How to Be a Better Human - How to give and receive good advice (w/ Hola Papi’s John Paul Brammer)
Episode Date: May 13, 2024Have you ever wished someone would just help you figure out your life? John Paul Brammer’s job is to do exactly that – he’s the writer behind the hit advice column Hola Papi. John has helped all... kinds of people on topics as niche as figuring out what to do when your boyfriend pretends to be Latino to as common as answering the age-old question of how to make friends as an adult. John reveals what constitutes good advice, why a lot of problems have similar solutions, and shares what we can do to get ourselves out of our trickiest situations.For the full text transcript, visit go.ted.com/BHTranscripts Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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you're listening to how to be a better human i'm your host chris duffy
someone once told me that anytime someone gives you advice they're really just saying the things
that they themselves need to hear and i know that that is definitely true when i give advice
30 seconds in i hear myself saying things like you're gonna give a great podcast introduction
just believe in yourself and don't overthink it. You have the skills.
And then the other person who I'm talking to is like,
I actually was asking for advice about how to bake bread.
So my point being, it's hard to give good advice.
It's hard to not make it about you.
I am of the opinion that most times the best thing you can do to help another person
is just listen to them.
But every once in a while, a solid piece of advice can lead to a
breakthrough. It can make us feel less alone and it can be really fun to witness. Today's guest,
John Paul Bramer, is an expert on giving advice that is actually helpful, actually useful, and so
much fun to listen to. So much fun that strangers, myself included, have been hanging on his every
word for years. John Paul is the author of Hola Papi, How to Come Out in a
Walmart Parking Lot and Other Life Lessons. And as a longtime advice columnist, he is here to teach
us his craft. Here's a clip. I mean, I give the normal advice that, you know, a good buddy would
give when someone's feeling down or like having issues in their relationship. But most advice
at its bare bones comes down to just communicate more with each other.
It's often just someone being like, oh, I'm worried that my partner thinks this.
What should I do?
And it's like, have you brought that up to them?
And nine times out of ten, no, they just haven't.
So it's me like dressing up, communicate better in different hats and outfits and pretending that it's different columns.
We are going to be looking at all of those hats with John Paul and laughing a lot over the course of this episode.
But first, a couple of podcast ads.
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Today, we're talking about how to give and how to receive advice with John Paul Bramer.
Hi, everyone. My name is John Paul Bramer. I am the author of Hola Papi,
How to Come Out in a Walmart Parking Lot and Other Life Lessons, as well as Hola Papi,
the Advice Column. I'm really excited to talk to you. I've been a fan of your writing and your
work for a long time, so this is a real honor. Oh, thank you.
So let's start for people who maybe aren't familiar with your
writing already. Can you just tell us the story of how your column Ola Papi got started? Ola Papi
is sort of a joke that got taken too far. I was working as a journalist back in 2017,
kind of a reporter doing a mix of like some culture writing, but mostly beat reporting.
reporter doing a mix of like some culture writing, but mostly beat reporting. And I was really trying to make it as a writer in New York City, which was very difficult. I was barely making rent.
And I had a friend who had just started writing for this new outlet called Into, and it was
launched of all things by Grindr. So Grindr, which is a mostly known as a gay hookup app,
they were trying to do the Playboy,
I'm just here for the articles route at the time.
And so they were sort of like snatching up queer writers here and there and trying to
get them to do weekly columns or monthly columns or series.
And my friend Matthew Rodriguez was like, hey, I know that you're looking for freelance
work in addition to some of your reporting.
Would you be interested in pitching a column? And of course I was. I was very keen on picking up as much freelance work as I could. The only issue was I was already really
stressed. I was kind of overworked as it was. And I was unsure if I would be able to really come up
with something new to write about every single week, which is what they wanted.
And that's when I got the idea for an advice column called Hola Papi,
because Hola Papi was something that people on Grindr would say to me sometimes.
I have Latino listed as my ethnicity on the app, so I would get it now and then.
And I was thinking about an advice column called Hola Papi because I was like,
okay, I can't come up with a new topic to write about every single week.
I don't know if I'm that observational of a person.
