Dear Chelsea - REPLAY: A Therapy Session with Dr. Dan Siegel
Episode Date: April 20, 2023Dear Chelsea will be back on May 4th for Season 4! Chelsea is joined in the Season 2 Finale by none other than her very own therapist: Dr. Dan Siegel. They chat about the double-edged sword of socia...l media, how to become a lifelong learner, and why you should always be generous with your oranges. Then: A mom struggles with her child’s pronouns. A 21-year-old grapples with the untimely death of her brother. And a followup with doting dad Alex, as he prepares for the next step in his family story.  * Need some advice from Chelsea? Email us at DearChelseaPodcast@gmail.com * Produced by Catherine Law Edited & Engineered by Brandon 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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Joel, the holidays are a blast, but the financial hangover, that can be a huge bummer.
If you are out there and you're dreading the new statement email that reveals the massive
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Okay, hi. Oh, hello, Catherine. Hello, Chelsea. Good afternoon, everybody. Good morning. We have
some very exciting news. Dear Chelsea, the podcast you are currently listening to has been named a
Webby honoree in the podcast general series advice and how-to category.
Woo-hoo!
Woo!
Congratulations, Catherine.
Yay!
Congratulations, Chelsea.
Oh, my God.
Earning the distinction of Webby honoree, that's what it's called, as recognized by the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences,
is a significant achievement granted to only the top 20% of more than 14,300 projects submitted in this year's competition.
So that is a very exciting little award.
Oh, my God.
I love it.
I love getting nominated for awards.
It's a whole new thing for me.
Yeah.
I mean, it's just it's a little bit of recognition.
It's kind of fun.
I love an attaboy.
Like, I love a pat on the back.
So this is just a wonderful way to get one of those.
Yes, yes.
I agree.
Thank you very much.
Yes.
What else, Catherine?
Well, I'm wearing my Dear Chelsea hat from our merch store.
Our merch is in.
You guys, our Dear Chelsea merch is in.
It's available on my website at ChelseaHandler.com.
It's very exciting.
Oh, I should also tell you this. So the very first day
that I wore my Dear Chelsea lemon yellow t-shirt, I went for a hike. My husband and I were hiking
in Griffith Park and a woman came up to me and she pointed at my shirt and she goes,
I have that in my ears right now. And I was really confused. And then my husband was like,
Catherine, she said she's listening to this podcast right
now, the one that's on your shirt. And I was like, oh, that's cute. It was very cute. I wonder why
you were so confused. I was. Well, it was like that urine. It was like that's in my ears right
now. I was like, wait, I don't understand. But she had earbuds in and it was a whole thing. But
it was very cute. Well, that is cute. I love that people listen to it. I always forget, you know,
you leave here and then you forget that you like even did a podcast.
Right.
So it's nice when people say, oh, my God, I love your podcast.
Or I I've called in or I've written in.
Somebody tried to hand me their submission the other day.
So I got to get that to you as soon as possible.
Just so everybody knows, Catherine handles the submissions.
Yes.
And there.
How do you submit again?
Dear Chelsea Project at Gmail dot com. Don't send it to Dear Chelsea. and handles the submissions. Yes. And how do you submit again? DearChelseaProject at gmail.com.
Don't send it to Dear Chelsea.
That's a very sweet woman who's not us.
And who's obviously annoyed by getting all of our emails.
But she's like, I feel bad.
I want to make sure that these get to you.
So DearChelseaProject at gmail.com.
And yeah, I read every single one that comes in.
So, and actually, I have received several emails about our Amy Schumer episode.
And there was one specific little thing that was mentioned on the episode that we wanted,
a lot of people wanted to make sure that we corrected, which, you know, we're here to
learn too.
So I think that's great.
Ashley says, Dear Chelsea, I love, love, love your show. The guests you have, the topics you cover, it helps so many people and I love listening every week. I'm writing to respectfully ask you for a correction to your episode with Amy Schumer. It was educational and vulnerable and your conversation on the autistic community and later in life diagnoses will change people's lives for the better. In the episode, it was mentioned that autism can't be diagnosed until around age 5 or 6, which is incorrect. I'm a speech and language
pathologist who works with children age 2 to 14, many of whom are autistic. You can seek diagnosis
as early as age 2. Early intervention is key for many families, and often the stigma of autism
keeps families from getting a diagnosis
until much later. My goal in my practice is always to put children and their families first,
and with all the advocacy Amy does, I want everyone to be armed with the most accurate
information possible. Thanks for your consideration, Ashley. Goddammit, Amy.
Goddammit, Amy. Why is she always getting me in trouble? Come on.
I'm used to getting people in trouble.
And then I met Amy Schumer.
Okay, so you can get diagnosed as early as two.
Thank you for your letter.
Thank you for your correction.
We appreciate that.
And yes, we want to get out accurate information to everybody.
Absolutely.
Early intervention, guys.
Early intervention.
I wish somebody would have intervened with me earlier than they did, because I really
just I could have used some sort of diagnosis when I was younger.
I don't know what my diagnosis is, but I could have used some help.
I feel like we're as we have expanding conversations about everything in the public domain, there
are so many things that I'm like, oh, wait, I have this.
I have that.
Like, it's because of podcasts and one in particular that I was like, oh, I have anxiety.
That's what that feeling is. Yeah. Or actually knowing the difference between anxiety and like,
you know, anxiety encompasses so many different things. Like being annoyed with people is anxiety.
I always thought anxiety is like, oh, social anxiety or an inability to socialize or
perform or go out or stage fright, like that kind of thing. And it's actually much more nuanced than
that. There is a whole spectrum of anxiety that you can suffer from and it can present in many
different ways in different people. So, you know, eating is anxiety sometimes. Doing drugs is anxiety sometimes. Or a celebration.
Can be either.
Chelsea, do you have any tour dates that you want to cover?
Yes.
I added a show in Saratoga, Saratoga Mountain Winery.
I added a second show in Nashville.
Nashville is where I am shooting my next special.
So there will be two shows now in Nashville.
And I am also performing at the just
for laughs comedy festival in montreal everyone has been asking for montreal dates to all of my
canadian friends that is july 28th i will be at the montreal just for laughs i'm hosting a gala
and then i also have another can i have two dates in Vancouver, Friday, August 12th, two shows
in Vancouver.
And then Saturday, August 13th and Sunday, August 14th, tickets are available for Calgary
in Alberta.
And I'm also adding a show Saturday, October 8th in Niagara Falls, which is Ontario.
So those are my Canadian dates coming up. And then this week, I'm starting
back on tour. So Thursday, April 14th, I'm in Cedar Rapids. Then the 15th, I'm in Des Moines,
and I'm coming to Omaha, Nebraska on Saturday night. So and then the week after that is Louisville,
Kentucky, St. Louis, Missouri, and two shows in Kansas City. So check ChelseaHandler.com for your tickets.
I'm back on tour, vaccinated and horny.
Let's get down to business.
It's just great.
It's just great.
I'm just back from Vegas, so I'm looking a little peckish or peaked.
One of those words.
They both apply, actually.
I'm hungry and tired.
We went to Whistler to celebrate my friend Ange's birthday.
That was Saturday night.
Which was very fun.
Sunday night was the Grammys in Vegas, which we flew out to with all of our friends from Whistler.
Then we celebrated Joe's birthday after the Grammys.
We had an after party for him with DJ Turb, one of his besties, DJing.
And it was so much fun.
And then we did it again Monday.
And then we did it again Monday. And then we did it again Tuesday. And we had activities like dune bugging in the desert for all of our guests. We had about
75 people there. So I am fresh off of a flight from Vegas. I just landed. I'm here today and
ready to talk to our very special guest for our final episode, which is our season finale of season two.
We'll be back shortly.
We won't take that long of a break.
But our finale guest is none other than my psychiatrist, Dr. Dan Siegel.
It's very exciting.
It's very exciting to have him on.
And he's going to help us with a couple of sort of trickier questions that we've had.
Because I obviously want to explain to all of my listeners, obviously I can help with many
things. And I think I know a lot about a lot of things. And I also know that I don't know
a lot about some important things. So when there is heavier advice to be given,
where we do need a professional, I obviously try to implement one every few episodes so we can
catch up with the callers who I was not feeling confident enough or you weren't feeling confident enough to help.
By the way, I've got so many compliments on you this weekend.
Oh, my gosh.
And my sister was also saying, I was on the phone with her last night, just how much she, A, loves your voice and B, how well-rounded you are.
Oh, how lovely.
She was like, God, Catherine just knows a little bit about everything.
