Good Life Project - It’s Never Too Late to Let the Real You Shine. A Love Story. | Sherri Dindal
Episode Date: August 7, 2025What happens when a former investigator who spent 26 years keeping her true self hidden decides at age 50 to let it all out on social media? Meet Sherri Dindal, who transformed from living life behind... a mask to becoming The Real Slim Sherri, amassing 5.7 million followers by showing up with raw authenticity, humor and hard-won wisdom that's inspiring a generation of GenXers to reclaim their right to take up space. Her story reveals how two brushes with death led to an extraordinary reinvention, proving it's never too late to become who you truly are.You can find Sherri at: Connect with Sherri | Wholesome Hippy | Episode TranscriptIf you LOVED this episode, you’ll also love the conversations we had with Karen Walrond about rewriting the mid-life narrative to one of joy, grace and possibility.Check out our offerings & partners: Join My New Writing Project: Awake at the WheelVisit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount CodesCheck out our offerings & partners: Beam Dream Powder: Visit https://shopbeam.com/GOODLIFE and use code GOODLIFE to get our exclusive discount of up to 40% off. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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So what happens when a former investigator who spent 26 years keeping her true self-hidden
suddenly decides at age 50 to just let it all out on social media?
Well, when Sherry Dindle did exactly that, something remarkable and completely unexpected
happened.
Nearly six million people showed up to watch, to laugh, to cry, and heal alongside her.
These weren't just casual followers.
There were people, especially gen X women, who saw themselves in her story of breaking
free from decades of playing small and carrying trauma and silence of trying to fit into everyone
else's boxes. And they watched in real time as she transformed from someone who thought joy and
authenticity were for other people into a force of nature helping others reclaim their right
to take up space. I discovered Sherry in my own feed and Instagram one day and absolutely
fell in love with how she shows up, how she tells stories, how just incredibly relatable and real
she is. Sherry is known to her 5.7 million followers as the real Slim Sherry. She's a storyteller,
comedian, entrepreneur, and the founder of natural skincare brand, Wholesome Hippian. After 26 years
as an investigator, she just completely reinvented herself, become this powerful voice for
Gen X and a champion for authentic self-expression, especially for women who feel invisible or
constrained by society's expectations. And along the way, she reclaimed parts of herself
that had been dormant for decades. And what makes this conversation so completely,
also is how Sherry reveals the hidden gifts that often come wrapped in our greatest challenges.
She shares how surviving trauma and learning to unbecome everything she was conditioned to be led
her to discover a profound sense of freedom and joy. And her story really shows us that
our most meaningful transformations can happen at any time, at any age, that it's never
too late to become who we truly are and to share that person with the world. So excited to share
this conversation with you. I'm Jonathan Fields. And this.
This is Good Life Project.
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From the director of Meet the Parents and the writer of Poor Things comes The Roses.
Starring Academy Award winner Olivia Coleman, Academy Award nominee Benedict Cumberbatch,
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excitement, and a little bit of hatred, proving that marriage isn't all.
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See The Roses only in theaters, August 29.
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You're just really excited to dive into conversation with you.
I'm somebody who's been following us.
along, laughing along, enjoying poignant moments and insights. Fellow Gen X are here.
All right.
As we have this conversation, you're a storyteller, comedian, founder of a natural skin care brand,
a wholesome hippie, a voice of Gen X creator. We'll talk about that because it's kind of like
an interesting thing to be named that. Something like closing on six million followers on
different platforms, brains behind the Gen X, some of the brains behind the Gen X take over at comedy
tour. Champion of all things, Gen X and Midlife. It's almost
It's almost like you're on top of the world and sharing your true self. But this wasn't your
life always. This is a fairly recent moment in the history of your life. And I guess it was a couple of
weeks ago you shared a post where you were honored with an award that seemed to be really
deeply meaningful to you. But in that post also, you start to share the fact that life
leading up to this, the first 50 plus years or so, was profoundly different for you. So I want to
take a step back in time and get a better understanding for, you know, what before times were like
for you? I think I had a pretty standard, well, I can't say standard. I had a pretty common
Gen X upbringing, I think. I didn't realize that until I started creating content. I started
really making content and talking about the past and the history, my history. And what came from
that was this discovery of a collective of people that were like, hey, you're telling my story.
That was my story, too.
And I never realized it, you know, I think you kind of go through life, you know, having
your own experiences and whether those be good, bad, you know, I had children and I've had,
you know, been married and, you know, you do all of what life tells you you're supposed to do.
You go through whatever you go through and then, you know, you land in this place where you're
like, okay, this is who I am.
when I turned 50, I just peeling back all of who I thought I was. And in discovering this
collective of people, I think I also discovered I wasn't alone. And I think I always thought my experience,
my past was unique. You know, it was like, this is my story. And then you start discovering a
bunch of people, millions of people actually that are like, that was my story too. And so it was
comforting in a way. It was somewhat healing. It helped me to progress in my healing.
from my, you know, just again, my past. And finding this space where I felt at home. I felt
a camaraderie, a similarity, if you will. And it's been wild because I had a traumatic
childhood. And you left home when I was 16, had my first child at 17, started a career, ran that
career for 26 years, ran hard. That was basically my entire identity for most of my life, just
being a mom and being an investigator, and those are the only things I thought I was good at.
But I always had this gnawing feeling that I was supposed to be doing something else.
I had some greater purpose that I just couldn't put my finger on.
I couldn't really get past all of the baggage that I was carrying, I guess.
And, you know, I finally quit my job.
It would be 10 years this year.
I quit my job 10 years ago.
I was burnout.
I was tired.
I felt like I needed to be doing something different.
and I didn't know what that different thing was going to be.
