Financial Feminist - 249. How to ACTUALLY Like Your Life, Your Body, and Yourself with Elise Loehnen

Episode Date: August 25, 2025

Be the first to know when we launch Business Bootcamp Live! https://herfirst100k.com/biz-waitlist If you’ve ever felt like you’re living life on someone else’s terms—constantly trying to be �...��good,” small, or palatable—this episode will change everything. I sat down with return guest Elise Loehnen, bestselling author of On Our Best Behavior and her new workbook Choosing Wholeness Over Goodness, to talk about how to actually like your life, your body, and yourself. We dig into how cultural “good girl” conditioning and stories about money, envy, success, and our bodies hold us back, and how to start rewriting those scripts into ones that feel true to who you are. Elise shares powerful insights on fear, intuition, and envy—and how embracing wholeness over perfection can free us to live more authentic lives. Elise’s links: Website: https://www.eliseloehnen.com/ Read transcripts, learn more about our guests and sponsors, and get more resources at https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/how-to-like-yourself/ Looking for accountability, live coaching, and deeper financial education? Check out our exclusive community! Join the $100K Club: https://herfirst100k.com/100k-pod   Our favorite travel and cash-back credit cards, plus other financial resources: https://herfirst100k.com/tools Not sure where to start on your financial journey? Take our FREE money personality quiz! https://herfirst100k.com/quiz Special thanks to our sponsors: Squarespace Go to www.squarespace.com/FFPOD to save 10% off your first website or domain purchase. Indeed Get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at Indeed.com/FFPOD. Rocket Money Stop wasting money on things you don’t use. Cancel your unwanted subscriptions by going to RocketMoney.com/FFPOD. Quince For your next trip, treat yourself to the luxe upgrades you deserve from Quince. Go to Quince.com/FFPOD for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns. Netsuite If your revenues are at least in the seven figures, download the free e-book Navigating Global Trade: 3 Insights for Leaders at NetSuite.com/FFPOD. Zocdoc Visit Zocdoc.com/FFPOD to find and instantly book a top-rated doctor today. Saily Get an exclusive 15% discount on Saily eSIM data plans! Go to Saily.com/FFPOD download the Saily app and use code 'FFPOD' at checkout. Masterclass Get at least 15% off any annual membership at masterclass.com/FFPOD. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Right now, you are living your life by everybody else's rules, and it's holding you back. In today's episode, we are talking with previous guest, Elise Lunin, about her new workbook choosing wholeness over goodness. Can you actually say what you want? Most of us cannot. We have subjugated what we want to other people's needs for our entire lives, and that has been what's been modeled for us by our mothers and our grandmothers and our aunts and our friends.
Starting point is 00:00:25 This workbook alongside her previous book on our best behavior are life-changing. And I say that, not in hyperbole, it's so incredible. I have learned how to bring my body into decision-making in a way that has kept me from betraying myself. In this conversation, we're talking about how to stop believing the scripts that were handed to you by society, by your family, and instead, start writing your own. So many of us are conditioned to be like, envy is gross and malicious, and I don't envy anything. In my experience, men are much more capable of being like, I'm envy of that prick. But for women, it's not conscious. We don't let it come up so that we can even say, oh, I'm jealous.
Starting point is 00:01:05 Elise and I dig into how a good girl conditioning shapes our entire lives. But also the stories we tell ourselves about money, success, relationships, our bodies, and power. And how you can edit those narratives into something entirely yours. Women are conditioned to perform their goodness in the world. Men are conditioned for power. But because women are conditioned to perform their goodness, we're incredibly susceptible to reputational heart. If you've been feeling stuck in a role that you never auditioned for, this conversation is for you.
Starting point is 00:01:33 Let's get into it. But first, a word from our sponsors. This episode of Financial Feminist is sponsored in part by Squarespace, Rocket Money, NetSuite, and Masterclass. Whether it's for a brand, portfolio, or store, Squarespace makes it easy. Head over to Squarespace.com slash ffpod and use code FFPod for 10% off your first purchase. Stop paying for subscriptions you forgot about. Rocket Money finds and cancels them for you.
Starting point is 00:01:58 Go to RocketMoney. slash ffpod to take control of your finances running a growing business net suite helps you manage it all in one place download the free cFO's guide to a i and machine learning at net suite dot com slash ff pod learn from the best to become your best with masterclass get 15% off any annual membership at masterclass.com slash ff pod Elise, welcome back to the show. What does it look like when a woman embraces wholeness instead of goodness? I think we would see women occupying more space in our culture, being themselves, not spending energy, trying to regulate how they show up in the world.
Starting point is 00:02:52 I think most of us spend a lot of our precious energy trying to perform to cultural standards, unfortunately. So I think we would see women are already amazing. I think we would see even more fully expressed amazing women in the world. And I think our culture would start to change really dramatically, really quickly. I am such an admirer of your work, you know this. Last time you came on the show, I literally told you, and still believe, like, I wish I had thought of that because it's just so good. You talk about the seven deadly sins, envy, pride, gluttony, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:03:28 actually get projected onto women to keep us small. While you were writing, was there one sin or story that you were personally dealing with or had the hardest time letting go of? Yeah, that's a great question. And I think that as people have worked through the book and this is feedback I hear all the time, they open a chapter and they're like, ah, money or ah, sex, like not really my thing, only to discover, oh, yeah, it is my thing. And what I find as I do this work, because I'm doing it.
Starting point is 00:03:58 it right alongside all of the readers in an ongoing way throughout my life, to be honest, I am going deeper and deeper into the onion. So as I peel back sort of the first layer of stories that I have about my body and food or money and is it base and unspiritual and bad to want more of it, et cetera, I come to even deeper and deeper stories. So first, I would say the most, the fastest one for me to access was gluttony, because I think that's the one that's most obvious and most pronounced in our culture. This will shock no one, right? A good body is a body that's disciplined and as small as possible and conforming and all of those things. We know this. This is still, to this day, held out to us as like a gesture of our value, right?
Starting point is 00:04:51 And then I would say the one really that's the most difficult for me to this day is greed. I just have so many stories about scarcity and having too much and not wanting to create any bit of inequity in my life ever that I'm still still doing work on greed to this day. you're in the right place I know I was like let's just do a coaching session Tori just makes me no but I feel the same way where you know
Starting point is 00:05:31 even as a money expert there's still hangups that I have around money right yet alone all of the rest of them I think something you just said sparked it for me especially with like gluttony and again one of the
Starting point is 00:05:44 one of the sins you talk about of yeah how do you have a disciplined relationship with your body how do you have the fattest ass but also the flattest abs and how do you make sure that you don't indulge in anything? And the thing I wrote down as I was, as you were talking about that, is like, shape-shifting. Like, I think we sometimes get smart about these sins and their impact on our lives. Like, oh, yeah, when I do ask for more money and they tell me to just be grateful, that's stupid.
Starting point is 00:06:16 Or, okay, we're going to be body positive or body neutral, but then there's this, thing that comes up. It's like the GLP1 thing. It always shapeshifts into something new. So can we talk briefly about what happens when we do get wise onto one of these sins? How is the patriarchy or white supremacism or whatever we're talking about start shape shifting to continue surviving? Yeah. I mean, it just keeps occupying space in our minds, I think. So we abandon or we just, maybe grow out of one story and then we pick up another one, right? And I think that underneath all these stories, because that's a really good question, why do we have these stories about what it is to be a good woman? And why do we keep them going and keep giving them energy in our lives? And the
Starting point is 00:07:12 reality is, is that they cover up a lot of very understandable fear. And not only are we built for fear, human biologically, this is one of the energies that has kept us alive. But in our current culture, our fear is just stoked all the time. And it's, you know, it's sort of these three buckets of fear. I'd say fear of loss of approval, which is a huge one for women. If you're excommunicated, if you don't belong, if you stand out from the crowd, you lose the protection of the people. It's like, again, biologically hardwired in us that exclusion equals death, right? So there's fear of loss of approval. There's, and I would say for women who are trying to move past this and put this stuff down and move on, it requires standing apart from other women
Starting point is 00:08:07 often. And there is a strong instinct of like pulling the crab back into the bucket when we see a woman who is like, I'm not, I don't do, I'm not participating, I'm out of here. It's like, How dare you? Yeah, tall poppy. How is she getting away with that? She's too big for her britches. Why her and why not me? This is the big part of the chapter on Envy.
