behavior, it doesn't seem like she's in a place or a state of mind to take that
on, like, or to have any accountability for why her... She's obviously embarrassed that her
daughter act like that. And instead of admitting that, she's covering up for it and defensive.
Like, oh, you, that she doesn't need gifts from you. Like, that's an even more childish thing to
say than what the daughter said, you know, by...
and not showing gratitude.
But also, you know, like, just great, don't get her any more gifts.
The girl doesn't know how to say thank you.
She won't get any more gifts from you.
And that behavior is going to surface and resurface and resurface.
Like, she's nine years old.
It's not going to get, it's going to get worse before it gets better if it does get better.
But it's going to happen again in some rude way.
She's going to be rude in some other way.
And I guess what I would say is not to address the issue unless it's,
a birthday situation and you don't bring a gift and then you could be like you told us not to give her a gift
she doesn't you know you said she wouldn't care like I would only bring it up if it's pertinent to
what has happened but this is going to recur with her with the girl and the mother yeah this isn't
the last time the mom is going to hear this either so I think you're going to have other opportunities
instead of focusing on something that transpired a while ago why don't you wait for the next
opportunity and then bring it up in the moment there you go so you're not
harping on anything, you know?
Mm-hmm.
So that would be my advice.
Yeah, don't say anything now.
Wait it, wait it out, and it will reveal itself again.
Celebrate your pride with the station that's as bold, vibrant, and diverse as you are.
I-Harp Pride, Canada.
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It's the soundtrack that keeps life loud and proud.
Just ask your smart speaker to play IHarp Pride Canada.
Stream us on your phone.
or listen now at iHeartRadio.ca.
Come together, celebrate love.
Pride.
Feel it all year long.
Let's go.
With IHeart Pride Canada.
Hi, this is Joe Winterstein,
host of the Spirit Daughter podcast,
where we talk about astrology,
natal charts,
and how to step into your most vibrant life.
And I just sat down with a mini driver.
The Irish traveler said when I was 16,
you're going to have a terrible time with men.
Actor, storyteller,
and unapologetic,
Aquarian visionary. Aquarius is all about freedom-loving and different perspectives,
and I find a lot of people with strong placements in Aquarius are misunderstood.
A son and Venus and Aquarius in her seventh house spark her unconventional approach to partnership.
He really has taught me to embrace people sleeping in different rooms, on different houses,
and different places, but just an embracing of the isness of it all.
If you're navigating your own transformation or just want to chart-side view into how a leading
artist integrates astrology, creativity, and real life, this episode is a must listen. Listen to the
Spirit Daughter podcast starting on February 24th on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
listen to your podcast. What do you do in the headlines don't explain what's happening inside of you?
I'm Ben Higgins. And if you can hear me is where culture meets the soul, a place for real
conversation. Each episode, I sit down with people from all.
walks of life, celebrities, thinkers, and everyday folks.
And we go deeper than the polished story.
We talk about what drives us, what shapes us, and what gives us hope.
We get honest about the big stuff.
Identity when you don't recognize yourself anymore.
Loss that changes you.
Purpose when success isn't enough.
Peace when your mind won't slow down.
Faith when it's complicated.
Some guests have answers.
Most are still figuring it out.
If you've ever felt like there has to be more to the story,
this show is for you.
Listen to if you can hear me
on the IHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcasts.
In 2023, a story
gripped the UK, evoking
horror and disbelief.
The nurse who should have been in charge of caring
for tiny babies is now
the most prolific child killer
in modern British history.
Everyone thought they knew how it ended.
A verdict, a villain,
a nurse named Lucy.
Lucy Letby.
Lucy Letby has been found guilty.
But what if we didn't get the whole story?
The moment you look at the whole picture, the case collapses.
I'm Amanda Knox, and in the new podcast, Doubt the case of Lucy Lettby,
we follow the evidence and hear from the people that lived it, to ask what really happened
when the world decided who Lucy Lettby was.
No voicing of any skepticism or doubt.
It'll cause so much harm at every single level of the British establishment
this is wrong.