I had zero clue what I was going to do.
And I quit my job, started a business and 10 years later, here I am.
But three and a half years ago, even though I had quit my job and I'd started, I have
a couple of businesses, actually.
I started a couple of businesses.
I still didn't feel like I was walking in my purpose.
I didn't feel like I had really was, I just again knew that there was something greater
that I felt called to.
I just couldn't figure out what it was.
And the reason I couldn't really figure it out is because,
all of the baggage was in the way. And so I started sort of this process of not just healing,
but sort of unbecoming all of the things that I believed I was supposed to be and that I
believed that I was and peeling back those layers and trying to rediscover the person that I
always was. I just had become something I think other people had conditioned me to be. And so I talk a
lot about that. I sort of started chipping away, not on purpose. When I first started making videos and
content, I was just making them for me. They were therapeutic for me in a way to just start talking
about these stories and memories that I had and trying to reconnect with a time when life did
feel good. And I started chipping away a little at a time at some of those tougher. I guess maybe
even taboo topics or topics that people may be suppressed and buried. And I know that I did.
So yeah, I started telling some of the, what I consider to be just truths.
You know, I think there's a lot of what you see online.
You see a lot of people creating, you know, videos that will make you laugh, or they're doing
dance trends, or they're, you know, they're talking about this thing or that thing.
And there's not a lot of real.
And you have, I guess, the luxury when you create content to edit, right?
Just like a movie that you make a movie.
You can have the luxury of the edit.
and you get this well curated feed, pictures are perfect, or the video is well edited.
And a lot of, there's, you just wonder sometimes how much of that's real.
I, when I started making content, I was just doing that.
I was just being myself, I was just finally for once being like, this is me.
And not the corporate version of me, not the version that everybody had raised me to be.
I wanted to be raw and real and true to myself.
And so that's what started to pour out of me and through these videos.
Like I said, they were therapeutic for me.
me in the beginning to just sort of really step into my authenticity and say, you know what,
I'm tired of tempering myself and quieting myself or shrinking myself to make other people
comfortable. And that's what I did. And what happened was millions of people apparently
enjoyed that. And I'm not for everybody. You know, I get that. I joke, I'm not everybody's
cup of tea, but it's good thing I drink coffee because I don't really care. And it feels good to just,
you know, finally just honor myself and who I am. And in doing that, I think I honor a lot of other people,
a lot of other people that wish they could have that kind of a voice or feel brave enough to speak their
truth. And what's come of it is just this amazing ride of nostalgia and truth and, again,
authenticity and this sense of freedom, really. Just enjoying the ride and be, you know, the freedom of being who I am.
and then also discovering friendships.
And, again, this collective of people that are like, hey, you know, we were the generation that everybody, we were the forgotten, they call us the forgotten generation, right?
Invisible generation, you know, forgotten.
We still get skipped.
You know, there's still TV shows that are, or news shows that'll put up the generations.
You'll see boomer than millennial.
They'll just skip right over us, even now.
And we're in our 50s.
And the oldest Gen Xers are turning 60 this year, you know, which is crazy.
to think about. And so to think that all this time, we're still being lost over or forgotten.
And I love being able to breathe life into our stories and to give, not that we want attention,
because Jen Exters are not one to want attention, just to, I think, to allow us to have space,
to allow us to feel like we can take, we're allowed to take up space. We were raised on, you know,
tough love and we're to be seen and not heard and rush it off, suck it up, rub some dirt on,
it like we weren't you know we weren't allowed to complain or whine or we often were again just
kind of invisible and we were taught to be that way and I think we've gone through our lives for the
most part living in that space and being okay with this is all the space that I'm allowed to take up
and we've accepted that and now a lot of us are coming into this middle age of life the ones that
have survived that made it this far I joke that our generations the smallest because a lot of us
didn't survive and so the ones that are arriving at this point life in their 50s and now turning 60
you're like, you know what, I don't necessarily like that I have to live in this box that you've put me in.
I want to take up more space and I hope that I give people the courage to do that.
I mean, there's so much that I'd love to dive into there.
And I'm nodding along also because for so many people, our age, this has been an experience.
But it's also because part of the experience is that we don't talk about these things and we don't talk about them in a public way and a public forum.
It's because we were the latchkey kids.
We were the kids who are, you know, like, whatever the opposite of helicopter parenting is, like,
that's what we experience as kids. You know, it's like you get on your bike in the morning. At some
point, you wander home, hopefully like not too bruised and banged up. And it was really just
the generation that was largely in the early days left alone. And then as you described,
like as we sort of like rose through life, became largely invisible. As somebody, we both
started a number of companies and nobody markets to Gen X. Nobody runs demographic groups or
for Gen X, there are very few products and services that are really focused on that sort of
45 to 60 age group. It remains to this day largely invisible in the world of commerce and in
service and in solution providing. And a big part of that experience when you're younger
is the expectation that you're not really here to take up space. And I'm curious for you,
like, how did that actually show up on a day-to-day basis in your life? Oh, gosh. It's
up in, I think, almost every way, you know, again, going back to that idea of not just of being
invisible, but being taught to keep yourself, like, small and quiet. And, you know, we, again,
that, that standard phrase, I thought it was just a phrase that I heard, that we were to be
children or to be seen and not heard. And then I'm discovering millions of people who, who follow
me or like, you know, that is so commonly shows up in my comments of, yeah, you know,
when I touch on a topic that to what you said, we don't talk about. We've just, you know,
we've gone through life. We've sucked it up. We accepted it. That's what we were taught.
And for me, it showed up in a lot of ways of just sort of masking. You know, I think that it taught me
to mask. It taught me to stay quiet, to keep secrets, to not draw attention to myself. It definitely
taught me to be apathetic. And I think apathy is sort of our hallmark of our generation.