Starting point is 00:08:26 The other buckets of fear are fear of loss of control. And then, of course, fear of loss of safety and security, which is the biggest cahuna of them all. And so we keep these stories going because we're convinced that if we let them go, in some way, we will die. And that looks like not being lovable, not being valued, et cetera. So it sounds crazy. But once you dig deeper into them, you're like, oh, that's the fear.
Starting point is 00:09:00 I do everything. So in this last chapter, one of my stories is I'm the only one who can do it right, so I should do it all. This is a story a lot of women have. When I sit with that story and I say, what's the underlying fear? Why do I do this? There's huge payoffs for me, by the way, Tori, in my life and career. I've gotten really far being the only one you can do it right, so I should do it all. It's also exhausting. I can't keep going without accepting support. Yeah, not sustainable. But it's gotten me really far,
Starting point is 00:09:31 major payoffs. The underlying fear, which is so sad, is fear of loss of approval. Why would anyone want me to be around if I'm not making everything easy? Would my husband still love me if I didn't make his life so nice and turnkey, he's not suggesting this, by the way, but this is what I've been swimming in since birth, like many of us. I have to be useful. I have to be in service. I have to take care of everything so that people want me to be around. It's all about control, right? Yeah. Like all roads lead back to control, both control, uh, uh, uh, of the unknown, but also the outside forces trying to control us. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:10:20 Yeah. Yeah. Not a question. But that's what it comes down to for me of like something that I encountered every time I was doing research and writing my book. And every time we do this show is it's like the reason society does not want women to have money is they become uncontrollable when they do. The reason society does not like women to. like themselves and be okay and whatever body they're in
Starting point is 00:10:46 is control. Like, all roads lead to control. Yeah. Yeah. And it's like the lash of like, you won't, this fear of loss of approval. All of these, this is like a lash that we're hit with.
Starting point is 00:11:00 I don't know how many people are conscious of it. It's just the patriarchy in action. And we respond. The fear response gets triggered and we respond in kind. And yes, certainly. women who don't need the protection of men, definitely harder to control, right? Women who, I mean, it's so obvious.
Starting point is 00:11:23 And yet I think so many of us get so mad at ourselves for like, for participating in this. How can I be so stupid? Why am I doing this? Why is this in my head? The reason, they're very good reasons that these stories are in our head. And these stories in some ways have kept us safe and they don't serve us anymore. And it's time to put them down. You were mentioning fear.
Starting point is 00:11:46 I think we talked about this last time as well. It's something I have spent a lot of time thinking about and reading about that, yeah, so much of this fear is lizard brain stuff from caveman days of if I leave my cave or eat berries from a bush that I haven't already eaten. Like, I literally could die. Like, that's literally his life or death. And now the fear is not the berry bush. it's getting canceled on social media
Starting point is 00:12:12 or having our parents or our friends disapprove of our work or I don't know insert thing here and we were having this conversation very briefly off mic before we started of even the tools that we use
Starting point is 00:12:31 every day live and breathe on fear like social media YouTube the algorithm like lives on fear and on scarcity and on trying to protect yourself by ostracizing other people. So it's not only, we're battling our own brains, we're battling the larger systemic issues, but just I'm trying to scroll on TikTok to tune out, and yet I'm encountering 12 different
Starting point is 00:13:02 things I have to worry about now. Can we chat about that for a little bit? Like, how do we navigate that. Yeah. It's so insidious. It's funny because now I feel like I'm just actively trying to train my algorithm in the opposite direction. It's like I just send people like really wonderful pet adoption stories and like funny marriage memes. I send them to my husband just to try and get more of that in my feed because I don't, I don't want to be click baited. Do you watch CBS this morning? Do you ever watch this? Or not this morning. Sunday mornings. Do you ever watch this? Sometimes. Yeah. So my parents love it and I confess because I don't have cable. I don't watch it all that often. But they've been doing this for like 40 years and the last two minutes is silent nature. Yes. Like have you ever seen? It's like. Yes. And every time I see it, I literally like feel my shoulders shrink down my back and like my nervous system resets. And like that's what I feel like I need on TikTok. It's just like give me, I don't know, bumblebee on a flower for two minutes. Yes. Well, I think we all need to reprogram not only our algorithms, but our relationship to fear. Because I think the other thing that happens, culturally, I just did an episode on this on my podcast too, is that we feel, particularly with everything that's happening around us, which is truly terrifying, right? It feels like end of times and biblical. And every day, it's like what new disaster is unfolding?
Starting point is 00:14:37 on the world stage that I need to pay attention to, right, in this attention economy. And I think that, and this is like a different version of goodness, but I think that many of us think if I want to be a good citizen here, if I want to stand up for what's right, I need to not only be paying attention to all of this, but I need to be vibrating. I need to match the energy of the moment.
Starting point is 00:15:04 And I need to have loyalty to the fear, and anxiety that people who are being kidnapped off the street by ICE are feeling in order to be a good person, right? And there's, that's not right, that's the story. I get it. It gets me too. But we have got, particularly at this moment in time, when we are being hijacked, left, right, and center, both energetically and physically, we have got to learn how to manage our fear and to not pay loyalty to the anxiety because that's the primary tactic of this administration is how do I extra how do I scare people masked ice agents it's out of a playbook literally it's like I'm going to
Starting point is 00:15:49 go and terrorize people like on Halloween every single day and we are playing into the hands of this administration by letting our nervous systems be taken over and so part of it is like okay I do not have to be loyal to this moment I'm going to go watch two minutes of nature on CBS Sunday morning. I'm going to go outside. I'm going for a walk. I'm putting down my phone. I'm just the more,
Starting point is 00:16:14 and what I tell myself is the more present and embodied I can be, the more I can manage myself. The less I'm projecting my fear onto other people, and the less I'm exacerbating the overall atmosphere
Starting point is 00:16:28 and the more I can take on from other people. By saying clear, stable, grounded. And I think the other thing that happens, quite frankly, and why we get burned out is there's this idea that awareness is enough right now, that we all just need to be hyper-aware.
Starting point is 00:16:52 Well, it's just like flipping out our hyper-vigilance, truly, action over awareness. And so I think it's incumbent on all of us. pick your thing, titrate your news. I love Jessica Yellen, who does news, not noise, and titrate it. Let her distill what's important and that you need to pay attention to. Team up with friends even. Like, you take this, you take that, I'll take this, take some action.
Starting point is 00:17:21 That's sort of the only thing that we can do, write a letter, et cetera. But like the awareness that we're all being stirred to offer is just burning us out. and getting all of our fear stories going. Lulls at me mentioning CBS and then us talking about Trump. So whoopsie on that one. But I banned him from the show. Trump? Well, yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:48 No, CBS. I know. When Survivor comes back on, I'm going to have an interesting moral conendrum. No, but I think we've all heard that. And I want everybody to go back five minutes and listen again. because I do think it is so hardwired of like, I see horrible things that happening in Gaza or, yeah, ice raids.