And I was like, I know she's like a general practitioner. That's so great. I mean, I guess I told her finance is
your specialty. That's where you've really come alive. Oh, my gosh, that would actually make
everyone in my family. My dad is a tax attorney. So that would make him laugh very, very hard. But
oh, that's so great. Yeah, great. Yeah. Yeah. You know, I love to research. I love to fall
down an internet rabbit hole.
Yes.
So it's finally paying off.
Yeah, it really is. Now that you've got this Emmy, Webby Award.
I mean, I slipped and said Emmy.
We can get one of those too.
Yeah, that's next for us.
Great. Excellent. Excellent. Well, should we welcome Dr. Dan onto the show?
I know Dr. Dan, during the course course of this interview will mention several of his books
but do we want to also maybe at the end we can mention all the books because his books are
helpful and I would like to just be on the record and say there a lot of them are parenting books
and I've read three parenting books from him. So you are an expert in parenting. Well I mean it
was more for Bert and Bernice and And we know how that turned out.
So, I mean, I don't know if you can apply parenting books to animals, but that's what I was after.
I mean, I think they can be as sassy as teenagers.
Like, Mimsy is in a very teenager stage right now.
She just plants her feet when she doesn't want to go home on a walk.
Oh, yeah.
Bernice does that all the time.
Bernice won't step on certain materials.
Like, she doesn't like certain surfaces so she stops
and then you have to basically choke
her to pull her over it. She doesn't
like sand. She doesn't like
cement. She doesn't like anything that's dirty
really. She's very spoiled.
Yeah, yeah, exactly. I don't know where she got
that from. My belle.
Must be. It must be.
We'll be right back.
Inside you, two wolves are locked in battle.
One thrives on fear and anger and doubt.
The other, courage, wisdom, and love.
Every decision, every moment feeds one of them.
Which wolf are you feeding? I'm Eric Zimmer, host of The One You Feed. I've been there, homeless, addicted, and lost. I know the power of small
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Ooh, and I am Matt.
And we're the hosts of How To Money. We want to be with you every step of the way
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Yeah, whether you find yourself up to your eyeballs in student loan debt,
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Listen to How to Money on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
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I'm Jason Alexander.
And I'm Peter Tilden.
And together on the Really No Really podcast,
our mission is to get the true answers to life's baffling questions like...
Why they refuse to make the bathroom door go all the way to the floor.
We got the answer.
Will space junk block your cell signal?
The astronaut who almost drowned during a spacewalk gives us the answer.
We talk with the scientist who figured out if your dog truly loves you.
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The forces shaping markets and the economy are often hiding behind a blur of numbers.
So that's why we created The Big Take from Bloomberg Podcasts,
to give you the context you need to make sense of it all.
Every day in just 15 minutes, we dive into one global business story that matters.
You'll hear from Bloomberg journalists like Matt Levine.
A lot of this meme stock stuff is, I think, embarrassing to the SEC.
Amanda Mull, who writes our Business Week buying power column.
Very few companies who go viral are like totally prepared for what that means.
And Zoe Tillman, senior legal reporter.
Courts are not supposed to decide elections.
Courts are not really supposed to play a big role in choosing our elected leaders. It's for the voters to decide.
Follow the Big Take podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen.
So today's guest has a medical degree from Harvard. He's a clinical professor of psychiatry at the UCLA School of Medicine and the founding co-director of the Mindful
Awareness Research Center at UCLA. He is a multiple-time New York Times best-selling author,
a neuropsychiatrist, and interpersonal neurobiologist, Dr. Dan Siegel.
Oh my God, look who it is. Hi. Hi there. How are you? Long time no see-see. I know.
How are you, you?
I'm very well.
This is my co-host, Catherine, who I think you've spoken to.
Hi, Catherine.
Nice to see you.
Likewise.
Likewise.
Dan uses a standing desk, Catherine, so if his motion is giving you motion sickness,
let him know.
Yeah, I can stop if you want.
I like walking, but if you want me to stop, I can stop if you want. I like walking,
but if you want me to stop, I can stop. No, that's fine. I'm fine with it. Although,
Catherine, are you okay with it? I think I'm okay with it. If I do get motion sickness,
I will let you know. I love the idea of getting motion sickness from someone else's motion. What does an interpersonal neurobiologist mean, Dan? You know, interpersonal neurobiology is a phrase for a framework
that combines all different ways of knowing, like the different fields of science or studies of
meditation, what are called contemplative insights with indigenous practices, indigenous wisdom.
And we bring it all together and say, if there's one reality, can everybody join in the
tent and have a conversation that's collaborative so we can see the wisdom from all these different
points of view? Oh, interesting. Is that a new field? Yeah, it's a new framework. I introduced
it in 1999. So it's relatively new compared to some other things. But it's new, especially in
the notion that it's not trying to replace an existing point of view. It's trying to say,
there are so many views from thousands of years ago, or from dozens of years ago,
and if they're all exploring the nature of truth, could we see if they all fit together somehow? There's a common
ground that E.O. Wilson, the writer, calls consilience. So we look for the consilience
or common ground across independent pursuits of knowledge.
Oh, wow. We're really leveling up this episode, Catherine. Buckle in.
So that relates to actually one of the questions that
I want to ask you, but I'll ask that later, but it relates to it. Okay, great. I love it.
I love when you ask me questions. It's so great to see you, I got to say, Chelsea.
Oh, it's always good to see you. Always good to see you. I spoke to you a few months ago
because I'm in a new relationship and about the adjustment to be in a relationship with somebody,
to spend so much time with somebody when I'm so used to being so kind of independent and alone. And I wanted to mention,
because you and I had a conversation once, and I can say this because it's private until I
publicize it. So I'll say it, but we talked about, I remember there was a period of time where I was
telling you that I just, I was like, I just want to go to bed at like eight o'clock every night. You know, I'm not in the mood to
hang out. I just want to be in bed all the time. And I was asking you, do you think I'm depressed?
And I was single at the time. And you said saliently, I think that if someone were in
your life that you were excited about, you wouldn't want to go to bed at seven or eight o'clock.
And it's, I still like to go to bed at seven or eight o'clock. And I still like to go to bed at seven
or eight o'clock. I mean, there are times when I can't, where of course I don't because he's a
night owl and we compromise a lot. But the other night I remember we came home, he was taping two
of his shows at the Forum in LA, his Netflix special. So they were big nights out and we were
out till one in the morning, then we were out till five in the morning. And on the Sunday, we were planning to go to all these
Oscar parties. And I woke up Sunday. I'm like, I'm done. I can't, I can't socialize anymore.
And that night, and you know, Joe wakes up, my boyfriend has more energy than a battery pack.
I mean, it is unbelievable what this guy is willing to do all day long on no sleep. It's
just crazy. I've never seen any human being operate
like this. He's got different DNA. So anyway, that night he was like going somewhere. I wanted to go
to dinner with his family. And I was like, I really just want to go to bed at seven or eight o'clock.
And I remember the conversation you and I had, and I thought, oh, what does this mean that I still
want this? Because I have this kind of element now to my personality where I want to
hunker down, you know, where I want to get in bed and watch TV and just build myself a little nest.
And I know when you do that often or too much, it becomes, it does become a pattern where it
feels like you are depressed. Well, no. So what's the part where you're calling it depression?
Well, I think when I was doing it consistently.
Now I do it on a Sunday night, or I don't do it as frequently.
So it doesn't feel as bad.
Because when you do it consistently, and I think it was also maybe a product of COVID
as well, that I was just like, there's nothing going on.
It's just easier to get stoned and get into bed and whatever. But it was becoming a pattern that I didn't like about
myself. It just didn't feel, I didn't feel alive. I felt like I was slightly depressed and I've
never really dealt with any depression to the level where I had to really like take anything
for it or I don't know. I guess I, I don't know if it's a question or just an observation, but
I don't know. What are your thoughts on that? Yeah, well, you're raising a couple of really important issues.
I mean, one, when you use the word depression, we should realize that there are people in
the world who have really serious ways where they get the experience of maybe going to
bed early or even having a hard time falling asleep.
It can go either way.
Their sleep can be interrupted.
They can get up early or they can sleep really long time. So sleep is a big issue to talk about
with this thing called major depression. But in addition, you know, they have low energy.
They have something called anhedonia, which means and is without. Hedonia is pleasure.
So they don't get pleasure in things
that used to give them pleasure. And also they don't get pleasure in anticipating doing something
fun. So they kind of lose their joie de vivre, their joy of living. It kind of goes away.
They start thinking kind of really down thoughts like, I'm no good, I'm guilty of things that I'm not even
guilty of, you know, I'm a horrible person and there's no future for me, there's no hope. And
then I start feeling helpless. So for any of us who've worked on a suicide prevention service,
when someone with serious depression calls you, you can feel it in the tone of their voice.