It taught me to be apathetic. It taught me to be sarcastic. And a lot of those, what I've come to realize later in life is that those were survival techniques. Those were ways that helped me get through life and face all the not just challenges in life, but the ugliness of the world. It helps your invisibility cloak to be even stronger, I guess. I think about how we as kids and then, you know, the way a lot of us were raised and the messaging that we heard from not to,
just our parents, but from society in general. It wasn't just the people that were directly
influencing our lives, but it was even just the general population. It's religion. It's
your teachers. It's other role models in your life that have in ways passed on conditioning
that, as I talk about, wires you a certain way. And it wired me that way. And it showed up in my
life every single day. And it's still, I'm still unpacking a lot of that. I'm still having to
peel back layer by layer, trying to get to the root of who maybe I really am. I never really
knew that version of myself because it became buried under all that conditioning. And again,
that hardwiring, it's almost like going in and ripping out those wires and allowing myself
to believe that I deserve to feel happiness and joy and peace. And I deserve to feel a sense
of freedom that I'm no longer bound by those, that set of rules that were given.
given to me and that were given to a lot of us. I mean, I think about that for the time,
most of us came up with boomer parents. Some had silent generational parents, but a lot of us
thinking about latchkey kids. And when a lot of moms were going to work, you had dual,
dual income households that were really starting to evolve in the late 70s, early 80s. A lot of
kids spent time with their silent gen grandparents. And so you had that conditioning and sort of a little bit
of an even tougher love, if you will, in some ways, which is a lot of why the boomers are the way
they are. But a lot of that was handed down from generation to generation. And the way that it
shows up, I think for a lot of us, if we're truthful with ourselves, which I've had to really
come into being, not just telling truth, but being truthful with myself, is that that still
shows up today in a lot of ways. You know, it still makes us question ourselves. It might make
us hesitate more. It might make us, again, that masking that I think a lot of us, especially
Chen Xers are so good at, is, you know, putting on that tough face or that mask so that we show up
the way we think other people expect us to or what makes other people comfortable. That was very much
a taught, what would be the word, sorry, words are hard because I'm 52. It was sort of a taught behavior
or trait, if you will. And so it's, you know, it's learn. It's, it's, I hope to show.
with people that you that's that's not your destiny you don't have to carry that around that
foundation that was built for you you can tear it down and start with a new foundation that you're
never too old you're never too far gone if you will it's never too late to sort of reinvent yourself
and that's what's happened for me it's just and i never never planned it that way i didn't expect
to be here where i am going from a person who was an investigator most pretty much my entire adult life
and towed a very hard line working closely with law enforcement and just this I was married to a cop
and we both just pretty rigid people you could be very rigid and you show up you know sort of in a more
can be a little bit more aggressive and assertive when you need to be but also only when only when you
need to be and I think coming up in that world made me even more I was well conditioned for it but
I even conditioned myself even more to conform and show up in the way.
world in a very particular way. And that just gets, eventually you get tired of that. That mask or that
armor you wear gets heavy. As I moved into my 50s, I just was like, I don't, I don't want to
carry this around anymore. I'm tired. It was, you know, it just was weighing me down. And I wanted more.
And I try to share that with others in hopes that they'll find that discovery. And we'll be right back
after a word from our sponsors.
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See The Roses only in theaters, August 29.
For you, is this a gradual evolution?
Was this a slow bill towards a moment or happening an incident that just shook you and said,
I can't live as this person anymore?
Like, this is not me.
Like, there's a part of me or maybe parts of me that I know are in there.
Like in my private time, in my own mind, or maybe with my closest friends, I get to share
that part of me.
But I'm not actually living as that person.
I'm not showing up as that person.
And that's a heaviness that so many people carry.
Whether you're Gen X or not, that's a heaviness that I think,
especially deeper we get into life and we feel the responsibilities of life
or maybe being a parent.
And we kind of vary a lot of our identity in the name of towing the line,
of being, quote, a responsible adult and fitting into whatever communities were around.
And like you described the heaviness of that.
It just builds and builds and builds.
So I'm wondering, in your experience,
Was there a moment that just woke you up and said, no more? Or was it kind of like a gradual unfolding?
It's actually a little bit of both. For me, it was always sort of this, there's always sort of been this something. But I never could figure it. I was almost like there was this doorway that was locked. I knew it was there, but I couldn't figure out how to find the key or how to open the door. So there's always sort of this longing for something on the other side, but I couldn't find my way. And then there was this moment.
in time. And that was 2021 for me. I got sick with COVID. I was pretty sick. I came out on the other side of that
thinking that, yeah, I just was looking at the world through a different lens. At that time,
everybody was feeling the weight of the world, you know, this pandemic. And people were dying and families
were being torn apart where they were losing, you know, multiple people in their families to this pandemic.
And I just came out on the other side that being very grateful that I had made it onto the
other side, that I was here. And it was sort of a second chance for me. It kind of felt like a second
chance, but it wasn't like my first second chance. You know, I had had a moment in time in my 30s,
early 30s, where I had a horrific car accident. I was run under a semi, and I walked away from
that, unscathed. Car was totaled. You'd have thought whoever was in that accident died,
and I somehow walked away from that with a cut on my knuckle.
I should have in, I was too, I think too young to appreciate that moment.
I knew I was lucky, but I didn't really stop and appreciate all that had been given to me,
that I had had the second chance.
And so I just sort of got back, I called somebody at work.
I was in a company car, come get me off this freeway, got into another car and went right back to life.
I didn't pause to really appreciate that second chance.