Starting point is 00:18:07 And so it's like I have to suffer along with them in order to feel better about the privilege I do have in my life. And I'm like, that doesn't actually help. Like, that doesn't make anything better. It only makes you better. Like, it centers you when that's not what we're trying to, accomplish. It makes you feel better about other people suffering because you feel like I have to play victim. I have to suffer. Right. Yes. And there's a very human need to sort of also put
Starting point is 00:18:40 ourselves in the middle of whatever is happening. And it's like, no, actually imagine that you're a washing machine. This is an image that I use that may resonate with people or people might be like, you're so weird lady, stop talking. But I just think of it as like, how much can I laundering. Like, how much can I move through my body and move out and ground versus contributing to what's already present? I don't go and yell at people online. I just, I don't, don't feed it. Turn it down as much as you can. Take the volume down. Because it's, you know, and the washer. Yeah. But fear is not our friend. And we're scared, even though we don't really know how to recognize it most of the time.
Starting point is 00:19:25 And it's good to just know that. It's okay. I'm scared. This story serves me because I'm scared. It's okay. We're talking about fear and also, by extension, we kind of get into power with that. You've said that you tried to blame men for the lack of women in power. Like, for Hillary losing, for women being underrepresented in the media, for Kamala lose.
Starting point is 00:19:47 And then you realized, oh, God, part of this is me. How do we hold both things at once? Yes, system sucks. Yes. But am I playing a role in upholding that system? I'm so excited to have Elise back in the show. And gosh, does she pack a punch every time she's here. When we come back, Elise answers my question about having awareness around facing our own
Starting point is 00:20:08 complicity in an oppressive system and how we can recognize when we're being driven by fear and envy. And the most important part, how to change the script to live more truthful and fulfilling lives. Stay tuned. This podcast is brought to you by Squarespace. One of the biggest things I hear from people who want to be business owners is they don't know where to start. They're like, I don't know what to do.
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Starting point is 00:22:28 Cancel your unwanted subscriptions and reach your financial goals faster with RocketMoney. Go to RocketMoney.com slash FFPod today. That's RocketMoney.com slash FFPod. RocketMoney.com slash FFPod. Yes. Okay. So before I get into that, I just want to offer this quote that's not mine. it's from this man, John O. Powell, I want to say. He's a professor who runs sort of like the
Starting point is 00:22:58 division of othering. And it is that we need to become much better in our culture at being hard on systems and structures and soft on people. We're really good at being hard on people and soft on structures and systems. So I just want to say that as sort of like a general tent because that was such an unlock for me. And I think typically the tendency is like, who can I beat up? Like who is responsible and where can I find my certainty and like land my punches? Well, a system doesn't have a customer service number. No, it doesn't. Like our Instagram inbox. Right? Like patriarchy doesn't have something I can yell at.
Starting point is 00:23:38 But I can yell at this particular person who I have decided is the problem today. Yes. Yes. And so when I started working on this book and I was, you know, like all of us throwing around words like patriarchy, I was like, wait, hold on, what is the patriarchy? Where did it come from? When did it start? Is it a foregone conclusion? Isn't it a foregone conclusion? Oh, no. It's like actually not that old, right? And then I went to, well, who's responsible for the patriarchy? And is it Mitch McConnell? Is it Trump? Who's running this thing? And I was like, oh, it's, nobody is running this thing. It's like Oz. But it is a system that was set in place that we, all of us, continue to perpetuate and enforce and see as the way things are and therefore the way things will always be. So that was my first aha was, oh, wait, we're just, we've imbibed this as fact and we're, but it's really a story. It's really something that we're maintaining with our own energy. And I, I also was like, you know, it's fun to blame a bunch of men.
Starting point is 00:24:53 And there are certainly a lot of men who have not only benefited from the patriarchy, but work really, really hard to uphold it. There are also a lot of women. And then there are a lot of women like you and like me who claim that we don't like this system. And yet we're also participating in maintaining it in the way that we treat ourselves and treat other women. and treat men. So there's like a big responsibility taking that needs to happen of I don't like this
Starting point is 00:25:25 and I choose something else and I am going to actively choose something else every single day. And we all know change is hard. It's really hard. And everything, all the energy wants us to pull us back into a status quo. But it just takes this conscious, deliberate effort. Why am I shitting on this other woman? What is she doing that I want? What does she have that I want? Is my, the reason that I'm judging her, is that valid? Or is she just making me uncomfortable because she's breaking code? You obviously experience this all the time, Tori, right?
Starting point is 00:26:03 All the time. So that's the sort of self-inquiry that we all need to take on as our responsibility if we're going to make something different happen. Talk me through what that actually was. looks like in practice. Can I do it like a little like case study like thought to thought to thought. So let we're going to use me. Okay. We're going to pick on me. Um, my post comes up in your Instagram feed and I'm talking about being a multimillionaire and how I want to be rich. Yeah. What happens in your brain and body in reaction to that that upholds the patriarchy and what do
Starting point is 00:26:45 I then have to do in my brain and body to work through that emotion without going to the comments and being like, ew, gross. Ew, gross, right? So recognizing, so first of all, when that comes up, and I know you get this all the time, it, the energy that's arising is, ew, gross, who does she think she is? How dare she? Why her and why not me? This isn't all necessarily conscious. It's just you're doing something that's making, I'll say it's me, um, making me deeply uncomfortable, right? I would never let myself do that. How are you getting away with that? Money is gross and base and you're not supposed to want more of it. I mean, I have a million stories. How like, oh, like you're supposed to take all of your wanting for more
Starting point is 00:27:34 money and bury it under a desire to save the world. Like, what are you doing? You're, you're violating all of my feelings about what a good woman says about money. And you're talking about it, Tori, gross. We don't talk about money, polite society. So that's what's happening. But what happens is when someone makes us feel bad, this is the classic projection, this is like Jungian shadow projection work,
Starting point is 00:28:01 when someone is making us feel uncomfortable, our instinct isn't to say, what's happening in me, like what is being activated in me, it's to say that person is bad they need to go away so that's what you are experiencing in your comments
Starting point is 00:28:18 there's something that you're doing that the people who are responding to would never allow themselves to do and so they need you to go away because you are making them feel that and I write about this a lot in envy because I think because it's envy really at its root
Starting point is 00:28:37 and so many of us condition to be like, envy is gross and malicious and I don't envy anything, ugh, that we just, we're not conscious. In my experience, men are much more capable of being like, I'm envy of that prick. Like, I want that. I'm going to get that. But for women, it's not conscious. We don't let it come up so that we can even say, oh, I'm jealous. I'm envious. I want that. Because also feelings are very unbecoming for women, right? Just having an emotion that isn't happiness all the time. Yeah. Yes. Anything that's bad, that we code is bad instead of like what it is to be a good woman is goes into the shadow trash bag for sure and then gets projected on to other people. She's a slut. Why is she, why is she wearing that dress? I don't want to see that. Like that's, that's all the same process. Why does she think we want to look at her body? You know, it's not a good body. That's the same, the same thing that we're talking about. so that happens where somebody has those emotions
Starting point is 00:29:40 how do they work through them in a way that is helpful and healthy like what questions are they asking themselves I think one is like yeah do I actually want this thing like do I am I targeting this person because they're showing me what I want and what is possible like what are other questions or things that we can help work through.
Starting point is 00:30:07 All right. So the minute that this starts happening in you, whether it's about money or someone's body, it could be in any sphere, someone being lazy, someone on vacation with their, whatever it is. When you start having that feeling,
Starting point is 00:30:21 I don't like this. This is rubbing me the wrong way. You could call it feeling triggered. Sometimes I just want to say, like, you can always tell based on your reaction, it's either informing you or it's like activating. you. If it's informing you, it's very, you don't, if I see a post from Marjorie Taylor Green, I'm not envious of Marjorie Taylor Green. Usually I'm like, that's a problem. That's like so mean.