It's kind of like flat and there's a huge despair there that
makes suicide a serious risk. So if anyone's hearing us and you're experiencing those,
please reach out for help to a mental health professional. If suicide is something you're
thinking about, you know, please reach out to a suicide prevention service because the great news
about depression is that it's treatable. And even though you may feel hopeless, there's hope
right around the corner. And part of it actually is the connection we talked about. So when I said
to you, I think if you had a connection with someone that mattered to you in your life,
it wasn't that I thought you were depressed, but some people do get depressed because
they have no connection. And it's really loneliness, deep, deep loneliness.
And our community, our larger society now doesn't really support people having connections with each
other. You know, the current US Surgeon General wrote a beautiful book called Together about this
sad epidemic we have, where we have so much material material wealth but we don't have much relational wealth people are so isolated from each other so you know that's that's
a separate sort of thing so being lonely can make you feel horrible and
despairing but it might not be called major depression but it still feels
terrible and we need to help people with that and then there's you know just
what's called dysphoria which is where you just feel yucky about your life. Dys is bad for you, it's
how you feel. And I'm dysphoric, you know, and I think anyone who reads the news can get dysphoric
because we're in a rough place in the world now. So our body is going to respond emotionally and
emotion, you know, is basically three things woven together.
It's relationships, the body's response, and meaning. Those three things are really what
emotion is. So if someone says, oh, my emotion feels horrible, I feel down, what's going on
with the world? Yeah, let's name it so we can frame it like in a picture frame and say, that's
what it is. Let's try to participate
in social activism. Let's try to do something to really feel empowered to actually have what's
called agency, or I can be an agent of action to do something. So a lot of people these days are
feeling hopeless and they can call it depressed, but that gets people mixed up with a serious psychiatric condition rather than
the world is in a really tough spot, so we can feel hopeless. Let's talk to each other about it,
because in working collectively, we can actually move through that to what Joanna Macy, a beautiful
writer, calls active hope. So this is a way you can take that word depression and see it as either
a serious disorder that sometimes these medications or other treatments or a more moderate condition where psychotherapy can be helpful or a way we're using that word to describe loneliness and then having a change in your participation in life. People in AA, for example, they get instant community through
Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, and their feeling of loneliness and despair can dissolve away because
they go to a regular meeting. A relative of mine is a recovering alcoholic, and he goes to meetings
seven days a week. He's like the most un-lonely person you're going to find because he's got a
whole community every day that he's actively a part of very meaningful conversations yeah i like dysphoric that's a good way to describe it because i think
for many of us especially with the events of the last few years it's it's like a low level
of dysphoria you know it's and it can feel it feels maybe like depression because it's not a
common feeling i i know for me i've never felt that kind of listlessness
where you're just like, it's ennui.
You're just like, I can't get it up for anything.
I'm not that excited about anything that's happening.
And I definitely did remove reading the news
from my repertoire after a while
because I just, I read too many.
It was too obvious what it does to your brain.
And obviously now with the events,
the most recent events in Ukraine and Russia invading Ukraine,
like that is something that as a human being,
it's our responsibility, I believe,
to be up to speed and to understand
and to be actively involved in doing whatever it is
that you may be able to do, you know,
whether that's donating money or volunteering in some way
or just being mindful of what's happening in the world
and meditating on it
every day, whatever like small contribution you think is fine for you or big contribution. But
the political aspect, it's just too sickening. So I realized that that was just contributing to my
kind of darkness for a long time and had to remove that. And it's kind of like, it's too bad, but it's an addiction.
It's just like anything else. It's just like being addicted to TikTok or Instagram or
mindlessly scrolling through your phone on social media. That is also an addiction,
you know? And I don't like the way that makes me feel either. And I'm very mindful of how
perusing, like, you know, if I'm reading a book
for two hours, I come away with a much different feeling, a much greater self-assuredness and
self-esteem than I do when I'm wasting my time reading gossip or reading, you know, the internet.
Like I know now what the components are that trigger me or take me to kind of a low energy vibrational place. Exactly. Well, you know, you're describing an awareness of how you're responding,
your body's responding, your emotions are responding. And then in that awareness,
you've beautifully created a space. So you can say, wow, I'm kind of addicted to these social media things. And I notice I feel really bad.
Wow. When I take the time to reflect on that, I can name it. Oh, I feel bad when I do the social
media. I can frame it and say, okay, what do I want to do about it? I'm not going to do it as
much. That's an empowered mind you're talking about that you have. And it's beautiful to hear
you describe it. And a lot
of people, and if you've seen the social dilemma documentary, you know, the people who designed
social media studied addiction and they intentionally create stuff on your screens
to capture eyeballs, to capture your time, focusing your attention on the thing, whatever it is. That wasn't by accident.
It was by intent. Yeah. But what's so astonishing is that everybody is aware of that and has been
made aware of that, yet we still allow ourselves to operate like that. People are like, I know,
it's crazy. It's like, well, wait, you're just a cog in a wheel if you're just allowing people
to manipulate your brain. Right. Well, and part of the reason why that addiction,
what's called intermittent reinforcement, if you keep on giving positive reinforcement over and
over again, after a while, it isn't so addicting, but intermittent reinforcement where I give you
a reward, then three next times I don't,
then I give you one, then eight times next I don't, then the ninth time you get a reward.
You don't know when it's going to happen. So it really pulls you in. That's number one.
The other thing, which is the other side of it, is that our brains are incredibly social.
So there's all sorts of studies I could tell you about, but the summary of all of them basically is
we are social creatures. That's no surprise. You didn't need to do brain studies to know that.
But when you look at the brain areas involved in feeling accepted, and I can tell you one study
that is so cool, when you're accepted, it activates this dopamine release. It's very rewarding. That's
what the dopamine is for. That was good.
Let me do it again.
Let me do it again.
Let me do it again.
But then when you sense that you're not accepted,
like you're not getting as many hits on your social media
or whatever like that,
the part of the brain,
it's called the dorsal anterior cingulate,
the part of the brain that registers social rejection,
I call it feeling of being inadequate,
like I'm not fitting in with the social group. It's exactly the same part of the brain that registers social rejection, I call it feeling of being inadequate, like I'm not fitting in with the social group.
It's exactly the same part of the brain as if someone's stabbing you with a knife.
It hurts.
Literally, in the brain, it's the same part of the brain.
Social rejection, physical pain, same part of the brain.
Now, when you take that, you go, wow, okay, so you're always trying to see how can I fit in?
How do I compare?
How do I fit in?
How do I compare? Do I belong? Do I not belong? You know, so you're always trying to see how can I fit in? How do I compare? How do I fit in? How do I compare?
Do I belong?
Do I not belong?
You know, so you're trying not to feel the pain.
You're trying to find membership in a modern society, as we talked about earlier, where we're so alone.
So you combine those two things,
the intermittent reinforcement,
all the other ways they know about addiction
with the social brain,
and it is a moneymaker
because then you're going to get so much time. Think about it. 15 years ago, we didn't have
these things. And now everyone's got them. Yeah, I know. People are like, oh, we're going to keep
our kids off social media. We're going to keep them off of iPads. We're not going to get any
of that until they're 10, 12, 15. I have a friend who waited for her kids to get a phone until I think they were 14. And it's like, what does that do? Because once you get it, once you're
in, you're in, right? I mean, I even see it in my two kids. You know, one was, he's old enough,
he's 32, to not have had that part of his adolescence. The other is 28, and she did.
And you can even see in their different
groups of friends, you know, they deal with social media in different ways, the younger one more.
I'll tell you a sad thing. I was having lunch with Caroline, my wife. We were having a nice
lunch in New York. It was a great restaurant and everything. Then these people come sit next to us
with this one-year-old kid, and it was really cute, and they were from another country. And it was her
birthday, so it was a birthday party. So put out this present just one sitting in the high chair
they handed her a smartphone and for the rest of the so-called birthday party lunch
every one of them is on their separate device and caroline and i are going oh my god so i took out
my phone to take a picture because
I wanted to put it up on social media. She goes, don't do that. You know, which was right. I
shouldn't expose them. Although I did get a picture where you couldn't see identity, but anyway.
Dan, you really should know better than that, first of all.
I know, I know. But I wanted to share on social media how scary social media can be,
because this kid now had won.
You should have gone up to them and said, Hey, yeah,
these are my credentials. And I need to let, yeah. And said, listen,
I am a doctor that specializes in this. I have a degree from Harvard.
I'm a neuropsychiatrist.
Do you understand the damage you are doing to your child's brain?
And your own brain.
I'm going to memorize what you're saying next time I'm going to do that.