But the thing about an advice column is people come to you with the prompt and people ask you a question and you can just use that as the subject matter.
matter. So I sort of reverse engineered an advice column without really having, I would say, the requisite knowledge about what the medium was and what its requirements would be. And so to
compensate for that, I thought, okay, it'll be a satirical advice column. So people will write into
me, but my answers will be self aggrandizing. I'm just gonna talk about how amazing I am. I'm just
gonna sort of ignore whatever the question they sent was. I don't know if you've ever seen the show Space Ghost
Coast to Coast before. Of course. So it was sort of like inspired by Space Ghost of all things,
where it's like, yeah, Space Ghost is a host of a talk show, but he's really bad at his job.
Like he ignores the celebrity guest, whoever it is, like some famous singer, some
famous actor, he would just sort of ignore them and focus on himself or carry on with his work
drama with his coworkers. And so I thought, okay, I'll do that. It'll be a fun, silly little advice
column where someone sends me a question like, should I break up with my boyfriend, but I just
start talking about my own love life? Or I just start talking about all the dates I'm having?
Or it's like, oh, I can't really relate to you I'm like a winner I don't know like
just really jokey jokes right so I kind of launched it that way and it was a success at first because
it was funny and I think that the first question was about like am I a racist because I'm into
Latino guys and I'm like a white guy it was solicited from one of my friends in real life. I just needed a pinata. Like I was like,
hey man, I need a funny question. Send me one. And when he sent me that, I'm like, this is
perfect. So I got to just like roast him. I got to call him like, cause he was talking about
learning Spanish and having this genuine interest in Latino cultures. And I believe I called him like Chipotle mayo in the piece or something.
It was just really just, you know, funny and it worked.
But the thing about Hola Papi, an advice column being sent through the app, which it was,
which is how they advertised it.
So after it launched, they launched the first column.
They sent it to people all over the gay sex having world, not just the United
States, but beyond. And within like a week, my inbox was completely flooded with letters.
Because I think if you're on Grindr in the first place, you're probably lonely,
you're probably looking for a connection of some kind. And being able to just send someone a letter
with the almost guarantee that they'll read it,
I think elicited a lot of feelings from people. And it made people think, oh, this is a place
where I can really put my problems. And a lot of these people were from countries where
gayness is not as accepted as it is here in the US. And so a lot of them felt like this is a rare
opportunity for me to express something that
I'm not able to express in my real life or even with strangers online. I am anonymous. This person
says that they want to hear from me. And so I started receiving all these letters. And the
thing about it was, they were not letters I could make fun of. They were not situations that I could
make jokes about. Olapapi started as a joke, became earnest over time. It's
still funny, I would say. But yeah, I had to kind of grow into my role as an actual advice columnist
because I put myself in that ridiculous situation. You know, one thing I'm really struck by in
reading Olapapi is that it breaks the format of what it means to be like an advice columnist, both in who you are,
in the people that you're giving advice to, in the situations you're giving advice to, but mainly in
the tone, right? Like when it comes to normal advice columns are very like self-serious and
from this position of on high, I know it all. And let me tell you about where the fork is supposed
to go next to the plate. And instead, I think one of the reasons why I at least love reading a lot, Poppy, is that like you share the ways in which
you are not sure about these things in which you're struggling. And many times there are
letter writers where you say like, wow, it sounds like you've got something figured out that I don't.
And then you're able to turn that into a joke and also give some really meaningful thoughts about like connection and people.
Yeah, I think back to my biggest inspirations in terms of advice giving and maybe inspiration is the wrong word.
I think about the people who've actually given me material, tangible advice in my life.
And I came out as gay in Oklahoma, where I'm from.
I'm from a very rural part of the state.
And I didn't even know gay people
existed for a very long time. And so I didn't come out until I was around 20. And that was
just because my environment was so hostile to the idea. I was bullied really badly in middle school
for not even for being gay, but just for being suspected of being gay, for being effeminate and
having interests that sort of deviated from what other
boys my age should have been into, which looked a lot like hunting and driving ATVs and, you know,
the typical rural country guy kind of activities that I just was not into. And so when I came out,
I knew nothing. I remember the first time I dipped my toes into the gay community in college and this guy was like
so are you a top and I was like a top at what because I thought he meant like a top student
I had no idea obviously there was very little sex education in Oklahoma for gay guys so a lot of my
education came very informally from just guys I met at bars.
Like I forced myself to go to a gay bar and I started talking to people and I would just listen
and people would start filling me in in terms of what the slang was, what the politics were,
because it really is like learning a completely separate language. Like all these little ways that
we have to signal to
each other, like, this is the kind of person I am. This is what I'm into. This is my sense of humor.