Starting point is 00:30:47 That's so horrible. I would like, it's easy to understand what that is. I'm not envious of Marjorie Taylor Green. But if you're having a reaction to Tori, for example, most likely it's, it's your envy. And then you catch yourself and you say, this is how honestly, like how I ended up leaving my job, starting my own podcast, starting to write my own books after ghost writing for, I think I'd ghost written 12 books for other people standing behind brands, was being like, hearing myself, it's shameful to admit it, but hearing myself being like, I don't like that book. Why is her podcast so successful? I don't like her. Like, why do people think she's so great? Okay. So this is my own example. And then I have a million examples on my own.
Starting point is 00:31:35 as well. I know we're using me as like, I guess, a quasi-victim in this, but like, I've done this to a million other women as well. Like, yeah, but you get, and you get it all the time, right? Yeah, I mean, I'm often on the receiving end, but like, there have been, I could give you two moments from, you know, two weeks ago that I have had these feelings about a woman presenting herself in a certain way. Yes. Get and getting away with something, right? So, yeah, yeah. When you start, when you recognize it and you're like, then you can arrest it and say it's honestly all it takes is like knowing looking for this and watching your friends do it with your friends when they start doing it being like okay wait wait stop stop stop what is she what's happening
Starting point is 00:32:14 here what is happening here because there's really good information for you there's something here that you want for yourself or she's doing something that you want to do so you stop it and you say what's okay what's happening and then you say oh it's because like I want to write a best selling book I want to host my own podcast like there is this is my soul I want to wear a bikini I want to wear a bikini without feeling self-conscious. I want to have an easy relationship with money and make a lot more of it. I don't want everything to feel so hard. I want that level of effortless wealth or whatever it is.
Starting point is 00:32:50 As you start interrogating it and investigating it, you say, oh, I understand. This is my soul saying, pay attention. This person has something that I want. I need to use this to guide my life forward. it's showing me what I want. And most women, I mean, I ask everyone listening to do this exercise, can you actually say what you want? Most of us cannot.
Starting point is 00:33:16 No. We have subjugated what we want to other people's needs for our entire lives. And that has been what's been modeled for us by our mothers and our grandmothers and our aunts and our friends. And so when I do this exercise with women, what do you want? like what do you really really want we start in one corner of the football field and end up i don't know how many yards are in a football field but we end up 100 yards down the line we're so far away from what they can first even say because they just don't even they won't allow themselves
Starting point is 00:33:50 to even know what they want it makes me teary when you talk about all of the women before us because, I mean, this has been going on since the dawn of time, but, like, when you make it personal of, like, what did our mothers want versus what did their life look like? What did our grandmothers want versus what their lives look like? And there's hopefully listeners out there who have women in their lives who go unabashedly for the things that they want, even if that is not socially acceptable.
Starting point is 00:34:27 Um, I have some of that, but I don't have all of that. And I, that's the thing that breaks my heart is when I see it, you know, with another woman, especially, you know, related to me or close to me. And then that leads me to think about myself, right? If I can feel that way of hoping that women I care about actually figure out what they want, not what their parents want or their spouse wants or society wants for them, but what did they actually want? Why wouldn't you hope that for yourself too? Yeah. Isn't it? It's so deep. And I have two thoughts. One, I think that what you're naming is why, and hopefully there aren't any hashtag tradwives listening who will take offense. I don't think so. That's why this movement, I think, is so offensive. It's like, yes, you can certainly live an off-grid life and garden and all of these things are. beautiful, but to sort of want to roll back. I mean, I'm from my dad's South African. My mom is from poor farmers in Iowa. I would not want, I don't think that that's what my great grandmother wanted for me. Let me tell you. At least I also get it, though. Like, because we've been, we're in this hyper-consumption, hustle, capitalistic culture, it feels good to be
Starting point is 00:35:57 taking care of. It feels good to say, oh, I'm not going to participate. But as soon as you dig in further, you're like, okay, but you're handing over agency. You're not being taken care of. You're handing over total and complete agency to somebody else. And by the way, the only reason we know tried wives exist is they're all on the internet making money. Yeah. Like, you're saying, I don't have any, like, I'm, you know, I'm not managing my own money. I stay at home with my children, which again is fine. My mom is a stay-at-home mom, but like, you are making money talking about this lifestyle on the internet. You are making money selling your raw milk on the internet. So it doesn't work. But we, I understand the idea of it, which is we're all so deeply
Starting point is 00:36:44 tired and burned out that we just want to be held and taking care of for just two seconds. Trust me. And I, you know, listen, I'm from Montana. I have my things. antisies about moving home and having a simpler life. Yes. I don't have any illusions about how hard it is to live in Montana during the winter. But yes. So, okay, but Trav-wise aside, you know, with on our best behavior and then there's this workbook, choosing wholeness over goodness that's coming out with the paperback.
Starting point is 00:37:17 And one of the tools is exactly this. And I love this one because essentially... Once you've figured out what these stories are, right? Let's say we're talking about money. You shouldn't want more money. It's based to want more money, whatever it is. Like, whatever the opposite of what you are teaching in the world is, Tori, women shouldn't talk about money. The tool, which I think anyone can do at any time, is to go into a woman's college and to teach a class. And we actually ask you to do this in the workbook, to teach a class of 18. to 22-year-old women, how to make sure that this story for them is also true. So let's say the story is, my story is like polite, girls don't talk about women. So I go and you create a little syllabus, we'll guide you through creating the syllabus, and then you go and you take this story that you're carrying around about women and money and you teach the next generation how to make sure that that story is true for them too.
Starting point is 00:38:19 And as you do it, and it's funny and you make it really big, But you just start to realize it becomes more obvious, like, oh, this is what we're passing on to each other, right? Like, this is the contagion that we're spreading through nice girls don't talk about money, which when you're teaching a class, it's like, okay, make sure you marry a man who takes complete control of the finances. You want to be sure that you don't know anything about mortgages or how to get one. You don't want to really understand interest rates while we're at it. Make sure you don't. Yeah. Yep.
Starting point is 00:38:54 You don't have your accountant's information. You have no idea how much money you have. Make sure your credit card is not in your name. Yes. Oh, this is such an interesting. I'm like, what would I say? Yeah, make sure your credit card's not in their name. Make sure that he gives you an allowance and you cannot overspend that allowance or you are
Starting point is 00:39:15 punished in some way. Yeah. Definitely. That's a good point. But, I mean, you could do this all. all day. But when you do it and you're like, this is what I'm living. This is what I'm holding as a story about my life. Is this what you want to teach your niece and your daughter and your friend's daughter? Is this what we want to be passing on? But that's what we're doing, right?
Starting point is 00:39:38 And when you make it really obvious, it's like, oh, shit. Like, no, I refuse. I think for many women, it's hard to do this work for ourselves because, again, we're sort of trained to be selfless. But when you think about it in that context of this is what I'm teaching my kids and this is what I'm teaching other girls and other boys, it's like, okay, not today. Now I feel emboldened to stop this. And yeah, we are being a little dramatic or making it all about like men's control over women's finances, which is a part of this. But it could also look like if you're bad with money, it means you're a bad person, right? Or if you're bad with money, you have no hope in fixing it. Just like if you're bad at French or playing the piano, you will never,
Starting point is 00:40:24 ever get better. We know that's not true. You have to practice. You have to practice playing piano. And it will be uncomfortable, but you will get better. It's the same thing with money. But again, we, I think we talked about this last time as well, that we feel like if we failed were a failure, it becomes part of the identity as opposed to just a neutral statement, which is, I'm not good with money right now. Not, I'm bad with money forever. Or, Or I can never get better with this. It is a DNA trait inside. It's just like, you know what?