You know, it didn't, it could have been a moment.
I don't regret it, but I look back and go, man, if I had just figured it out in that moment,
I could have got back another 18 years of my life, you know, that I wouldn't have wasted
in that place that I didn't have happiness and joy and the freedom that I have now.
And so when it happened again, and I felt like I'd had a second chance in 2021, I didn't want to waste it.
And I started doing the really deep work, the hard work that I had always wanted to do.
I just didn't know how to do it.
I couldn't figure out how to get past.
certain things. And so I started really doing that deep, meaningful work, if you will, and just
realizing the things that were holding me back was what I was holding on to, you know, that I couldn't
find a way, yeah, well, you know, just the trauma that I had gone through and, and things that were
still haunting me as an adult, you know, that I just, that had somehow, it kept showing up in my
life, you know, these flashbacks and things that I think if I'm honest with myself, I couldn't
let go of because in some way they were the only connection I had to the person who I was, right?
Like this person that I lost through all of that. And so it was learning to let those go.
It was learning to that learning to let go, learning to forgive, understanding and teaching myself
that forgiveness is not a weakness. It's a gift you give yourself. It frees you. And it was
coming to terms with those types of things and understanding that in the letting go process,
I could start to find pieces of myself that I actually wanted to reconnect with.
And that journey of healing, I used to think that healing was something you just did and then you were done.
It's not.
There's no finish line.
It's not something that you're done with one day and then life is just great.
No, it's more linear than that.
It's, it goes on forever.
It's a process that you do day in and day out and the healing itself gets easier.
but you are always sort of in this process of evolution and rediscovery and learning about
yourself. And it's the willingness to connect with that. It's the willingness to say,
this is who I am. And these things happen to me, but they don't define me anymore, you know,
and letting go of that. And I think a lot of people really struggle to get to that point of where
they're okay with just letting go and forgiving and finding a place where they can be at peace.
And that's what I had longed for my whole life, was just a sense of peace. And I finally have
found that. And like I said, it's still a process. I've come to terms of the idea that I'll always be
in that some phase of that, but that it gets easier with time and letting go, being willing to let go of
those, that armor that had been sort of woven into me through the conditioning and the trauma
and all the beliefs, you know, the belief system that, you know, if you think about it and a lot of
people don't, the belief system that most of us carry was given to us. It's molded through your
experiences and things that you do in life. But your early belief system is sort of given to you
by someone else through the lessons they teach you and the expectations. And so it was coming to
terms of the idea that I could still take parts of that belief system, that some of those
things still are true to me. But I was allowed to start writing my own. It was allowed to start
rewriting my own story and my own belief system in doing that. It's been amazing to come out of that
and go, oh, this is what happiness feels like. This is what peace can feel like. And again,
I hope for me, in the stories that I share and some of the things I talk about is that I don't
only affect my generation. I do talk a lot about my generation, but that I maybe will touch
or reach or even older people sooner. For the young people that they get there, I wish I could
have done it in when I was 32 when that accident happened. Like if I had 18 years or actually,
at this point is 20 years ago. If I had that 20 years, like what, maybe where would I be now? If I had
already had discovered peace and happiness and what joy felt like, because I used to believe that
happiness was for other people, you know, and that joy was just like a joke. Like it wasn't
real. You know, I didn't believe that it was something that existed, but it does. And you can find
it. It's just often buried, like I said, underneath all this other stuff, you know, the baggage that
we carry around that eventually gets very heavy. You use the word forgiveness, which is,
I think it's an interesting word because a lot of times when we hear that word, what we're
thinking about is, well, who am I forgiving? It's another person, somebody who's done me wrong
in my past. That may be a part of your story, right? But so often, like, the forgiveness
that actually really unlocks so much of what we yearn to experience and feel is self-forgiveness.
It's the parts of us that we feel have done other people harm or done ourselves harm,
that we can't understand often. And we just hold on.
to this blame and shame. And it's not directed at someone else. It's literally directed to a part of us
that we've kept down inside. And we're just, we were carrying that heaviness. So the forgiveness,
I think a lot of times when people hear that word, it's like, well, who am I forgiving? Who's the
person out there? But so often, it's a part of us that actually gives us the greatest relief.
And also, in my experience, is often the hardest one to forgive. I would agree with that because
guilt and shame are two really big ones, and they're more internal. They're emotions that you feel for
yourself, right? And so carrying around shame and guilt, I recently learned that shame is one of the
strongest, if not the strongest emotion to overcome. And it encapsulates many other emotions
that feed into shame. And so learning to shed that or learning to forgive yourself, for me, the shame and
the guilt that I carried around wasn't something that I did, but it still felt some form of guilt and
shame around that as if I somehow had played a part or it was somehow my fault. And I know now
is one of the biggest things holding me back in my healing journey. I had thought, you know,
back in my 40s, early 40s, I called myself healing. You know, I was working on myself. But I realized
that I hadn't, I wasn't. I had no idea what I was doing and, and wasn't being really honest
with myself about what I needed to work on and what was really getting in the way of me finding
joy and freedom or this feeling. Because freedom means a lot of different things for people,
right? Like freedom can mean what you feel is a sense of free. Like we live in the United States and
there's that sense of freedom. But then there's also this sense of freedom of just being able to do
what you want, whenever you want, or the freedom of being who you are and showing up for yourself
first. And this is especially true for moms. We tend to not show up for ourselves. We show up for
our families and our children often first, we will sacrifice ourselves. It's like the biggest
sacrifice that moms make is for their kids, right? And so there's all these things that you can call
freedom. But for me, freedom was just that. It was this ability to step into a place of peace
and free from all the things that sort of I held for so long that just continued to pull me back
into a past place that I didn't want to be. And I couldn't control that.