Listen to doubt the case of Lucy Letby on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Sarah, I just wanted to recognize the fact that you're Iranian and Persian and ask you
if you have any family in Iran right now.
I have a lot of family.
I have a lot of family.
My uncle actually got shot a couple weeks ago.
He was caught in the crossfires.
And they had a really hard time getting him in the hospital.
He's fine.
They were able to get the bullet out.
He was driving to work.
And yeah, it's really awful.
And I pray for the situation over there to change.
Growing up, being Persian is something that was always looked down upon.
You know, I think the outside world believes that the Iranian citizens are like the government
and that every Persian is a terrorist.
And there was always this stigma around it, but I really, really hope and pray that situations change.
Things change over there.
And the world can get to know Iran and its people for the beautiful citizens that they are.
It's such a rich culture.
It's such a diverse culture.
It's like deeply immersed in poetry and beauty and songs.
And, you know, even there are no history books.
Even the history books that reflected the beauty.
that Iran had, even those have just been erased. So, yeah, it's, it's tough. I talk about it with my family
every day. We don't really have a way to get in touch with anyone over there. It's pretty sad.
And I'm just praying for a miracle. Yeah, yeah, I am too. I am too. It feels like the whole world
needs a miracle. We need a, like, all the systems feel like they're about to break, you know?
Yes. Yes. And I just, and, you know, and the people over there, they're so desperate. They have
nothing to lose anymore. You know, it's like my, I have a lot of family over there, aunts and uncles.
They can't afford electricity. You know, they can't afford food. I mean, inflation is so high.
It's like if you want to go out and buy a chicken, it's like $100. You know, it's just, it's insane
how little these people have. And that's why they've just taken to the streets now because they're
dead anyway. There is nothing to lose anymore. But they need help. They need help if they're going to
instigate any kind of change.
Yeah, I know. It's like, I mean, yeah, that's a whole other political conversation.
Exactly, exactly. One in which, you know, yeah, we don't get into. But I really just pray that in this time of upheaval, you know, that the analogy of things needing to break down in order to rebuild better, I really hope that that applies.
Yeah. For everybody.
Yeah, I think so. I wonder, I think that's true. I wonder how many years that takes, you know? Like, I was going to happen.
in our lifetime or is this going to be a hundred year thing?
Like, are we going to see the change?
We need to go, I read this really interesting thing on Instagram this morning.
It was a quote about how we were a matriarchal society for 250,000 years.
And for the 10,000 years that we've been a patriarchal society, shit has hit the fan.
And we've had more wars.
We've had more, like, you know, just depravity, especially in light of all the news circulating
right now.
It's like we are in a situation where women have taken the,
a second-class citizen role at the expense of humanity.
Yes. And I really think that, you know, going back to the fames that we talk about, too,
it's like the reason why that has happened, and this is important for every woman listener
of your podcast and your platform to know is because we are so strong. We are the creators.
Like, the universe made us the creators for a reason.
Like, societies from the beginning of time have been so intimidated by the natural power that women hold.
And it's just important for us to remember and do whatever we can, big or small, to help tip that scale.
Yeah.
And it was comparing societies to, like, all animal societies.
You know how they're like the male lines ousted out of the group because he's not helpful.
You know, how, like, all of these.
But serious, it's true.
Like, it's all matriarchal and animals, elephants, lions, like, all of it.
They're just like, you guys aren't allowed to be here.
You're violent.
You're scary and you're brawny, but don't confuse.
Don't confuse brawn with, like, that's for labor.
You know what I mean?
That's not for running societies.
Right.
Men have made such a mess of things.
I think, like, let's just get all of them out of power and it's time for women to have a turn.
And let's just see if we can turn this around.
I think we can. Yeah, and I love men. You know, I'm not, I'm not sitting here as a, you know, a man hater like Samas. I love men and I think there's a very important role for them to play. But the tips of the scale of masculinity has become so unhealthy that we need to find that balance again.
Sarah, loved hanging out with you. So much fun talking to you. You as well, Chelsea. Thank you so much. This has been such a privilege.