Starting point is 00:40:54 I'm not very good with money right now, but I can get better. I can learn. Yes. It's like the season of great divorce memoirs right now. Maybe it's always that season. But Jen Hotmaker has awake coming out this fall. There's another book called Strangers coming out. This woman, Bell Burden, who wrote this viral modern love column over the COVID about her
Starting point is 00:41:19 husband just coming home and leaving and being like, you take the kids. But in all of these memoirs, like one of the themes is, and Jen writes about it in a hilarious way, she had no idea, not a single iota of a clue about what was happening in her financial life. And it's a good read. It's a great, great book, but it's just a good cautionary tale. To your point, like, obviously people who are engaging with you probably have taken the first step towards managing their money but many of us are scared to and until we get sort of that brutal wake-o call and not there are no spoilers here but jen was like learning how to manage my money was like the greatest thing for my like 46th year of life um but it's common obviously otherwise
Starting point is 00:42:11 I mean, you have a robust business because, man, I hope someday I don't. Like, I would love to be out of a job at some point. Also, we need to have Jen on the show. That's incredible. I didn't know if she said that. Yeah. Can we talk about, you know, we're talking about money. I think the gluttony is a, and gluttony and envy, I think, are too easy ones to kind of pinpoint,
Starting point is 00:42:34 which is like, again, skinny at all costs. And then, you know, if I don't like this person, it's probably because I'm, envious. How does this show up in other things? Like pride I'm thinking of or pride. Pride is probably the big one. So maybe let's talk about that for a second. Let's talk about pride because it's somewhat in a Venn diagram with envy and scarcity, which is and and I don't know. I know some people make this connection, but not enough of us make the connection between what happens to highly visible women in our culture in the way that we celebrate their in and invariable inevitable take down right like i really worked hard to find examples for the book dory of women
Starting point is 00:43:19 who have endured without being quote unquote put back in their place but can you name one did you get to i was like you know the only person is merrill streep i mean not the only one but she's an example of someone who sort of goes away and then she comes out and launches her book and next movie and then she goes away and because she doesn't chase any relevancy, she's not visible I don't even know if she's on social media
Starting point is 00:43:47 she has managed to keep herself safe from what I can tell I might be able to debunk that one I'm sorry oh there you go see I think I think she's a very good she's the closest I could have gotten but early she tells a story about early
Starting point is 00:44:02 in her career she was basically told she was not pretty enough to be an actor like that her you know because she has kind of a longer nose that her she would have to basically change her face in order to be successful and it didn't matter how good of an actor she was she had to be more palatable she had to be more conventionally attractive but again early I think early 20s I think that's part of it too is just like I think we all have like an older woman we admire who like just doesn't give a goddamn fuck and it's like so that's what we're talking about here, but like, how do we start it when we're 25?
Starting point is 00:44:39 Yeah. How do we start it when we're 40, not when we're 65 and wearing whatever we want, you know? Honestly, it's a really fascinating exercise to try and think about a powerful woman and try to find one that didn't get knocked down a peg. A little humbling to think about. When we come back, we're talking about the stories we tell ourselves and how those narratives are keeping us from living our fullest lives. We'll see you after the break.
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Starting point is 00:47:13 and women come for women too. Let me be clear. This isn't about men shooting them out of the sky. This is often women on women hate. It's like, again, being conscious of it and being like, what's happening here? Like, why am I so excited that, like Billy Elish I just saw was like got in trouble for talking about being Irish or something. I don't know. It's like the latest cultural shenanigans of just like she's had enough goodness. Let's put her down. But this is, it's not just, it doesn't just happen to famous women, right? It happens to all of us in our lives all the time. There's sort of a cap on what women can achieve, how much they can be seen and celebrated
Starting point is 00:47:57 before we decide we're done. They're annoying. And I think that we all need to be super conscious of this pattern in order to break it. We do not do this to men. They do not run out their relevancy curves in the same way at all.
Starting point is 00:48:14 There are a few men, obviously, but they generally have to do something legitimately bad, whereas women aren't doing, what's the crime? Right? Being there. Taylor Swift on a jumbo-tron is somehow the worst thing in the entire world. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:30 Versus pick male celebrity who has been courts at Timothy Shalame. I know because I'd follow him obsessively. He was like courtside at fucking every single Knicks game in the playoffs. Did people get sick of him? No. They were like, what a Knicks fan he is. Yay. Go him.
Starting point is 00:48:45 He loves his home team versus Taylor Swift supporting her boyfriend. Ew, gross. Oh, gross. Go away Taylor Swift, right? So part of it is just being conscious. of what's happening here, which is that women are not allowed. Again, it goes to the very beginning of our conversation. Standing apart is dangerous. Excelling. Yeah, tall poppy in the poppy field. Bad. So the more we, and that is in us. We're very conscious. Rightly so, I need to be very
Starting point is 00:49:18 careful about how much I'm putting myself out there, how much public sex, public sex, Yes, but public success I achieve because people are going to come for me. It's like an invariable thing. I will say, and I write about her in choosing wholeness, but one example of a woman in our space who I use almost as exposure therapy for this is Karas Wisher. Yeah. And because she like flexes like no one's business, she just flexes all over the place. it makes me. She name drops like crazy. Name drops, access journalism, etc. And it, and he give, Scott gives her shit. He is also flexi. I'm much more tolerant of it from him. But I listen to them. I mean, I love that I love pivot, but also as exposure therapy, because I, I spend the time being like,
Starting point is 00:50:16 this is making me uncomfortable, Kara, stop bragging, stop bragging as a way to just be present with myself and to recognize what's happening in me in that moment. And she doesn't give a fuck, right? She, because, and that's another good example of our culture where women are conditioned to perform their goodness in the world. Men are conditioned for power. But because women are conditioned to perform their goodness, we're incredibly susceptible to reputational harm. All you have to do is say a woman is bad. And then we usually like take ourselves out. It's just so uncomfortable. But Kara doesn't care. And so in that way, she's a great example of someone who just keeps going. She doesn't give a shit. And so as much as we can sort of embody that energy and try, like use her as a
Starting point is 00:51:10 persona, it's good for us. Go and brag a little bit. Go and just practice. Do it with your friends. just like brag to each other. It's so uncomfortable to worry and yet we all need to practice. You want to hear mine? Yes. Bragging is, I don't have a problem with that. Good. It will shock no one to hear that I have big tits and I only discovered I had big tits like seven years ago.
Starting point is 00:51:40 And I just, I didn't know because I was always taught to cover up. and taught to not wear anything too revealing and not basically dress my body type. And a woman I follow, she's very famous, I'll say it. I've never told this to her. I think it's Noel Downing. Have you seen this woman? Similar size to mine. They're out all the time, like all the time.
Starting point is 00:52:06 And not in a way that is like only fans purposely provocative. It's just like, I'm on a trip in France with my child and my husband. I'm wearing a dress that I want to wear. I happen to have bigger boobs, so they're just out. And a couple years ago, I was following her, and I was seeing so much boob, and it made me uncomfortable, and I unfollowed her. Because I was like, she's showing off and, like, sexualizing herself. Now, I grew up Catholic. Again, I grew up with, like, you do not, like, you do not dress like this.
Starting point is 00:52:40 And then I got more comfortable with my own body, because, of course, it was me. Of course, it was me being like, I feel deeply uncomfortable with this because I feel like it's wrong or bad or it's drawing attention to yourself or it's asking for it, right? And as soon as I started uncoupling that belief with the way my body looked, I literally started following her again, and I realized I hadn't followed her for a while, started following her again probably six months a year ago, when I got more comfortable with that because I was like, This challenges this feeling I have that I grew up with that society tells me. And now you'll see on Instagram, the titties are out all the time for me.
Starting point is 00:53:21 I love your boobs. Thank you. They're so heavy, dude, and I thought about cutting them off. But that's a story from another time. But it was literally like, okay, the bragging thing, whatever, talking about money, those things have never truly made me uncomfortable. But this is one thing that did. And I saw another woman doing something that I thought was scandalous or bad, or again, asking for it, calling attention to herself.