And so that, for me, was freedom, was like, oh, I can, I'm free of that.
It has a place now.
I have the power to control it.
It doesn't control me any longer.
That guilt and shame that you're talking about are two really large, big emotions that are
hard to overcome, actually, and they are rooted in forgiveness.
And we'll be right back after a word from our sponsors.
Searchlight Pictures presents the roses.
Only in theaters, August 29.
From the director of Meet the Parents and the writer of Poor Things comes The Roses.
Starring Academy Award winner Olivia Coleman, Academy Award nominee Benedict Cumberbatch, Andy Samburg, Kate McKinnon, and Allison Janney.
A hilarious new comedy filled with drama, excitement, and a little bit of hatred, proving that marriage isn't always a bed of roses.
See The Roses only in theaters, August 29.
when you make the decision then in 2021 says this has been a slow build you have this
you get really ill with COVID and you recover and then you look around and realize so many
others have the experience the same thing and are not here anymore or or like have long-term
struggles this becomes a wake-up call to you this becomes the second you're like big
moment where you're like okay I'm still here
And I can't do the next season of life the way that I've done what's come before.
So you make an interesting decision.
I'm sure there are a lot of other things that you started changing and thinking about
and people you were talking to.
But one of those decisions that you described is I'm going to start just filming video
and putting them online, right?
So you're, I guess, around 49 at that point.
That was 40.
It was actually 48.
Okay.
You're well into life.
People know you in a certain way.
You know, you've got a certain reputation among the community.
And then you're like, I am going to start creating videos.
Now, for anyone who's seen your videos, like we're having a grounded, calm, you know, like conversation here.
This is not the way that you show up in your videos online.
You're funny.
You're snarky.
You're wise.
You're throwing in tons of nostalgia points so that so many people can relate to so much of what you share.
when you decide, and it feels like really apparent that this is not sort of like a made up character
that you step into. This is just a part of you that wasn't, it was being tucked away until that
moment. So when you decide, okay, you know, I'm half a century into life almost and I can't
keep doing it the way that I'm doing. I need to actually show up as myself. And I'm going to start
to just put up videos. Was this really just you, I just need to do this for myself and maybe five
people will watch this or or were you think to yourself maybe I can show up and like
inspire an entire community or what was going through your mind when you're like I'm going to
start just creating videos that are very different than the way a lot of people probably know me
and just put them up. It actually didn't start that way. So I while I was healing from COVID,
you know, I hadn't been on TikTok before that. I've been on some social media for years. I used them
for my business, but I hadn't been on TikTok. And I think like a lot of people my age were like,
that's for teenagers and dance videos. I've got a couple of young kids myself. So I knew it was aware
of it. I was like, yeah, I wasn't interested. But I found myself lying in bed for a month,
you know, scrolling through. That was what entertained me. And I remember thinking, I can do this.
Like, you know, they're not the dance part, but they were starting. At that time, people were
starting to make content that wasn't just dance videos, you know. And so I was like, I think I could do
this. And then originally I thought I would use it for my business. I was like, oh, I'm going to start making
videos for my business. And it never turned into that. In trying to figure out how to use the
platform and learning the technology, you know, the first few videos they made out, they were just funny.
They were just funny videos. They had nothing to do with my generation. I did not set out thinking
anybody would see them. I honestly had zero expectations. I was just trying to learn the technology.
And then one day, I don't remember why I made it, but I made a video that was the sounds only Gen X hears.
And it was just opening clips, like few seconds of opening sounds to songs that would resonate, like would
get you.
They're like a dog whistle.
As soon as you hear them, you know, you stop.
And I made this video and it didn't do much at first because I was an investigator.
My brain is wired to just go down the rabbit hole very, very easily.
So I was down the rabbit hole trying to figure out how this stuff works.
And somebody said, hey, if a video doesn't work the first time, just repost it. So I did. And that I went to bed and I woke up and the next day, all of a sudden I had 40,000 new followers off of that one video. I have no idea what's happening. I also fell into the trap early on listening to people who are like, oh, you know, TikTok wants to put you in a niche. You know, if you try to make any videos or outside of that niche, then they are not going to perform well. So I was like, oh, then I need to make another Gen X video because that video did really well. And so I started making.
videos about Gen X. I started just talking a little bit about just early on, a little bit,
just funny stuff about our generation. And slowly that built into storytelling. I've always
been a chatty, Kathy, I guess. And I love storytelling. I never really considered myself a
storyteller, I don't think. But I could tell a good story. And so I started making Gen X went right down
into that niche and started making more videos for our generation. And that's really what started
to take traction. So I thought, oh, that's true. You really just have to be in a niche and only do
this one thing and those videos will do well. Well, what came from that was I got, I get bored very
easily. I can't only talk about this one thing. I don't have enough to talk about. Because of the
trauma that I've, I endured as a child, I don't have a lot of memories. You know, a lot of that's
really just not, it's just a blank. It's just blank. And it's more like a movie reel, you know,
little clips of stuff. I early on had a really hard time connecting.
with a lot of Gen X content because I was like, I don't remember that much. But a lot of people
would surprisingly comments would unlock a memory where I was like, oh my gosh, I completely forgot
about that. And so it's been, that's where the therapeutic side of it came where I was like,
this is very, this is good for me. It's helping me remember good things, right? I wasn't only
holding on to the dark memories. And so it was good because it was helping me to reconnect with
the good of my childhood, the stuff I really did love about growing up in the time
that we grew up, you know?
I mean, we were feral, but we were free.
It was a lot different world.
And that's been one of the most joyful things for me
is that being able to reconnect with the nostalgia
and the memories and the good times, right?