Yeah. Come on. I mean, think about the impact that would have had. Yeah, maybe it's
unwelcome, but I mean, you're doing them a favor, at least giving them the information that they
may not be privy to. Well, it's so interesting, Chelsea, because there are times when I wonder
about doing that, offering unrequested suggestions. Now, my kids are now adults, so that's a whole
parenting adult children thing where you actually intentionally don't do it. But as a professional
and a member of our human family, when do I offer stuff like that? So it's a little tricky. I've
tried it a few times and it often does not go off well. So what I do is I keep a lot of my extra parenting books in the car and then I just like hand them out for free, like, not always, but sometimes you can get somebody who really hears you and you're doing them a service or a favor.
You know, I mean, that is sad.
Yeah.
But, you know, when you and I first met, I really was impressed with how you like to learn new stuff.
What in you really empowers you to have such a focus on lifelong learning?
Because when you came to me, you weren't like an
adolescent coming to me for therapy. You know, I'm a child, adolescent and adult therapist,
and adolescent can struggle with things. You know, you were a full on adult, accomplished a lot,
but you came to learn more, you know, and it's such a beautiful thing that I think Life Will
Be the Death of Me, your book, illustrates. But what is it that you can teach all of us about your lifelong learning nature?
Well, I mean, thank you.
I think that's a huge compliment.
I mean, I don't know that it's really, I think I just am very curious, you know?
Like, I have a curiosity that I've always had, which has gotten me into lots of trouble
as a child, like asking impertinent questions, but being really curious about people's lives. And I love interpersonal dynamics. Like I
just love, like when I meet a family, like if I'm on vacation and I get to meet brothers and sisters
together with their parents and watching the dynamics and like how they function, I just will
never get tired of that. And because I'm from such a big family
and we have so many additional family members because people get married and hook up and have
boyfriends and girlfriends and children, it just gets more and more complex. And so for me,
it was about becoming a better, more self-aware, fuller person. But curiosity, I think, you know,
I could listen to you talk about the brain and science for
hours because I find that fascinating too. You know, I mean, there are things I don't find
fascinating like Bitcoin, you know, that is when I talk about that, it's like, okay, I don't have,
I mean, I had someone explain an NFT to me finally, where I was able to get understand
from the beginning to the end. And I was like,
oh my God, I want to pay you for that explanation because I now understand what an NFT is.
Okay. Well, I'd have you tell me that, but we won't.
We'll save that for another, we'll save that for a private conversation.
Yes, yes.
But thank you. I mean, I don't know. I really don't know how to answer that. But I do think
that when you ask questions, you're signing up for just like more knowledge, right? And especially
if you have the luxury of going to someone like you, you have so much experience. It's like,
it's a win-win situation. Yes, it's going to be painful at times when you're doing inner work,
of course, because you have to face things about yourself that are not pleasant and that are humiliating or embarrassing or however you want to frame that. But bravery gets you to a better
place in life, I think, you know, being brave about finding out about yourself.
I think your journey in therapy, it isn't everyone's experience that they're so
basically open to change. And I remember there was a moment, and you say this
in the book so I can share it, you got very emotional about something. And I think there was
an awareness that you felt you shouldn't be emotional, you shouldn't be crying,
you shouldn't have that, right? One is lifelong learning, but the other is openness to change.
Well, yes, I would encourage everyone to always be curious to learn. I mean, learning
is knowledge and knowledge is power. And I want to be powerful. Okay, so should we go ahead and
take some callers? I think that's a great idea. And I'm going to make us take a quick break before
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We had a caller, right, Catherine, that's going to call back in because
it's a man who's transitioned from being a woman and he has a three-year-old daughter
with his wife. And he was asking when the appropriate time is to explain all of
those things to her. And I thought, we have Dan coming up. I think you'd be better suited to
answer that question instead of me. So I think we were able to get Alex on the phone today,
right, Catherine? Yes. His three-year-old daughter, Sutton, he has a bottom surgery
coming up in the next year and a half. And so he's wondering how to address those things with Sutton. So hi, Alex. Hello. Hi, Alex. Hey, Alex. Nice to meet you.
Nice to meet you. Thank you for having me. Yeah. Well, when you were on last time, I was like,
oh, you know what? We had a great conversation, but I thought we have my doctor coming on next and he would be
better suited since he specializes in adolescent brain development and childhood, all of this
stuff. So yeah, he's here. So we thought maybe you could give him a summary of your situation
so he could weigh in. For sure. Yeah, absolutely. Thank you. So the situation really is, is I have a three-year-old
and I am on the cusp of going through the consultation process to have my next major
surgery as being a transgender. And I really am going to be embarking upon a long journey of about
three to four surgeries to have everything happen. And it usually takes about a year, year and a half and long recovery times. And I wanted to do this early in Sutton's development
so that it wasn't kind of a core memory for her, but I'm just kind of teetering on how much to be,
to tell a three-year-old, a four-year-old about what type of surgery I'm having, the impact that
it's going to have to her life, as well as what healing time is, because it's not like I'm sick or going through anything that's something that
she should be worried about. More so, this is a great part of my journey, but it's going to be
impactful for her. So I just want to make sure that I'm expressing both sides of it and the
reality of it, but also in a way that she's going to understand what's happening to daddy.
Well, she's so lucky to have you as a parent, Alex, because your intuition of tuning in and getting a feeling of transparency that a family without secrets is a family that has, you could
call it a coherent narrative, that is a narrative about whatever's going on,
even if it's about something that wasn't expected, which is usually where stories come from,
you know, is really important. And what is your heart and your gut? Literally, we have three
brains. You have a brain in your head, you have a brain in your heart, you have a brain in your gut.
And what is your heart brain and your gut brain? What are they
telling your head brain that has the words to speak? What are they signaling to you?
So I suppose if I was to refer to my heart, I would say that I want to make sure that she feels
comforted in those times when I'm healing and I can't be around her as much, can't play with her
as much or engage with her as she expects. And then I guess my gut is kind of telling me to be
a little bit more worried about kind of what the impact is going to have and what I guess the
optics are a big thing. Optics of her going back to daycare or talking about what our family looks
like at that time or her having to do everything with mom because I won't be able to get out of
the house as well for that amount of time. So yeah, I just want her to feel like I'm still there
just as I am every single day now with being as able as I am.
That's fantastic. And these two brains, when they send their wisdom
up to your head brain, which has kind of logic and thinking about things in that way,
what does your head brain say about the whole developmental timing of when to speak with her?
I suppose my, my head brain is kind of, kind of being more logical. Hopefully it's, it's,
it's on my side, but being more logical in the way that telling me that it's, it's,
it's going to be okay. Like this is only going to be a blip and what our family development
looks like. And I hope that what comes out of it is that she sees that my happiness continues to grow
on my personal journey and that our family just becomes more kind of united that when
she looks back on the time, yes, it was trying in the grand scheme of how we had to schedule
things.
And I wasn't there for, you know, going and running outside as much, but after the healing
life, we'll go back to quote unquote normal. And I will just have more
happiness and more understanding of how I walk in the world. So that hopefully just makes it easier
for her and for our family to progress as a unit. That's so beautiful. Well, I mean, Alex, for me,
you've kind of answered the question in the deepest way of what feels right to you personally,
what feels right to you for your daughter. And then, you know, when you're turning to Chelsea
and you're turning to me, you know, as a person who writes about development, here's just added
on top of your wisdom, I would just add the following things. The way you're, I think,
approaching the notion of a family story,
the family narrative, and I don't say story like a pretend story. I mean, we are narrative creatures.
We tell the story of who we are. And some families never do that. And there are all sorts of secrets
and all sorts of things that are never talked about, you know, and then that shuts things down.
I mean, Chelsea, we could talk about
that about when your brother died that you've written about so powerfully in your narrative
of letting that come out and be the story. So Alex, for you and for your whole family,
everything can be our teacher. You know, life happens, stuff that's challenging happens. And if we see things that are not expected as challenges rather than as threats, then we bring as a parent a very different attitude.
Like saying, we didn't expect this to happen.
Now, how you then make that health-promoting, growth-promoting stress or distress is what I think your beautiful question
is doing. You're saying this is going to be stressful. That's fine. Life is that's meaningful
and stressful. How do we allow this to turn into a positive growth promoting challenging experience
rather than a threat? And the answer is what you've already told us. You're ready to be fully present with your daughter. You're being fully present with yourself. And so, you know, you could turn to the people who are involved in the surgery and the centers you're working with and ask them this question too, which I would say is this, is every child's a little different in terms of
their temperament, and every child's a little different in terms of their attachment to
different caregivers. But the commonality across temperament and attachment is to tell a story
that makes sense of things. So in a book I wrote called Parenting from the Inside Out,
it sort of teaches you how to bring those stories.
Or I wrote that with Mary Hartzell.