Starting point is 00:53:48 She was just existing. Her boobs happened to be big. And in society, we have conflated, you know, busty women with male desire. And it's like, that is a socialization. That is a social construct. And as soon as I realized that that was what was triggering me and unpacked it, my life got better. Yeah. No, but it's so like that's the first step is just consciousness. It's just that. It's like, oh, I can actually take a breath and recognize what's happening in me and then can I get more comfortable with this? And it will show up as you become, honestly, like whenever I get upset, I do this with one of my best friends, Sarah, who's my neighbor and we walk all the time. It's like, we diagnose each other. It's like, Sarah, what's happening? Why am I, why is this person driving me crazy? Like, what can you? tell me what's happening and then we like diagnose it together until we land at like oh oh i'm just
Starting point is 00:54:48 jealous she's like getting away with this i'm jealous she's like so many people you know are celebrating this thing about her you know it's so helpful it will change your life it will change your life just that one action right yeah yeah your boots need to be free tory don't cut them And the comments are going to continue, right? Like, I never commented on Noel's videos or photos, but it was what was going on in my head. And there's just some people that make the stupid decision to take every thought in their head and put it on the internet, right? Or even, you know, your family might say something to you that is deeply hurtful. But it's like, once you realize what's going on and start unpacking that for you, that's not where it ends because you're going to continue getting challenged in that belief.
Starting point is 00:55:39 over and over and over again. Yeah. So how do we sustain the work we just did? Like, how do we carry that through when something else is triggering for us? Or when, you know, we do have, like, a very significant thing happened in our life. Like, oh, I went for the raise and I was told no, and I was, I don't know, fired because of it. Or I, yeah, posted a photo on the Internet where I was confident and I got 40,000 people who unfollowed me, which is a real life thing that happened to me.
Starting point is 00:56:10 It's like, how do we deal with the real life consequences of that? I mean, that's a major question. I mean, I tend to be, I'm a very spiritual person. And so I think, and I'm not like a, let's slap some toxic positivity on this and say, everything is to your benefit always. But I would say, all right, Tori, you've been liberated from 40,000 people who, feel like they should, that you are in some way reflection of them and that they should be able to control your actions and you should be according to their preferences, right? Like so many of us
Starting point is 00:56:48 live our lives, like we get to control the external thermostat of the world to fit our preferences. It's actually bonkers, right? But this is how many of us feel. Like I can't be around anything that bothers me right now. And for the person who went for the raise and clearly these people don't see your value, right? They feel like they can just get on without you. And that's really good information to have. These are not your people. This is not your job. And so I'm not suggesting that these aren't hard, horrible lessons. But I think we get sort of the redirection that we need from life sometimes to, you can either sort of orient your success. to pleasing people externally,
Starting point is 00:57:41 recognizing you actually have no control over how people feel about you and whether they're going to like you or not. Or you can just keep working on your own internal GPS and integrity and not trade off your values for likes or a job that feels bad. I've said this many times on the show, but it's like if you are sacrificing your own happiness,
Starting point is 00:58:07 your own contentment, your own worthiness to make other people feel more comfortable. Bad idea. Bad idea. It's a bad idea. I try it, guys. It doesn't work. And, yeah, in my work in the short term. We all do things that we hate in the short term to do what needs to be done.
Starting point is 00:58:24 Oh, it absolutely works in the short term. Yeah. Yeah, you, somebody else is more comfortable, but then it, it, like, festers. And it just like, it's like a little, I don't know, it's like you swallowed a tapeworm. it just like starts feeding on you from the inside. Yeah. And it becomes increasingly threatening. Like you, look, you survive, you not only survived losing 40,000 people, but you're doing great. Right. And again, I'm giving an example, but there's a million. I have even higher stakes examples of this in my life. Yeah. That for privacy reasons, I'm not going to share.
Starting point is 00:58:57 But like, I have very high stakes examples of this. I know other people who have even higher stakes examples of this where, yeah, they've lost their livelihood. They've lost their spouse. They've lost, you know, close family relationships. And that's deeply, deeply hard and deeply uncomfortable. Yeah. And life, unfortunately, is, like, suffering is part of life. And so are things happening to us that we would never choose and do not want. And yet, when you look back, it is easy to say, well, often easy to say.
Starting point is 00:59:33 even like I think about some of the horrible things that have happened to me. My best friend died, my husband, my brother's husband, when he was 39, he was like my brother, my best friend. And I can even look at his death at this point. It's been eight years. I mean, I would do anything to have another conversation with him. And yet he course corrected, there was something about that loss that course corrected me in a way for which I can actually find gratitude. And that might sound like a perverse example, but I'm not alone in having that
Starting point is 01:00:08 experience. It's like, what do you take, when you take a terrible thing that's happened, and then you're like, I need to actually use this. This can't be for not. And I'm sure a lot of people who we've all lost jobs, it's a right of passage. And often it can just put you on a better track. It's just, it's very scary. I'm not suggesting. that it's not. But this is life, you know? There's a line I love that you said, and I felt the same way for so long. Quote, I was carrying my head around on a stick when referencing being so on your head and disconnected from your body. I think this is another thing that we're told is like, um, logic is good. And of course it is. But like, I logicked my way to so much anxiety. Like,
Starting point is 01:01:03 I logicked my way to so much worry and concern to the point where, like, I was not checking in on my body at all or felt like even that was too woo-woo or that was kind of bullshit because your brain and your thoughts are what matter. So how is your relationship to your body changed throughout this work? And is this something women are conditioned into? I think definitely conditioned into, in part, I mean, it gets into the sort of the metaphysical, like the masculine is associated with sort of ascension and spirit and our father, the Lord, and the woman is sort of the base material.
Starting point is 01:01:45 Material, actually, it shares the root of mother. Matter is mother. So it's like the feminine is the body and sort of the womb and the tomb. I was just going to say, right where you're giving birth is like center, right? That's your center of gravity is your pelvic center. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:02:01 And we live in a culture. doesn't really have much reverence for women, for women's bodies, for the planet, right? There's the extreme devaluation of the feminine. So, yes, I think that we are taught, like, you want to be thoughtful, ascended out of your body. And many of us have lost connection. I have been, you know, I became dissociated from my body through early sexual trauma. That happens to a ton of women, too, right? and boys and men.
Starting point is 01:02:31 But, so we sort of disconnect. We just, like, it doesn't matter what our body wants, right? And it gets into the gluttony chapter in our hunger. Like, you can't know what you want, body. You're bad, and I need to discipline you and rule over you and decide what you get and what you don't get, right? So our whole lives is really spent in, like, discounting, devaluing, ignoring, and ruling over the body.
Starting point is 01:02:56 There's so much to be gained from being embodied. It's how we experience pleasure. It's how, it's just like amazing to do the work to become more embodied. This has been a big thing for me in the last five to ten years and it's ongoing. The other thing is, and we write about this a fair amount in the book, but I have learned how to bring my body into decision making in a way that has kept me from betraying myself. I practice what I call the full body no before I say yes to doing anything it's like okay mentally I can give you a million reasons why this is a good idea and I should do this thing but like I run it through my body does my energy go up or does my energy go down and if it goes down
Starting point is 01:03:45 it's like I don't want to do this this is a no this is a no I couldn't do that until I learned how to bring my body into it. In fact, in light of, we were having a conversation before this about this whole strategy that we're supposed to do around our shows. And like every part of my body was like, this is an energy down, full body, no for me. I cannot do this. I'm still fighting between my head and my body about that. But like, right now it's, I have to listen to my body.
Starting point is 01:04:17 It's a no. Yeah. Again, said it a million times. if you've listened to this show many times, you've heard me say this. But what I've realized is intuition is knowing without being able to know why you know, if that means like you can't logically tell somebody. When somebody asks you, how do you know that? You literally, the only answer is, I don't know.