I got bored and I was like, I can't just talk about this one thing.
And I'm not a believer in, I don't like being told what to do.
So that's just, I don't just don't.
I don't like be told what to do it.
And so I was like, you know what, screw you.
I'm not only gonna do this one thing.
I'm going to do what I want to do, and it felt genuine to make that content, but it also
didn't feel as genuine as I wanted to be because I was like, I don't remember enough.
And so I started talking about the one thing I could really talk about very authentically,
which is aging.
So I started talking, making videos about aging and midlife and just why didn't anybody tell us
that this is what the hell happens to you when you get to be this age.
And I, you know, I've always been funny and very sarcastic, but I never considered my
I never really considered myself to be that funny.
But, I mean, if I look back, I'm like, okay, I've always been kind of funny.
You know, those videos didn't take off right away, but then eventually those really started
to do well.
Also, also still connecting with the same audience just through a different genre, really.
You know, it's like, oh, we're all still at the same age.
We're all going through it.
We've all grown up the same way.
And then menopause hit me.
And so I started making videos about that.
And those are hilarious because menopause is just ridiculous.
And so you can make fun of that all day.
And I just broke the rules of the algorithm, which was that a lot of people do only just do one
kind of thing. And I do multiple things. And through that, what came out of that was that I started
making these daily dose videos because I was, again, they were therapeutic for me. They were
funny, nostalgic, but then they were also somewhat healing. I was telling my own stories,
but also the stories of others at the same time. And so what I recognized after a while of doing
that, especially through the comments, was that there's this really brokenness to a lot of our
generation. You know, a lot of them haven't found a way out. They can't see the light at the end of the
tunnel. They still are very much living in a place where I lived for so long. And so I started making
these daily dose videos. They're kind of a tough love, kick in the pants, you know, wake up type
video. And they were really chipping away at some of the really tougher parts of life, you know,
talking about the letting go and the finding peace and happiness and all of that.
And so I ended up just being sort of this hodgepodge of content, you know, and it somehow
worked. It somehow broke the rules. It's somehow not just on one platform. It wasn't just TikTok.
That's where I started. You know, I started putting content on Instagram and Facebook and next thing,
you know, now I've got, like I said, almost six million people where I'm still struggled to believe that
there's almost six million people that care about one thing that I have to say.
I wonder if part of that also, you said you broke the rules of the algorithm, right?
Which, yes, you did, you know, because everybody tells you choose your niche.
Really? Like, just boom, boom, boom. And you hit a point where you're like, all right,
I can't actually be me and do that thing, even though it seems like the algorithms remind me.
But when you decide, I just need to start talking about and sharing who I am and what I see
and what I'm experiencing. You didn't just break the rules of the algorithm. In no sense,
small way, you also broke the rules of culture, of society, about what a, quote, woman of a certain
age, the expectations about how that person would show up. And you're like, oh, hell no.
Like, so it wasn't just the algorithm. It was bigger than that. Yeah, you just, you just reminded me,
I mean, especially early on. So, I mean, I have blue hair. At one point, my hair was purple. I have
tattoos. I'm 52. You know, I cussed like a sale.
even on being nice here on your podcast.
I got a lot of hate early on, you know,
and I still do occasionally.
I've learned to ignore it.
You cannot dwell in the comments.
It'll tear you down.
But I used to see those comments and they would bother me.
And I started at first, they did bother me.
And almost for a while made me even reconsider what I was doing, like putting myself out
there because people can be so mean.
You know, I come from a time where if you talk trash, you get punched in the mouth.
and now everybody does it behind their keyboard, you know, so it's different. And so I was, I didn't
know how to deal with that, you know, these keyboard warriors, if you will, the trolls. And so it
almost discouraged me. And then there was a part of me that was like, no, that's not who I am. Like,
that just was more fuel on my fire. And so I started doing these clapback videos and started
sort of snapping back at people of like, you know, their idea of ageism. I realized that in those
moments of ageism was alive and well and how real it was, and especially for women. And so I
use that as content. That for me, that was like, you are low-hanging fruit. Like, you are making
this so easy for me. Like, I can use this all day to chew you up and spit you out. And I did that
for a while. And I don't do them as often anymore. I don't, because I, A, I don't get in the
comments that much for that kind of content. But I also recognize that I, the clapbacks,
although people love them. My clapback videos always generally do very, very.
well. I realized that it wasn't really who I wanted to be. I didn't want to be, you know, I didn't
want to be, here I am talking about living in your authenticity and, and being kind to yourself
and finding peace and happiness and the next video I'm handing somebody, you know, their
entire dignity, you know, in one little video, 30 second clip. And I realized that it sort of was
a little bit of a conflict for me. It made me come across in some ways almost as maybe being
disingenuine, you know, that I was saying one thing and doing another. And so I'll still occasionally
do it. If it catch me on the right day, just rageful enough on the right day, I will still
clap back. But I just, you know, I realized that that wasn't early on. It served its purpose. And
people still say, oh, I really miss your clapback videos. But some people thrive on that. Some people
just thrive on the negativity. And I didn't want to be perceived as negative. And those videos
tend to be a little more in the negative space. And so I don't do them as often. But you're
absolutely right that I did break all those rules. And not just what I say.
and how I say it, but just in how I show up in general, right?
Yeah.
Belief it like, you know, they're like, okay, grandma with your blue hair,
you're trying too hard, you know, those kind of comments, you know, and I'm like,
I'm not trying anything.
This is just me.
I'm not, I don't have to try.
I'm married.
I got kids.
I'm not planning to have any more kids.
I have my own business.
There's nothing that I need, but they don't get that.
And some people just, they're just in such a bad place in their own lives that they
would like to drag other people down with them.