There's like a separate vocabulary in the gay community that I just didn't know about. And so
I was getting caught up to speed. And my teachers, my mentors were really just whoever was sitting
around and whoever's ear I had and whoever I could ask
questions. And I feel very fortunate that I met the right people when I came out and people who
were willing to kind of take me under their wing and sort of listen to what I had to say and kind
of taught me the ropes, you know? And so when I started doing Ola Poppy, I kind of thought of it
as a less formal enterprise than some of the other
advice columns are out there. I kind of wanted it to be like, I'm your friend at a bar, or I'm like
this cool stranger that you just met, but I'm willing to listen to you and we can joke around
together. And I don't think I have all the answers, but I think we can have a good time in our
conversation. And that sort of rides your inspiration because the community resources that were available to me were so informal. Like I
didn't pick up a booklet or a pamphlet and start reading stuff and be like, oh, that's how all this
works. And I think that now my favorite Ola Poppy columns are those less formal ones where I'm
having a good time. I'm kind of riffing on the person. I'm lightly ribbing them. But at the end,
we come to a place where it's like we both learn something from each other.
Yeah, I think that's really interesting. And then I also see the idea of feeling like you're
not alone in your identity. And that's also very much a part of a lot of poppy too. That kid who
was in Oklahoma and felt like, well, there's not other people who are like me,
that clearly that kid who would now be reading your column and being like, oh, wow, this is great.
There are people like me.
Yeah. And also, you know, we're having a good time with it. In the interest of saying it, I have been reading the Olapapi for several years now,
and I think I'm very much in that category of people you talk to where you're like, well,
it's kind of surprising because I'm like, I'm like a straight white married father.
And I'm like, I love the column. It's so great. And it's just interesting to hear from people who
have great voices and are able to write really compellingly. And part of it is I find really
useful things that I can apply in my own life. And then part of it is I get to see the way that you see the world. And it's just cool to see through someone else's eyes always.
So I find that I get a ton out of it, even if it's not necessarily like
the exact identity markers that I also identify with.
I mean, I think to me, the magic of reading something is being able to put yourself in
someone else's shoes. So whenever I do like
author panels, and most of the author panels I do are sort of diversity focused, I'm either there
because it's like Latino Heritage Month, or it's Pride Month. And the common question I get is like,
when did you first see yourself in a book? And you know, the typical answer you're supposed to
give there is like, oh, I first read about a gay character when or i first read a latino character when but for me i'm just like i don't know i saw myself in neil gaiman's coralline
you know i saw myself in the stuff i was reading as a child that were like women protagonists or
straight male protagonists because the cool thing to me about reading is that i'm able to put myself
in the shoes of someone who's technically nothing like me, but I get to engage in their world for a little bit. And I get to find that actually,
we're not so different, or we experience things in similar ways. And what's cool about Olapapi,
the really life affirming, human affirming thing about it for me, is that it launched as this
niche advice column on a dating app that was predominantly geared towards
gay men, which is a really specific subset of the world population. But seeing it grow and seeing it
be syndicated on the cut and seeing people from all walks of life start reading it, I'm like, no,
we've all been in sort of the same emotional rooms together. We've all sort of felt what it's like to
be different or to not fit in or to feel like
there's something about myself that I don't understand. I don't have the right vocabulary
to express this facet of myself. As a writer, my mission was always like, I want to bring as many
people into this experience as I can. And so it's really affirming and really cool to see just how
many people are able to access the words I'm putting down. And it's not just for people who are exactly like me. It's been really interesting to see how you are starting to
share some of the work from Samara, which is your second book, a semi-autobiographical
illustrated novel about quote, young love, Oklahoma and the wind. And the reason why
what we're talking about makes me think about that is, to me, one of the interesting and powerful parts about graphic novels is they can often capture emotions and feelings and moments that are almost impossible to put into words.
And that those illustrations, the visuals convey something that wouldn't be possible to put into words. And I think what you're saying right here is like how there's this universal human experience of having something about ourselves that we don't quite have the vocabulary for. So it's interesting that now you're kind of going into an art form in a medium of writing that allows for that, in fact, relies on that, not having the vocabulary and instead
switching to an entirely different way of communicating.