Starting point is 01:04:38 I just know. Yeah. And every time I've had an intuitive feeling, it's, one, been 100% correct. But two, it's been very hard to describe how I know. Yeah. Which makes decision making in a very brain logical, masculine society very difficult, especially, like, running a business. How do you know? I just know. That's not a good answer, but it's a true answer. Yeah. And I think if you were to poll most major decision makers at companies, day traders, et cetera, they're making decisions based on that knowing. And, it is intuitive, it is instinctual, and it is not, they're not like evaluating all the data and using that to inform their every single decision. They are just, they know. And I think that that gets stronger, the more that you exercise it. When we come back from a word with our
Starting point is 01:05:37 sponsors, we're wrapping up our conversation with Elise, including talking about why we have such a hard time trusting our intuition and our bodies. Also, fair warning, we have a light spoiler for Life with Pie, which is one of my favorite books of all time. You'll hear it coming. You can pop ahead two minutes if somehow you haven't read the book that came out in 2004. All right. See after the break. I don't know about you, but every summer, I realize I don't have the clothes I need. I'm like, do I just wear jeans? Nope, that's too hot. I have sweaters. Don't. Swetters are bad in the summer. And this is what happened to me last year. And I was like, I need a new summer wardrobe.
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Starting point is 01:08:09 Masterclass.com slash ff pod. I'm not going to spend too much time on this, but one thing I've thought a lot about that you're actually the perfect person to talk about this with, is that all of these things we use stereotypically as women to, like, inform our decisions. So I'm thinking like tarot, astrology, our gut, all of these things are dismissed, and I think they're dismissed because they're feminine. Yes, 100%. And yes, this is my Ballywick. As you said, I love this stuff. If it's remotely woo-woo, I'm interested in it because I think it is this devalued source of wisdom and a way to connect with the universe. And so much a patriarchal religion has been funneled through this God the father archetype, right?
Starting point is 01:09:02 Right. Which is also crazy. And I can say that as someone who went to 18 straight years of Catholic school. If you're not in it and you look at any other religion, it's fucking. bananas. Like you want me to eat and they Catholics literally believe it is the body and blood of Christ. They believe it has been transfigured. Yes. That's insane if you're not part of that religion. That's bonkers. And I can do this for every religion, right? But we believe that. So why can't we believe other things? Yeah. No, Catholicism, it's like the mystery cult of it is
Starting point is 01:09:36 wild. And as you mentioned, like the rituals, it's wild. It's traditional. nuts. But most modern religions, and I say this is like a deeply spiritual person, it's a form of culture, right? It's actually quite different than the way that it was intended. So Jesus didn't write. He had his 12 disciples, this Jewish rabbi wandering around the desert. The New Testament was written 100 years after he died, passed on by. So we've structured these things. They're all these, it's all a culture. But when you go into the wisdom traditions, of all the Abrahamic religions, et cetera. They're all more or less describing the same thing, which is this oneness that, like, it becomes duality, et cetera. They're all telling very similar stories. And it's much more aligned, really, with, like, tarot. Terror and Kabbalah, for example,
Starting point is 01:10:30 which is the mystical arm of Judaism and sort of the wisdom tradition of Judaism. They are rooted together. There's this amazing guy, Mark Horn, who teaches Kabbalah Tara. and astrology, like the three magi, they're astrologers. The sign of Jesus is the fish. He was born in Pisces.
Starting point is 01:10:51 And so anyway, so these are all these like super ancient, emergent ideas. The I Ching, I mean, it's incredible when you actually go into like the Tao Te Ching. And it's this way of talking to the universe. And they're old. and beautiful and so fun. And I mean, let me tell you, I ask the E Ching a lot of questions. I throw coins all the time.
Starting point is 01:11:21 And I always get the advice I need. I love, love all of these systems. I think they're so rich, in part, because they just put you in conversation with yourself. Yeah. Yeah. Well, it's like the flip-a-coin, right? It's not about the outcome.
Starting point is 01:11:38 It's about your reaction to the outcome. Yeah. So it's like, should I do this thing and you flip it and you get an answer and you either like the answer or you don't like the answer that tells you what you want. Yeah. And I would say like, for example, the Dao or the I Ching, if you, and there are lots of, I have a lot of resources for this and I've done podcast episodes about it. But if you, you have to ask a well formulated question and what you get back in these hexagrams are these like cones, this like incredible, beautiful wisdom that you. you have to then translate and apply. So it's also not like, I don't, I don't call a psychic and say, do I do this or I do, do I do that.
Starting point is 01:12:19 I don't do, I don't even believe in it. I believe in free will and there are endless, endless options. But I like to be in a dialogue with my higher self or the universe or God, whatever it is, my spirit guides. One, it just makes life more fun, Tori. Yeah. And two, I find it as I'm, it's a way of me getting in touch with myself. We can cut this. Did you ever read Life a Pie?
Starting point is 01:12:49 I did a million years ago about being on the boat with all the animals. But that, it turns out in the end, he maybe didn't. And then he asked, what's the better story? It's one of my favorite books of all time. Because you spend this entire book, he's on a raft with Richard Parker, the tiger, right? Yes. And he survives, right? and, you know, the orangutang name orange juice and all of this.
Starting point is 01:13:12 And then you get to the end. And it's about a three-pager where he's like, maybe none of that happened. Here's the actual story. Orange juice is a representation of my mom. Richard Parker was the chef who tried to kill me. Like, all of this stuff. And then you get to the end. And the guy's like, well, that happened.
Starting point is 01:13:28 And he goes, maybe it did. What's the better story? Yeah. Like, does it actually matter what happened? Does it actually matter? I find that's, I think that's such a critical question. And I also find that when people try and shut, like, me down or other, often women, about, I have 18 crystals on my desk. They're pretty.
Starting point is 01:13:52 They're pretty. But I think they're really powerful. What if that's it? They're pretty. How does your iPhone work? There's a crystal in there. I love crystals. I wear them all the time, black tourmaline on the string in my bra.
Starting point is 01:14:05 off. But I find that when people, it's like, it drives people, some people, crazy. Oh, yeah, because it's not logical. It's not masculine. No, it's not masculine. I'm like, yeah, maybe it doesn't work. Maybe a lot of the things that men do don't work either. Don't work. But it gives my life meaning. I think it even brings my awareness to like, what do I need to like shake out of my body? Black tourmaline is like, they call it the energetic vacuum cleaner. So it's like, all right, I need to like, actually, I'm going to, instead I'm going to take a shower and just like get this day off of me. what's the harm? But it's like what's, and what's the better story? And I think my, in my life,
Starting point is 01:14:41 like, having faith in some higher order and wanting to talk to the other side and wanting to be in communion has made my life so much richer, adds meaning. And yeah, I'm sorry if that's offensive to someone, go find your own meaning. Yeah. The other thing with Pi, too, is that he practices three religions. And, his rabbi, his priest, and his, um, uh, um, um, um, um, yes, thank you. But yeah, they all get together and they basically are like, he can't do this. And he literally, they like, please read it. I'll send you a copy if you don't have. Yes. I love this book so much. I studied it in school, which was so cool. It was one of the books we read in high school. And, um, yeah, they all like literally have a basically
Starting point is 01:15:27 a conference call with him. They're like, you need to pick one. And he goes, why? And they're like, well, you just, you need to. And all three of them are. like talking about how yeah it's crazy that he's trying to do all three at once and he's like well i get different things from all of them so i think that most people don't know though that they're all have this Abraham they're all Abraham they're all have the same father people don't know that about our three major religions yes i yeah funny yeah okay so you wrote this workbook i have it on my desk i'm so excited i'm just gonna just you're gonna have fun in there it's to rip me a new one, and I'm so excited for it.