A book I wrote with Tina Payne Bryson
is called The Power of Showing Up.
Those two books would be great ones
for you to actually read before you tell her the story
because they show that whatever the age,
people ask this about kids who are adopted.
When should I tell my adopted kid?
Whenever you bring it, two, three, four, she's old enough now to be able to hear a story. As you know,
don't want to hear it again and again and again and again. And so you have to be ready to like
be repeating yourself, but that's fine. And when she sees the love in your heart,
when she feels that your gut is really behind this and your
head is now bringing the words to make a story make sense.
She's ready at three, unless there's some other issue that says, let's hold it off.
But if the surgery is happening soon, then telling the story, even having toys that allow,
you know, enact the story.
And here's what I would say, this is not just about
the surgery, but about the general idea of transitioning, is people, they don't understand
that gender identity is different than assigned sex, whether you have a penis or vagina. When I
used to be in pediatrics and we'd go to the delivery room to help with the baby, you'd see the outer manifestation and say, boy or girl.
But gender identity is actually along an entire continuum
because the brain of mammals can be hugely female,
which it starts out as in all of us,
but then the way the testosterone that's secreted by the testicles
crosses the blood-brain
barrier and to various degrees, masculinizes that brain to be a teeny bit masculine, but mostly
feminine or middle way, both ways, or all the way masculine, your gender identity is based on that.
And it's not yes or no. It's not like a switch on or off, boy or girl. So just explaining it that way, even like a switch, you say what we look like for most
of us, 98% of us outwardly when we're born is like a switch.
It's on or off.
It's boy or girl.
But actually, gender identity is not like that.
It's more like a thermostat where you have all these degrees.
And you can't tell a person's gender identity from the outside.
And I had one gender identity
and my assigned sex was something else. So I'm in the good fortune of making sense of that.
And so I'm going to make my outside match my inside. That's the story, right? So she at three,
she's going to get that. And when I work with kids who are like four or five who are assigned
gender is one thing, but gender identity is the other, I talk to them about that.
And the parents say, oh, but this is going to be challenging.
Oh, yeah, but this is the way it is.
And this person could be incredibly healthy and happy if you as their parents let them see this is just what happened.
And life is about always exploring and learning and growing.
And this is a beautiful thing.
And it works out fine.
Whereas, as you know, if people say, no, no, no, you can't do that.
That's when it's a problem.
So is that part of what you've learned in your journey?
Absolutely.
And making sure that having a daughter that's kind of going through this journey as a part
of my journey, I feel it's my responsibility as her parent to make sure that the environments that she is in, the people
have that positive outlook. And that's what I'm trying to do as well, which is why it's just
nerve wracking, you know, raising a kid in this day and age. And I'm from, we're in a small town
in West Michigan. So it's a little bit difficult,
but I think exactly like you said, creating that narrative for my family that makes a positive
space, no matter what challenges come about is, is a great way to put it because no one writes
that story or that narrative, but, but us. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. You know, you might enjoy also
giving you these references, but there's a book called Brainstorm I wrote for adolescents, which talks about how parents can approach when a child themselves is having a different. expectation a kid comes out the other way, how that works out. This would be the flip side where you're going to come as the parent to teach your child that what she may be learning in school
or on television is one extreme and that is actually more subtle. And so she has the incredible
fortune of having you as a parent who will guide her through a deeper notion of the way things
actually are, which is a beautiful gift you're
going to give her. Thank you. I appreciate that. And I appreciate your advice. And thank you for
having me so that I could have that conversation and get that. I appreciate it. Well, I hope we'll
be able to check in with you and see how it all goes. Yes, thank you. I love that. Bye, Alex.
Bye. Thank you so much. Bye. Oh, that was perfect. Awesome. I love it.
Yeah.
Really connecting the dots here.
Oh, good.
And I loved what you said, too, about gender being so separate from the actual physical sex.
It actually goes with another question that someone wrote in.
But this one really directly relates to what you were saying. So this question is from Monica, whose child Kira has told Monica that they'd like to go by they them pronouns.
So Monica says, Dear Chelsea, love the podcast.
We have a 15 year old daughter who came out to us as non-binary a few months ago.
She tells us that all of her friends refer to her as they slash them.
A couple of years ago, she told us she was bisexual.
I laughed and told her that it was a trend.
I didn't handle that well, obviously, trying to do this one better.
We live in Boulder, Colorado, in a very liberal setting where it's hard to tell if this is a trendy choice or an actual feeling that she's going with.
Several of her friends are either bisexual, non-binary, or trans. We love that this generation can explore their sexuality
unlike we were able to do growing up. The hard part is the labels. I feel like at this point
in her life, she doesn't have to label her sexuality. Am I wrong? My husband and I don't
feel comfortable referring to her as they slash them. We're both very open and liberal.
We believe that people should love whomever they want to love to find happiness.
For some reason, we're having a hard time with this one.
We support her in every single way, and whoever she wants to love, we completely support.
She's single at the moment.
The issue is the pronouns.
We've talked to her about this and have told her that we support her, but we don't feel comfortable switching pronouns at this point.
She says she understands.
Are my husband and I complete assholes?
Thanks for your time, Monica.
Well, thank you, Catherine, for sharing Monica's question.
There's so much to say about her reflections.
Yes. The first broadest statement to make is the more you know, the less you see.
And what that means is the way the brain is constructed, it kind of has a way of learning,
learning, learning, learning, learning. And then to speed things up, it then makes categories,
which have concepts then that emerge from them and words like boy or girl.
So by the time you're, you know, very young, you figured out, okay, I'm a boy, I'm a girl,
you know, that one's a boy, that one's a girl, you know, those are categories, right? And they
kind of make sense from anatomy. But as we pointed out, your assigned sex, which is what your external anatomy is, is actually not always correlated
with the feeling inside of who you are or the feeling of who you're sexually aroused by
that often comes up. Initially, you can feel it when you're four or five, then it kind of goes
quiet for a little while, but then it gets really active around 11, 12, 13 when adolescence hits. So, you know, sexual orientation is the phrase we use for who you're sexually attracted to.
And so it can be for people of your same assigned sex, and you call that one thing,
or a different assigned sex, and we call that something else. And so being open to your sexual
orientation, who you're attracted to, that's one thing.
So when you use a word like bisexual, that's different than the they-them story.
So we should just be really clear about that.
So the they-them is about gender identity.
What I like to do, if Monica were here, I'd ask her, but I'll ask you, Catherine, and you, Chelsea, about this. You know, people have asked me to put my gender identity in my little box at the bottom of a Zoom call or any kind of platform I'm on. And I thought about
it and I thought, you know, I actually don't feel like particularly a he. I don't feel like a she.
I don't feel like a they. Actually, I barely feel like a Dan. I know that's kind of an illusion too. So I've
been putting ABCD, which is like an abbreviation for a body called Dan, you know, because even
that's an illusion, you know, we're all kind of manifestations of the same essence popping up in
a body for about a hundred years. So. A hundred? Jesus, Dan. I mean, come on. I'm being optimistic.
Yeah. Well, that's a long time. I know, but I can take it. OK, fine. So anyway, let's just put it that way. You know, so I say that because the world needs us to broaden our identity from just the bodies we're in and realize in terms of racial justice, social justice issues and
racism, you know, we're part of one human family. And also we're part of the family of all living
beings in terms of what we're destroying, biodiversity and the climate. So yeah, they say,
say whether he or she or they, and I go, well, actually, I want to say none of the above,
which is a lot to write. And then it gets people angry. So when I don't put it on my little name tag, it's not because I'm being dismissive of it.
I actually, I don't want to be put in a bind. So I don't know, how do the two of you feel when
people ask you to do that? Because it's a personal, very personal thing.
Katherine, you identify, right? You label that,
I know, on your emails and everything. Yeah, I do. I do it really as a support for people who
may not use traditional pronouns. And it was tricky for me in the beginning. I have a few
friends who are non-binary and it was tricky in the beginning. And now, just after practicing, it sort of suddenly feels like
the most natural thing in the world. Like I said to my husband today, we're going to our friend
Ash's birthday and it's at seven o'clock and they want us to be there. And it just suddenly feels
like the most natural thing in the world to use those pronouns for someone else. It takes a little bit of practice, but you can come around.
Yeah. And more importantly, it's important to respect people's decisions about themselves,
whether it's a fad or a trend. That's not your decision either. Even though you're a parent,
you don't get to decide if it's a fad or a trend, but respecting your child's
decision and respecting their choices goes a long way into the future of your relationship with your
child. When you give them agency and you give them license to be themselves, then it's not going to
be a problem if in five years she's like he or she or they decides that they want to be referred to
as a girl again or that they're not, they don't feel
non-binary or any of it. But I think you are doing your child a disservice when you're not respecting
something that is not an easy thing for them to say. It's not easy for that. You have to think
about that, you know, and you can say you're supportive, but that you're not, you don't feel
comfortable calling them they is actually not really being supportive.