And so I tend to, like I said, I just try to ignore those people now.
But yeah, they are out there, and they come out in full force sometimes.
Yeah, and I mean, it's really when you, and again, as you were saying, like, women are judged very differently than met, especially on social media where somebody can hide behind a screen or when there isn't surly this direct thing.
I mean, it's like, yeah, I don't know if you read Miranda July's all fours, which is this tremendous book.
But if you look at the reviews on that book, it's a novel about a woman in her 40s who's really just completely rediscovering who she is and what she wants out of life and sexuality.
relationships. And a lot of the reviews on that book are like five stars and one star.
What's it called? Miranda July's book, All Fours. All fours. It's so raw and visceral and powerful
about like what happens when a woman basically says, okay, like I need to actually do this
this part of my life in the way that makes sense for me. And I know I've heard Miranda
interviewed also and she said she's taken a lot of heat. Some people absolutely love her and what
she wrote and resonates so deeply in there are these all-forged group chats going on around the
world. And then other people just fiercely reject the whole notion that a woman in the middle
years of her life could talk about things like this and show up in a particular way and
consider these ideas. And I see what you're doing as it's so compelling in one way because
you're basically saying, just deal with it. You know, like this is me. Yeah, I tend to phrase it a little
differently than that, but yes, you're absolutely right.
It's like you're not saying that overtly at all, but what you're saying is, in the way that
you show up, you're basically saying, okay, so like, I know who I am. And for decades of my life,
I didn't show up as this person, at least in this way. And now I'm going to bring it all forward.
And some of you may like that. Some of you may love it. Some of you may be inspired by it.
Some of you may hate it. Some of you may be threatened by it or offended by it. But that's not going to
stop me from showing up in this way because I know who I am and why I'm doing it and it feels
right to me. I mean, does that land? Because that's the way it feels when I watch. I'm nodding because I'm
like, that's absolutely, you know, you captured that very well because that's exactly where I'm at.
And for me, it wasn't until I was close to 50 for me to finally step into that space. And it feels
right. It does. It feels good. It feels good to say, you know what? You said it way nicer than I would,
but screw you. This is who I am. And you don't have to like me because I don't care if you do or you don't. You hit a point in life, especially women, I think finally hit a point in life, especially the menopausal years for women, where you just are like, I yeah, this is who I am, take me or leave me. But I don't want to be the version of me that you want. I don't want to be that person anymore. I live that way for so long. I refuse to dishonor myself any longer for other people.
people. For me, that deep sense of freedom in finding that of like, you know what, I refuse to
dishonor myself any longer. And if you don't like that, that's a you problem. It's not my problem.
And it feels, you feel lighter. You feel good to know that I feel good to know that I show up every day
as who I, this person who I am, the person I've always been, but tempered or hid or contorted for other people,
that I get to show up as this person every day and that there are people out there
that do appreciate it. You know, there are people that look for that. They're looking for that
little nugget of wisdom, something that breathes life into their day, something that helps
them find courage, something that helps them to evolve, helps them to wake up. So many women,
especially now that I'm on tour, so many women who come up to me and tell me that story of like,
you saved my life. You have breathed life into a part of me that I thought was dead. And that I
I don't take that for granted.
It gives me purpose.
You know, I told you in the beginning.
I didn't know it was this,
but I always felt some sense of purpose that I wasn't fulfilling,
that there was something greater I was supposed to be doing.
I didn't know it would be sharing, you know, sage wisdom in my 50s.
I had no idea it would be that.
But it feels right, you know, and I don't know where it's going to take me.
You know, I will continue, you know, and I received the award that I received.
I couldn't believe that I deserved an award like that.
I really struggled. I was up for like three awards initially. One was for comedy. One was for
motivational inspirational. And the other was for the cheer of the year. And the first two felt okay.
I was like, okay, comedy, sure. I can take that. Motivational, inspirational. I'll even give you that.
But cheer of the year just really made me step back. I was like I don't, I didn't feel worthy of that.
I felt like there are so many people doing really like powerful, important things in the world that are
deserving of something like that, you know? And when I won, I was in shock, naturally, but so many
people that came that either came through the comments or sent me messages that said, you absolutely
deserved it. You've changed my life. You saved my life. They were near their end of their rope,
you know, for, I don't know, a lot of people don't realize, but women in this age, suicide rates are
the highest for women in their midlife. And especially late 40s, early 50s. And so for them to have
someone that they can look to, you know, that either makes them laugh or makes them think
or helps them in some way to find whatever it is that they seek, whether that be peace
or happiness or whatever, I will continue to show up for those people as long as I can
because I know what that felt like. I lived that way for so long to know that I'm helping
even just one person, you know, is enough for me to keep doing it. And also, you know,
part of the way that you show up, there's this sense that, okay, so you
you know this is resonating. You know you're building an audience in the community and you're
getting to show up and share parts of yourself. But like a big piece of this also, at least from
the outside looking in, is it looks like you're genuinely having fun. Oh, I do. I do. And I think so many
of us, we reach sort of like a certain point in life and we're like, oh yeah, the fun days, the carefree
days, the loose, the goofball days. Like that left when I was 16 and I was just bouncing around with my
friends. And, you know, this is not the season of life for that. And you're showing you
You know, you're like, no, no, no, no, no.
This gets a seat at the table.
And it looks like when you show up, it really looks like you're just having fun.
And it's a reminder that says, oh, this can happen.
This matters.
You can show up this way.
Some people may dismiss you, but a lot of other people actually won't.
And a lot of other people will say, oh, like, I want some of that.
I hope that they do.
I really, I mean, I am genuinely having fun.