Starting point is 01:16:07 So you wrote this with a co-author, Courtney, who you said, okay, I want to collaborate with this person for the workbook. Why was it important for you to have a collaborator in this? So when I would take on our best behavior out into the world, women would say, okay, great, now what? You know, what do I do about this now that I can see it? And I didn't really have great answers. I have far more answers now, having lived.
Starting point is 01:16:35 that for a while. But amazing things would happen in these groups of women once women start talking and sharing. Now, I'm not a therapist and I'm not a coach and I could probably grant myself more authority. But when you're getting into really deep territory with women, I felt like I am not equipped to take people apart and put them back together again in a way that sometimes really deep sharing can evoke. And so I was asked to do a workshop and I wanted to do it with a, with a coach or a therapist. And so my friend Courtney said she would do it and she's a brilliant coach and she uses the Enneagram and a lot of different other models and the Enigram and the sins are related. And so we did this workshop together and it was amazing. And she brought to the
Starting point is 01:17:29 workshop this process, which is now in the workbook of these seven tools for figuring out what stories are running your life, making them really big, teaching the class, which we discussed, creating personas, et cetera. And it was so powerful, so fun, and really deep. People shifted, did some work in that room and really started to shift some of these stories. And so it was just a no-brainer. I was already working on this workbook to use. this process as the backbone for the book. And it was fun. I love collaborating as much as I also love doing my own work. So that was the genesis. I felt like I wanted to go into rooms and feel like I could relax into letting what things happen. Yeah. Without being like, oh my God, what am I going to do
Starting point is 01:18:24 if something big comes up? Are you an enneagram three? I am a six, though a three is a good guess. I type, I always type as a one, three, or five. I'm an enegra. I was going to say one, and I was like, I get more three vibes from her. You're a six. I'm a six. What are you eight?
Starting point is 01:18:44 No. Nope. My public version of me is an eight. Nope. Okay. As soon as I say it, I'm a two. You're a two. Okay.
Starting point is 01:18:54 Well, eight and twos. Two. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. If you, and I'm also a cancer, which shocks people. But as soon as you know me in real life, I am actually very sensitive. I'm very sensitive. I cry at everything. And I also just want to be loved. So, I'm Leslie Nope. I just, I want to be loved so badly. And that's so funny. Well, eights go to twos under stress. Does does a two go to eight under stress? Okay. All right. this makes sense. Yeah. Yep. Saj, Sun, Pisces Moon, Virgo rising. Oh. I have a lot of Virgo. Mm-hmm. That's why everybody likes you. Virgoes are the best. Okay. My last question for you, and I literally, I could talk to you for so much longer. I could talk to you for six hours about this. Me too. What is the most rewarding part about embracing wholeness in your life? Oh, just to be able to relax. You know, I feel like I was holding, I was so rigid about some major stories in my life,
Starting point is 01:20:04 like the one I mentioned earlier. I'm the only one who can do it right, so I should do it all. And even just working with that story to relax around it and release it and to say, I'm not going to be the person who does everything today. I'm going to sit on the couch and watch Love Island. And while I do that, I'm going to patrol my own brain to stop. me from criticizing myself. Even just like being like, I want to be slothful. I want to be lazy. I want to be someone who understands popular culture. It's just better to just be like, I am all of these things
Starting point is 01:20:42 and I can be lazy. I can be gluttonous. I can, I like embrace these parts of myself too. It's a much, much better way to live. Let me tell you. freeing. Yes. Yes. And I think that's what we all want is to actually feel free. Yes. And I think what we all want, or at least what I want, is just to turn down the volume on that voice inside my head that is scolding and chastising and judging me all the time. And I have really gotten good now at doing that. And it's like, not today. Leave me alone. Go away. Totally. I admire you in your work so deeply. I'm so thankful to have you. Please plug away both books because I have both of them on my desk and everybody needs to read them. They are a required reading. Thank you. All right. So
Starting point is 01:21:35 on our best behavior is the price women pay to be good. That book is coming out in paperback. The companion workbook is called choosing wholeness over goodness, a process for reclaiming your full self. You can just do the workbook without reading on our best behavior. My editor wouldn't want me to say that, but it's true. And it works sort of in any format, any story in your life. And my podcast is pulling the thread, which is the name of my substack as well. And you can follow me on Instagram, but at least Lundon. In our 100K club program, we do a book club every quarter. And yours is our third book after myself and another financial book. So I'm really excited. Amazing. I literally, I was like, I talked to
Starting point is 01:22:23 my programs manager. And I was like, this one next. We're doing this one next. So, thank you. Well, if you need anyone to answer any reader questions, you know where to find me. Oh, my gosh. Don't tell me with a good time. Thank you. Thank you so much. Thank you. Okay. As we're wrapping up, have you ever read the poem warning by Jenny Joseph? Do you know this poem? Will you read it? I'm going to do a really bad version of it. I've talked about this on a different episode. I saw this poem probably eight years ago. It was on the wall of the wall of, of a bathroom and I took a photo of it. Yeah, I had to have been like 23. Oh, okay. When I'm an old
Starting point is 01:23:01 woman, I shall wear purple with a red hat that doesn't go and doesn't suit me. And I shall spend my pension on brandy and summer gloves and satin sandals and say we've no money for butter. I shall sit down on the pavement when I'm tired and gobble up samples and shops and press alarm bells and run my stick along the public railings and make up for the sobriety of my youth. I shall go out in my slippers in the rain and pick the flowers in other people's gardens and learn to spit. You can wear terrible shirts and grow more fat and eat three pounds of sausages at a go or only bread and pickle for a week and hoard pens and pencils and beer mats and things in boxes. But now we must have clothes that keep us dry and pay our rent and not swear in the street
Starting point is 01:23:48 and set a good example for the children. We must have friends for dinner and read the papers. But maybe I ought to practice a little now. So people who know me are not too shocked and surprised when suddenly I am old and start to wear purple. That's an amazing poem. I cry every time I read. It's so good. It's literally everything you're talking about. It's like, I don't give a fuck. I'm going to wear a hat that doesn't go with my purple dress and I'm going to eat a bunch of food that makes me happy and I'm going to spit in public. And like, yeah, and make up for the sobriety of my youth. That is amazing.
Starting point is 01:24:29 And then like, but now I have to do the right thing. I have to buy clothes and pay our rent. But what if I just practice a little bit right now? Ugh, I love it. Here's to practicing. Thank you so much to Elise for joining us. You can find her incredible life-changing. And no, I don't use life-changing in hyperbole here.
Starting point is 01:24:50 Her life-changing workbook, choosing wholeness over good. wherever you get your books. You can also subscribe to her podcast pulling the thread wherever you're listening right now and her substack, Eliselunin.com, L-O-E-H-N-E-N. Thank you, as always for being here, financial feminists. Thank you for your support of feminist media. Please share this episode with somebody that you know it will impact and help, and we'll see you back here soon. Bye. Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist, a Her First 100K podcast. For more information about financial feminist, her first 100K, our guests, and episode show notes, visit
Starting point is 01:25:26 Financial Feministpodcast.com. If you're confused about your personal finances and you're wondering where to start, go to her first hundredk.com slash quiz for a free personalized money plan. Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap. Produced by Kristen Fields and Tamisha Grant, research by Sarah Shortino, audio and video engineering by Alyssa Midcast, marketing and operations by Karina Patel and Amanda LaFew. Special thanks to our team at her first 100 K. Caitlin Sprinkel, Masha Bach-McGieva, Sasha Bonar, Ray Wong, Elizabeth McCumber, Daryl Ann Ingman, Shelby Duclos, Megan Walker, and Jess Hawks. Promotional graphics by Mary Stratton, photography by Sarah Wolfe, and theme music by Jonah Cohen Sound. A huge thanks to the entire
Starting point is 01:26:10 her first 100K community for supporting our show. Thank you.

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