Yeah. And the other thing too is it's not a huge thing to give away. It's not changing who your child is fundamentally. It's not a wild leap to say, you know what, I'm just going to go with
this. I'm going to say they, them. I might slip up, but I'm going to try my best and, you know, supporting your child
in whatever way you can.
And like Chelsea said, these things can pass or maybe they won't.
And you're allowing your child to discover who they are by supporting who they are right
now, because that is always going to change.
Whether their pronouns change or not, they're going to continue to change.
Yeah, I concur with what you're both saying. And I think it becomes challenging when parents get
really upset when some schools, like here in Los Angeles, they'll have a whole day of discussing
gender identity and that you have choices of names you used and you should look inward,
which I think is actually fantastic. And some parents get all
agitated about it because they think it is making a child be confused. But it's actually, I think,
just informing a child and freeing a child like Monica's daughter is, or I don't know if you'd
use the word daughter here, Monica's child, let's say it that way. So we have a moment where as a parent,
you can take a deep breath and say, if your child comes to you to empower them to explore the actual
biological reality that gender identity is independent of assigned sex at birth. People,
I remember when I was a kid where that wasn't a part of our discussion. They suffered so
much. And when schools introduced this or this podcast or all the ways we can just make it a
part of our conversation, it is a biological fact that gender identity develops in its own way
that can be independent in an extreme or subtly or or or align with your assigned
sex so to to name it as a something that's very real in our lives i think is going to really help
with everyone even if your gender identity matches your assigned sex you're going to understand that
there are other people where that's not the case. And instead of feeling uncomfortable like Monica feels,
which, you know, we feel uncomfortable
when things don't match our expectations.
So I hope listening to this conversation
will help Monica and her child's father
to feel we're learning something too.
And to be lifelong learners
is a really important stance to take.
Inside you, two wolves are locked in battle.
One thrives on fear and anger and doubt.
The other, courage, wisdom, and love.
Every decision, every moment feeds one of them.
Which wolf are you feeding?
I'm Eric Zimmer, host of The One You Feed.
I've been there, homeless, addicted, and lost.
I know the power of small choices to turn your life around.
On this podcast, I sit down with thinkers, leaders, and survivors to uncover what it takes
to feed the good wolf.
This podcast saved me.
It's like having a guide for the hardest parts of life.
The wolves are hungry.
What will you feed them?
Listen to The One You Feed on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
2025 is bound to be a fascinating year. It's going to be filled with money challenges
and opportunities. I'm Joel. Oh, and I am Matt. And we're the hosts of How To Money.
We want to be with you every step of the way in your financial journey this year,
offering the information and insights you need to thrive financially. Yeah, whether you find yourself up to your eyeballs in student loan debt,
or you've got a sky-high credit card balance because you went a little overboard with the
holiday spending, or maybe you're looking to optimize your retirement accounts so you can
retire early, well, How to Money will help you to change your relationship with money
so you can stress less and grow your net worth.
That's right.
How to Money comes out three times a week, Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays,
for money advice without the judgment and jargon.
Listen to How to Money on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Jason Alexander.
And I'm Peter Tilden.
And together on the Really Know Really podcast,
our mission is to get the true answers to life's baffling
questions like why they refuse
to make the bathroom door go all
the way to the floor. We got the answer.
Will space junk block your cell signal? The astronaut
who almost drowned during a spacewalk gives us
the answer. We talk with the scientist
who figured out if your dog truly loves you
and the one bringing back the woolly
mammoth. Plus,
does Tom Cruise really do his own stunts?
His stuntman reveals the answer.
And you never know who's going to drop by.
Mr. Bryan Cranston is with us today.
How are you, too?
Hello, my friend.
Wayne Knight about Jurassic Park.
Wayne Knight, welcome to Really No Really, sir.
Bless you all.
Hello, Newman.
And you never know when Howie Mandel might just stop by to talk about judging.
Really? That's the opening?
Really No Really. Yeah, really.
No really.
Go to reallynoreally.com.
And register to win $500, a guest spot on our podcast, or a limited edition signed Jason bobblehead.
It's called Really, No Really, and you can find it on the iHeartRadio app, on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The forces shaping markets and the economy are often hiding behind a blur of numbers.
So that's why we created The Big Take from Bloomberg Podcasts,
to give you the context you need to make sense of it all.
Every day in just 15 minutes, we dive into one global business story that matters.
You'll hear from Bloomberg journalists like Matt Levine.
A lot of this meme stock stuff is, I think, embarrassing to the SEC.
Very few companies who go viral are, like, totally prepared for what that means.
Courts are not supposed to decide elections.
Courts are not really supposed to play a big role in choosing our elected leaders.
It's for the voters to decide.
Follow the Big Take podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen.
Our last caller today is Katie.
Katie says, Dear Chelsea,
The last nearly two years of my life have been the most intense,
devastating, and transformational time of my entire 21 years. In September of 2020,
my older brother and only sibling died extremely suddenly from a brain aneurysm at 22 years old.
Needless to say, this loss has been extremely difficult to navigate,
and my entire outlook on life has completely changed. I know you were very young when you lost your brother, and I feel as though
we're similar in how that type of loss affected us. After the first few months of complete shock
and fear that I would lose my parents to heartbreak over the death of their son,
I started to get really angry at the world, which was completely unlike my old self.
I have done a lot of therapy to overcome
some of that anger, but I still struggle daily to comprehend how my smart, wonderful, and seemingly
perfectly healthy brother is gone and never coming back. I also find meeting new people to be
emotionally draining as sometimes the, do you have siblings question comes up and without fail,
this always makes me spiral. I feel nervous opening up about
my brother because I feel like people in their early 20s are not equipped to talk about loss
and death. It's almost taboo in some ways. What has helped you with accepting and understanding
such severe and sudden loss at such a young age? And how do I combat how his death has caused me to struggle with coping in other areas of my life? Katie. Hi, Katie. Hi. Hi, Katie. It's your lucky day because my psychiatrist, Dan,
is here with us as our guest today. Oh, wow. Who helps guide me through my grief and my new reality,
which I had a lot of delayed grief. So it's good that you're talking about it not so
long after it's happening and that you're facing these issues because it is a big, big, unexpected
obstacle that has happened to you, you know, and it's not something that you're not going to get
through, but it's so difficult and only other people who have lost a sibling can really relate
or understand. So Dan, do you want to take the lead on this? And I'll chime in.
Sure. First of all, Katie, thank you so much for reaching out to Chelsea to really share
your experience and share your question. I'll ask you, when you were actually putting this
question together and sending it off, what were you feeling inside of you that allowed you to feel like you could articulate
and in a sense, go public with it? What was going on inside of you?
It was honestly Chelsea, because I watched Evolution with my mom. And I don't think either
of us had ever really seen somebody talk about death, like so raw and just so open like that.
And I don't know, it just like really spoke
to me and we didn't say a word the entire time. All we did was cry and laugh. And yeah, I don't
know. I just felt so kind of like, I felt empowered by it. And I was like, you know what? I'd love to
talk to her because there was a lot of parallels between what you were saying and what I've
definitely been feeling. And so, yeah, I definitely felt like there was like a bit of a connection there.
And like you guys said, like not a lot of people go through what I've gone through
and Chelsea has.
So yeah, definitely that was empowering for me.
When you saw that someone could really look at the death of a sibling,
in this case, you both share the loss of your brothers.
Was there something in what Chelsea shared in Evolution that especially spoke to you?
Yeah, absolutely.
I think the main thing was the anger because I was never an angry person.
I was always really calm, quite put together and everything.
And then I started to have these feelings of anger when the numbness started to go away.
And it just was so unlike me.
And I was just so kind of mad at the world like that it took him because he was just such a
wonderful, kind human. And he truly just like, he was just such a light in this world. And it just
felt so wrong. And so the anger that she had and how that leaks into other areas of your life,
I think that's kind of where I drew
like a lot. Like I just, I just totally connected to that because it was like, whoa, this is
affecting how I see every area of my life, not just death and loss. It was, you know, in school
with friends, everything. Then bitterness too, when people talked about like their siblings and
it was like, I'm self-aware enough to know, like, it's not right right I don't want to be bitter about other people because they should get to express their love
for their siblings that are alive and and that makes me happy I'm still happy for them but I
couldn't help but still feel bitter you know and angry so definitely those feelings of anger that
Chelsea talked about I definitely connected to that a lot that's what made me start to realize
whoa like I gotta I have to seek out like therapy and stuff like that because I tried to do it myself for, I think
the first eight months and yeah, it just wasn't working. And I could just see down the line,
it would just start to get worse. I want to just jump in and just say,
you have such a huge opportunity for growth right now for you to be facing this so soon after it
happened means like you have such a
bigger advantage like I didn't face this I went 30 years without being able to deal with my emotions
you know so you're so young and you're vibrant and you're going to be able to get through this
and I just want to say something that's so important for you to hear it's like you when
you think of how amazing your brother was and what a light he was in this world, he would hate to see you in
pain. He would hate to see you feeling bitter. He would not want that. So in honor of him,
you've got to do the work to get yourself out of that anger and bitterness because you want to be
able to celebrate a life that he had and live your life with him in it, in honor of him and with him
because he's still with you. Just because he's gone doesn't mean he's gone from you. He's still within you and your parents.