I look back at my early videos where I was to where I have aware I am now and just seeing how
that's evolved and how much fun I've allowed myself to have. And I think touching on what
you just said about, you know, we believe that that all goes away because that laughter and
fun and carefree spirit is only for the young. We're kind of taught that. I mean, there's a video
going around right now, for example, where they're like interviewing people.
on the street saying, what year do you have to be born to be considered old? You know,
and it's these kids that are like, oh, you know, 2,000. And I'm like, oh, 25 is old now.
Like I had no idea. It's this idea of young, right? We're sold this bill of goods that like you
have to do everything when you're like young because there's going to come a point when you're
old that you're not going to be able to do those things. And that's a bunch of trash. Like,
that's not true. For me, the best of my life is just starting. I mean, yeah, I've got my kids.
those parts of my life will never be outdone. But I'm doing things in my 50s that I would have
never done in my 20s. I would have never shown up the way that I do now in my 20s. And there's
something to be said about, especially at this point in your life, of like showing up authentically
and just really enjoying the ride. And that's one of my standard lines. I say that at a lot of the end
of my videos, especially my daily dose ones, just enjoy the ride. You know, and I don't say it quite like
that, but you just got to enjoy every moment of it. Life is so short. And,
we take for granted every day, every hour, every minute that goes by, we just take that for granted.
And it is truly wasted on the young. And when you're young, you think you've got all this time ahead of you.
You've got your whole life ahead of you. And those two second chance moments that I had taught me that I, those could have been snuffed out like that.
Like that life could have been over. And all of those things I could have done, should have done, the regrets that maybe I would have had of the things that I didn't do, I don't want that for myself anymore.
want to live and enjoy what life has to offer because you know what? It could be gone tomorrow.
I don't want to be on my deathbed and look back and have regrets. And if I had continued to live
the way that I had, I would have so many regrets. Just enjoy the ride. Whatever the ride is,
you know, whatever it is, enjoy it. Do the things that scare you and do the things that make you
come alive. And those are the things for me. There's so many things that help me back because I was
scared. Now I'm like, whatever, it is what it is. I'm going to do it. I'm going to do the hard things.
I'm going to do those things that scare me because those are the things that for me,
they make me feel alive. And then the things that make you feel, you know, that make you come
alive, what those are the things you're passionate about. Those are the things that, you know,
for, I tell them with work, if you do a job that hit me, you hate that literally drains the life
out of you. That was me. Get up every morning and literally cannot stand the idea of having to crawl out
bed and go to this place that feels like a prison, you should be doing something else. But find
something that sets your soul on fire that gives you life, that breathes life into your fire
instead of snuffs your fire out, you know, and do those things because life is short. And you
don't want to get to the end of your days, whether you die slowly or you die suddenly, and look back
and go, God, I wish I had done those things. That's where I was after my second, second chance was
like, man, it could have been gone. And I wasn't even 50 yet. And now I'm 50. And 52,
I started really making that content at 50, but 52 be 53 this year. And I'm doing things
I never imagined. I didn't have those. Were not in my cards. They were not on my being a
content creator going on tour, doing stand-up comedy. None of that was on my bingo card.
Okay. It was on my bucket list. And here, yeah, here I am in my 50s, suddenly doing all these
things that I never would have done in my 20s or 30s. If you would have tried to
convinced me to get on a stage to do stand up in my 20s, 30s, 40s, I would have laughed and been
like, there's no way. I would have never said yes. But I'm in my yes phase of life. I'm in the
point in my life where it's like say yes to everything that you possibly can because our days get
shorter, not just in the sense of they go by faster, but we just have less time on this earth.
And so you just got to do everything that you want to do and can do while you can still do it.
I love that. It feels like a good place for us to come full circle too. And so I always wrap these
conversations with the same question, I kind of feel like you just answered it, but I'm still
going to ask you, in this container of good life project, if I offer up the phrase,
to live a good life, what comes up? To live a good life is not wishing that you or somebody else
every time you wake up. You just wishing, not wishing that you or someone else. Live a life,
the good life is living a life every day, just being who you are and not wishing you or someone
else. And that's the good life for me. That's freedom for me. It's just,
being me. And yeah, I think that sums it up for me. Just waking up every day, not wishing that
I was anybody but the person that I am. That's a good life. Thank you. No, thank you.
Hey, before you leave, if you love this episode, Safe Bet, you'll also love the conversation we had with
Karen Waldron about rewriting the midlife narrative to one of joy, grace, and possibility. You can
find a length of episode in the show notes. This episode of Good Life Project was produced by
executive producers Lindsay Fox and me, Jonathan Fields.
Editing help by Alejandro Ramirez and Troy Young, Christopher Carter crafted our theme music.
And of course, if you haven't already done so, please go ahead and follow Good Life Project
in your favorite listening app or on YouTube too.
If you found this conversation interesting or valuable and inspiring, chances are you did
because you're still listening here.
Do me personal favor.
A seventh and second favor.
Share it with just one person.
I mean, if you want to share it with more, that's awesome too.
one person even, then invite them to talk with you about what you've both discovered, to
reconnect and explore ideas that really matter, because that's how we all come alive together.
Until next time, I'm Jonathan Fields, signing off for Good Life Project.
Searchlight Pictures presents The Roses, only in theaters August 29, from the director of Meet the
parents and the writer of Poor Thing.
comes The Roses, starring Academy Award winner Olivia Coleman,
Academy Award nominee Benedict Cumberbatch, Andy Sandberg,
Kate McKinnon, and Alison Janney,
a hilarious new comedy filled with drama, excitement, and a little bit of hatred,
proving that marriage isn't always a bed of roses.
See The Roses only in theaters, August 29.