It was so fun. And the book of the book.
called Life is Life is Lifey, the A to Z's Navigating Life's Messy Middle. So please grab yourself
a copy. And I hope to see you in person at some point, Sarah. I hope so too. I hope so too.
Yes, we'll be dripping in all kinds of goodness. Yeah, we'll practice our blowjobs together.
That'll be something to look forward to it. That would be fun. Okay. Take care.
We'll switch tips. Okay, great. All right, bye, ladies. Thank you so much. Have a great day.
Okay, guys, I am officially on my high and mighty tour.
March 13th, Cleveland, Ohio, March 14th, Columbus, Ohio, March 15th, Cincinnati, Ohio, and then March 20th is Denver, Colorado.
March 27th, Portland, Maine, March 28th, Providence, Rhode Island, March 29th, Springfield, Massachusetts.
April 10th is Chicago.
I'll be at the Chicago Theater.
April 11th, Indianapolis, Indiana.
April 12th, Louisville, Kentucky.
April 16th is Albuquerque, New Mexico.
April 17th is Mesa, Arizona.
April 23rd is Kansas City, Missouri.
April 24th is St. Louis, Missouri.
April 25th is Minneapolis, Minnesota.
April 30th, Nashville, Tennessee.
May 1st is Charlotte, North Carolina.
May 2nd is Durham, North Carolina.
May 6th, I'm doing Netflix as a joke festival.
I will be in Los Angeles.
That is a new announcement, along with Atlantic City.
May 15.
Saratoga, California, May 16th, Monterey, California, May 17th, Modesto, California.
And then June 4th, Portchester, New York.
June 5th is Boston, Mass.
And June 12th is Portland, Oregon.
And then Seattle is June 13th.
So suck on that, everybody.
Go to Chelseahandler.com for tickets.
If you want advice from Chelsea, write into Dear Chelsea Podcast at gmail.com.
Dear Chelsea is a production of IHeartMedia.
Follow Chelsea on all socials at Chelsea Handler and find Catherine on TikTok at Flashcadabra.
Dear Chelsea is edited and engineered by Brandon Dickert, executive producer Catherine Law.
Find full video episodes and minisodes now on Netflix and get tickets to see Chelsea Live at Chelseahandler.com.
Hi, it's Joe Interesting, host of the Spirit Daughter podcast where we talk about astrology, natal charts, and how to step into your most vibrant life.
And today I'm talking with my dear friend, Krista Williams.
It can change you in the best way possible.
Dance with the change.
Dance with the breakdowns.
The embodiment of Pisces intuition with Capricorn power moves.
So I'm like delusionally proud of my chart.
Listen to the Spirit Daughter podcast starting on February 24th on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcast.
I'm Nancy Glass, host of the Burden of Guilt Season 2 podcast.
This is a story about a horrendous lie that destroyed two families.
Late one night, Bobby Gumpright became the victim of a random crime.
The perpetrator was sentenced to 99 years until a confession changed everything.
I was a monster.
Listen to Burden of Guilt Season 2 on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Clayton Eckerd in 2022.
I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor.
But here's the thing.
Bachelor fans hated him.
If I could press a button and rewind it all I would.
That's when his life took a disturbing turn.
A one-night stand would end in a courtroom.
The media is here.
This case has gone viral.
The dating contract.
Agree to date me, but I'm also suing you.
This is unlike anything I've ever seen before.
I'm Stephanie Young.
Listen to Love Trapped on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
What if mind control is real?
If you could control the behavior of anybody around you,
what kind of life would you have?
Can you hypnotically persuade someone to buy a car?
When you look at your car,
you're going to become overwhelmed with such good feelings.
Can you hypnotize someone into sleeping with you?
I gave her some suggestions to be sexually aroused.
Can you get someone to join your cult?
NLP was used on me to access my subconscious.
Mind Games, a new podcast exploring NLP.
aka neurolinguistic programming.
Is it a self-help miracle, a shady hypnosis scam, or both?
Listen to Mind Games on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