And that is a beautiful thing. And that is the light that you should think about getting to
spread when you move forward in your life. Yeah, absolutely. And he truly would be so
unhappy. He would be so upset if he saw like this affect us long-term. Cause again, like just such
a selfless human being. And he just would not, he would not, he'd be angry with us, to be honest.
If we let it get us down for a really long time, he would not be happy with us for sure.
It's such a beautiful invitation, Katie, that you're inviting us to really look at this question,
what helped? And Chelsea, you're bringing up this notion of what the sibling, what the brother would
actually want for you.
The experience of grief, which is the word we use for when someone we love that's really
important in our life dies or goes away and we can't reach them, that loss is huge. So grief goes through stages and it really
invites you to bring into awareness all the different feelings you're having. And as Chelsea
points out, you are doing that, Katie, and your notion of self-awareness is really important.
And there are things you can do to expand that. With Chelsea, we would do meditation
in particular, this thing called the Wheel of Awareness. You can get this book called Aware
or Becoming Aware is the workbook where you will learn to actually enrich that ability to be aware.
And that can help the grief process to just let the anger there be in awareness. You don't have
to do anything with it. It can just just teach you something the other emotions that are really basic when something like
this happens are sadness and fear so a loss like this at a young age that can
rock your world because you don't expect someone young to die you expect someone
older way older to die yeah so when something unexpected like that happens
it can lead to fear it can lead to sadness and it can lead to anger where the fear is like oh my god
things aren't safe nothing i can't rely on anything the sadness is there was a connection
that's ripped from me and i have such a longing to be with my brother but it's just it's not there
when in fact it's just like Chelsea said,
he's inside you, but him being alive in his body, now that's changed. So you want to deal with that
feeling. You can't just call him up and talk to his actual self. You can deal with the inner self
of your brother. And the anger is about something is wrong that needs to be righted, right? So anger is like this drive
to correct, you know, sadness is like a drive to connect. And in many ways, fear is a drive to
protect, right? Those are the three in the brain, they're deep, deep in the brain. So they're really,
really foundational, as you're pointing out, the anger then starts spreading over all these things. So the idea of finding a practice, whether it's in therapy or doing like a meditation,
that gives you time to just be with your emotions. And then the grief process, once you give yourself
that respect to just feel what you feel, talk about it, write in a journal about it do meditative reflect reflection on it then it will
have its natural course don't worry about the timing but do give respect to all the emotions
are there and they will then take their natural path and in many ways grief as it goes forward
becomes meaning making that is you say i didn't plan for my brother to die,
but my brother would want me to actually make sense
of how this has impacted me.
And as Chelsea has done with her wonderful work now,
to take a loss that really,
as you've shared with the world, Chelsea,
your way of dealing with that pain was to shut it off the emotions, but now to share with the world, you don't know, Katie, how
the sadness and really profound loss of your brother dying unexpectedly like this,
it was no one's fault, aneurysms happen. All the ways that you can bring the
emotional learning from this will be a meaning that you can make. And there's a number of things
about hope and about joy that there are wonderful books on this. There's a book called The Book of
Hope and A Book of Joy that I think you'd love because what it says is that the sorrows in the
world, whether it's a personal loss
or the loss in biodiversity with what we're facing with the climate or the challenges of social
justice, all these can get us all angry, sad, fearful. And what we want to do is take those
emotions and allow ourselves to feel them fully, but then really keep hope alive, a kind of active
hope that a writer named Joanna Macy calls it, active hope
where you're really turning that pain into actually something positive in the world and not only
having hope but having a sense of joy. And I think if your brother were watching us now and he said,
my dear sister Katie can hold on to hope and can be joyful in this life, what would he feel about that?
Yeah, that's a really good point. That was moving me to tears. That's really good. Yeah, I honestly,
like, you bring up a really good point, too, in the fact that, like, I have grown, like, so much
from this loss and, like, the way I view the world in good ways too. And my desire to make my
parents proud, even though I know I would make them proud if I did nothing, because they're just
the most wonderful people in the entire world. But yeah, like he really has allowed me to see
the world so much clearer. And I just feel like I'm going to do such great things because I've
grown so much from this. And yeah, you're right. Like it is,
it is a choice to, to wake up every single day and, and, you know, choose happiness despite all
the pain. And that's what I've really been working on is just choosing to be happy because at the
end of the day, you know, like the random cruelty of him being taken away, it has to be a choice
for me to, to keep going and to do it for him and to do it for my parents.
And I find that that's really helped me too,
is like letting myself feel those emotions
and yeah, growing from it, like you said,
like it is, there's power in that.
There's also something Dan taught me,
losing somebody is like a robbery.
You've been robbed, you know?
And that's how it feels.
It feels you're violated and you
cannot make sense of it. But are you going to spend your entire life harboring such anger towards
those robbers? You know what I mean? Because are you going to spend your energy doing that? No,
you're not. You want to be a light for your parents. You want to help your parents heal.
It's not your responsibility, but you can, you know, you can be a light for them as well. And when you're talking about emotions coming up,
something that Dan and I talked about a lot was like, where are you feeling something? You know,
are you feeling it in your chest? Do you feel it in your stomach? Being in touch with your body
and respecting yourself enough to sit with it. You know, when you're overcome,
you're allowed to go outside and cry and sit there for 20 minutes because once you extinguish it,
there is a lightness of being that happens. And it's when you resist your emotions where you get
into trouble. So it's okay to feel all those emotions and let them out and know, okay, oh,
I'm feeling, okay, I'm feeling this. Sometimes it takes 30 seconds just to sit with yourself.
And sometimes you need an hour, whatever it is you need, you know, you need, and you'll
know, but, but being respectful of that. So you're not repressing or suppressing anything so that
it's not creeping up on you later, you know, that you're experiencing everything and, and thinking
about where it is in your body. Like, oh, I'm, I'm heavy in my chest right now. Okay, I feel like I'm going to cry.
Okay, now I'm going to cry.
It sounds almost pedantic in a way,
but it's so important to respect yourself and your emotions.
And that's how you get through something like this in a healthy way
because you are going to be in a place
where the pain is no longer as acute as it feels today. You are. That's what
happens with life. You're going to move on. There are going to be moments where you're going to feel
extreme joy again, and you may already have, and that's part of healing. That's part of healing
because you're still here. So everything that is coming up, it's just, you know, you obviously want
to be with a therapist and talking with somebody too. You need that kind of support right now for sure. Are you seeing someone right
now? Yeah. Yeah. I have a therapist. Yeah. Yeah. And she's really great. Yeah. So all of those
things are helpful. And just, you know, remembering that there is no wrong feeling or emotion.
There's nothing wrong. This is all just a process and it doesn't last forever.
No, that's really great. Like, thank you. And I just want to say thank you to you as well,
because honestly, yeah, like listening to your podcast and watching your standup has really
helped me a lot. And I just think it's so brave of you. And yeah, again, really empowered me as
well. Oh, thank you. I'm so glad you called in and I'm so glad we had Dan here today for you.
Yeah. It was so nice to meet you as well, Dan. Thank you so much. Nice to meet you, Katie. Nice to meet you. Thank you
so much. Thank you. Thanks, Katie. Bye. Bye-bye. Bye. Wow. What a sweetie. Yeah. Wow. Hmm.
Oh, okay. Well, that was quite a heavy episode today. It was. I do have one little extra thing as we move into this close.
Kelsey emailed us and said, I recently went through a massive life change, which led me
to changing careers, moving states, and finally getting out of a long-term toxic relationship.
I read Life Will Be the Death of Me, and it inspired me to get back into therapy and really
try to delve into the deep childhood trauma.
Your story resonated with me.
I was sitting outside my therapist office today and debated going in and was questioning
whether this was where I needed to be.
I put out into the world that I needed a sign.
I went into therapy, and halfway through, my therapist pulled out an orange out of her bag, tossed it to me,
and said, I think you need this today. I stared at her in shock and then subsequently lost it,
and then had to explain that I was inspired to get back into therapy after reading Chelsea's book,
and that someone tossing me an orange was an unexpected sign of compassion when I needed it
the most. An orange unraveled me and gave me the sign that I'm exactly where I need to be.
Our journeys are not the same, but thank you for sharing yours and inspiring me to heal
so that I can find my happy and success as well.
It's already working.
Much love and admiration, Kelsey.
Oh my God, that makes me cry.
Dan, can you believe that? that's incredible that is so beautiful
i was sitting the other day i got some shitty news i was sitting the other day with joe
and we were somewhere oh yeah it was when i had to go to the hospital and when the next day we're
sitting down i was just like oh my god what's wrong with me? I'm so stressed out. I landed myself in the hospital. I didn't think I was stressed out. And we were just sitting in this restaurant at a hotel. And I was just looking at him just so confused about where I was in my life. I thought I was doing so great. And I was on top of everything. And I had learned how to deal with everything. And I looked down and
there's this whole tree of oranges right behind us. And I was like, oh my God. And I go, look.
And he's like, see, you're okay. You're okay. You're always okay. It's just a little hiccup.
So I love that. Oh, Kelsey, thanks for sharing that with us. That was so nice. So emotional.
I love it. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Let's
take a quick break because I just, I have a new loofah that I want to try out on Catherine.
I'm sorry. Does that sound like workplace? Workplace professionalism. Times have changed
and someone has to respect that. And that someone is me. That's right. So I apologize,
Catherine, about the loofah comment. It's okay. I love a soft scrub.
And Brad, I apologize to you too about the loofah comment.
Gosh, that's your husband right in front of him.
I know.
It's okay.
He wouldn't mind.
It'll be fine.
It'll be fine.
Let's take a break.
Okay.
Inside you, two wolves are locked in battle.
One thrives on fear and anger and doubt.
The other? Courage, wisdom, and love.
Every decision, every moment feeds one of them.
Which wolf are you feeding?
I'm Eric Zimmer, host of The One You Feed.
I've been there, homeless, addicted, and lost.
I know the power of small choices to turn your life around.
On this podcast, I sit down with thinkers, leaders, and survivors
to uncover what it takes to feed the good wolf.
This podcast saved me.
It's like having a guide for the hardest parts of life.
The wolves are hungry.
What will you feed them?
Listen to The One You Feed on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
2025 is bound to be a fascinating year.
It's going to be filled with money challenges
and opportunities.
I'm Joel.
Oh, and I am Matt.
And we're the hosts of How To Money.
We want to be with you every step of the way in your financial journey this year,
offering the information and insights you need to thrive financially.
Yeah, whether you find yourself up to your eyeballs in student loan debt,
or you've got a sky-high credit card balance because you went a little overboard with the holiday spending, or maybe you're looking to optimize your retirement
accounts so you can retire early, well, How to Money will help you to change your relationship
with money so you can stress less and grow your net worth.
That's right.
How to Money comes out three times a week, Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, for money
advice without the judgment and jargon.
Listen to How to Money on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Jason Alexander.
And I'm Peter Tilden.
And together on the Really No Really podcast,
our mission is to get the true answers to life's baffling questions like
why they refuse to make the bathroom door go all the way to the floor.
We got the answer.
Will space junk block your cell signal? The astronaut who almost way to the floor? We got the answer. Will space
junk block your cell signal? The astronaut who almost drowned during a spacewalk gives us the
answer. We talk with the scientist who figured out if your dog truly loves you and the one bringing
back the woolly mammoth. Plus, does Tom Cruise really do his own stunts? His stuntman reveals
the answer. And you never know who's going to drop by. Mr. Brian Cranston is with us today. How are you, too?
Hello, my friend.
Wayne Knight about Jurassic Park.
Wayne Knight, welcome to Really, No Really, sir.
Bless you all.
Hello, Newman.
And you never know when Howie Mandel might just stop by to talk about judging.
Really? That's the opening?
Really, No Really.
Yeah, Really.
No Really.
Go to reallynoreally.com.
And register to win $500, a guest spot on our podcast,
or a limited edition signed Jason bobblehead.
It's called Really No Really, and you can find it on the iHeartRadio app, on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The forces shaping markets and the economy are often hiding behind a blur of numbers.
So that's why we created The Big Take from Bloomberg Podcasts, to give you the context you need to make sense of it all.
Every day in just 15 minutes, we dive into one global business story that matters.
You'll hear from Bloomberg journalists like Matt Levine.
A lot of this meme stock stuff is, I think, embarrassing to the SEC.
Amanda Mull, who writes our Business Week Buying Power column.
Very few companies who go viral are, are like totally prepared for what that means.
And Zoe Tillman, senior legal reporter.
Courts are not supposed to decide elections.
Courts are not really supposed to play a big role in choosing our elected leaders.
It's for the voters to decide.
Follow The Big Take podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you listen. Dan, what advice do you need from me? Well, I asked you earlier, you know, how do you
keep that lifelong learning approach going? And the related thing was, how did you let yourself
be open to really facing your emotional life there? And then
a bonus question for you, which from our relationship, you'll probably think this is-
Dan is never short-winded, everybody.
Ridiculous. Is how did humor enter your life so we can try to be inspired not to be funny stand-ups
like you are, but to just make sure that in the face of all the challenges, we keep our humor alive.
Yeah, I God, I don't know if you can. I don't know if that's a learned thing or if that's inherent. You know, I think I was born with that because my family was just we're all like that. Like sarcasm was our, was our function, you know, like everything was
sarcastic to deal with the lameness. Like we just are, we're constantly like, Oh, like our parents
were lame. Growing up was just lame. Our birthdays, our parents trying to like celebrate our birthdays
was lame. So we just had these built in senses of humor to cope with it. But I don't, I can't
really speak to whether or not you can, you know, adopt it. I think it's important to remember not to take yourself so seriously,
right? You're not the only person on this planet. There's a million, billions of things going on
around you. And you're just, what you want to bring is light and happiness and joyfulness,
right? To the table, to the energy field around you, to the people that you come in contact with. So I think humor plays into that, to be light and happy and set a tone and
inspire people to be open. And yeah, I guess, you know, just try not to take yourself so seriously.
You got to be able to laugh at all the bad stuff too, because there's humor in everything.
Sometimes you have to look a little harder for it, but it's there. Beautiful. Well, that's great because that
actually relates to the other questions that you've already answered, you know, how to
keep those questions going and really keep an open mind to grow throughout life. So
Chelsea, thank you so much, Catherine. Thank you so much. It's really an honor to be here with you and really a joy to speak with all the people who had questions today. And I feel very privileged to be here. So thank you.
Oh, thank you so much, Dan. I know that you usually charge for this kind of advice. So I appreciate you volunteering your services.
Well, I feel like I'm enriched just like working with you, Chelsea.
This has really been a great conversation today.
Thank you.
Awesome.
Thank you so much, Dan.
I really appreciate it.
I'll see you soon.
Great.
You well.
Thanks, Dan.
Thanks, Catherine.
Thank you so much for tuning in to Dear Chelsea Season 2.
We'll be back with another season May 12th.
See you then.
Do you want a shortcut to the best version of you?
Here it is. Feed the good wolf. I'm Eric Zimmer, host of The One You Feed. Every week, I talk to
brilliant minds and brave souls about the art of small, powerful choices. Our listeners say it all. This is a lifeline. Transformational. The best
antidote to a bad mood I've ever heard. Join the pack and start feeding your best self.
Listen to The One You Feed on the iHeartRadio app, financial hangover, that can be a huge bummer.
If you are out there and you're dreading the new statement email that reveals the massive balance that you may have racked up, well, you could use our help.
That's right. I'm Joel.
And I am Matt.
And we're from the How To Money Podcast.
Our show is all about helping you make sense of your personal finances
so you can ditch your pesky credit card debt once and for all,
make real progress on other crucial financial goals that you've got,
and just feel more in control of your money in general.
You know it.
For money advice without the judgment and jargon,
listen to How To Money on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Jason Alexander. And I'm Peter Tilden. app, Apple Podcasts, or a limited edition signed Jason bobblehead.
The Really Know Really podcast.
Follow us on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to Decisions Decisions, the podcast where boundaries are pushed and conversations get candid.
Join your favorite hosts, me, Weezy WTF.
And me, Mandy B, as we dive deep into the world of non-traditional relationships and explore the often taboo topics surrounding dating, sex, and love.
Every Monday and Wednesday, we both invite you to unlearn the outdated narratives dictated by traditional patriarchal norms.
Tune in and join the conversation.
Listen to Decisions Decisions on the Black Effect Podcast Network, iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.