Yeah. So I am a visual artist as well. I do drawings, I do digital paintings. And I think
what's always drawn me to visual art is that I'm kind of obsessed with this idea of language and
language not just being words that we say out loud and not being things we write down
but I think that there's a visual language there's an emotional language there's body language and
all that stuff is our attempt to communicate some form of interiority and how hard that can be using
a tool that does crude as language so whenever we're writing something down or we're trying to
put pen to paper to get someone else to read it, I'm always struck by how like there's a universe, there's multiple universes where that sentence I just wrote is a better sentence.
And it can kind of convey what I'm trying to say even better.
And just knowing that I didn't find it or that you only sometimes find everyone's novel as a writer.
And so with this next book that's half illustrated, half written, I'm sort of doing an homage
to the weird kids like me.
Back when I was in middle school, I had a spiral notebook that I would draw in all the
time and I would write stuff in it.
And I tried to invent my own little alphabet in it.
It was clearly like copy pasted from art.
I was also like trying to steal a little bit from hieroglyphics because I didn't have the
greatest grasp on what Egyptian hieroglyphics were. I thought it was just communicating with cool little pictures.
So I was making my own little analog emojis in my notebook, just being like, yeah, okay,
this means bird and it looks like a bird. But the point is back then, I think that language in my
head was this free roaming thing that sort of went back and forth between visuals and writing.
And so with this book, what I'm really trying to communicate is how hard it is to communicate that
level of interiority to really bring your true self out in the form of any kind of language,
and how that's kind of okay. And it's all right, because that's a really tall order at the end of the day, especially, you know, touching on the Latino experience and speaking Spanish and English and how we kind of find our reflections in our own faces and whatever we write down and whatever language we put it out in.
I'm very interested in digging into themes about how impossible it is to use language to tell the truth.
But we try our best anyway.
How do you go about expressing yourself in the world?
What are some ways in which you can actually make yourself be understood and known and
seen in the way you want to be?
So for me, and I think this is sort of what
the whole point of Olapapi the book is, it's sort of what I was going for here,
is recognizing that we as human beings really rely on storytelling. We rely on narratives to
understand the world around us and ourselves. And so I think we often have this misconception that
we're telling stories to other people, but we have some sort of innate truth in our own heads about who we are and where we come from and
what kind of person we are. But being able to recognize that those are narratives as well.
So one of the chapters in my book called How to Lose a Rabbit, it's about me and I'm working for
Condé Nast at the time. I have a desk at One World Trade. You know, I've been, I've seen Anna Wintour in an elevator.
I really think that I'm all that.
Like I'm running Ola Poppy, the advice column.
I'm getting a lot of letters every single week.
And I really think that I've made it in the world.
And I go back to my podunk little hometown.
And I am driving past the rural middle school where I got bullied really badly.
And I have this idea in my head, okay, I'm going to park my car.
I'm going to walk over to the school.
Thankfully, it's summertime.
There's no one around.
And I am going to declare victory over this dumb building.
And the way I'm going to do that is I'm going to walk up to this wall that I always used to sit by when I was a loser little kid and I had no friends.
And I had to hide behind this wall so that I wouldn used to sit by when I was a loser little kid and I had no friends and I had
to hide behind this wall so that I wouldn't be bullied. And while looking at this wall,
I would entertain myself by finding shapes in the pebbles because it was sort of like this
pebbled thing and they're all different colors. And so I would connect dots between the different
rocks and find shapes in them. And there was one shape I was looking for in particular,
which was this rabbit face. And I
wanted to go see the rabbit and I wanted to tell the rabbit, hey, you suck. You've always sucked.
I'm better than you now. I don't need you anymore. That was going to be my way of just telling this
rabbit to its big stupid face that I had overcome everything that this building had put me through.
And then I go and what I find is that I can't find the rabbit anymore.
It's the same wall.
It's the same everything.
But I've changed as a person.
The way I see the world has changed, and I just don't have the same eyes or the same brain
that as a child let me see this rabbit's face.
And I'm making new shapes, and I'm seeing new things in it,
but I can't find the one that I used to look at every single day.
new things in it, but I can't find the one that I used to look at every single day.
And it really made me think about how we kind of abide by these really crystallized narratives in our heads about how things went or what the past looked like or the events in our
lives that made us who we are.
And we kind of forget that those things are narratives to begin with.
And then we encounter something that disrupts the narrative, new information. We revisit the memory enough times, and we try to put it out there in the
real world, or we try to tell someone about it. And as it's coming out of our mouths, we realize,
oh, wait, every time I try to write about how I was bullied and how bad it was, it always feels
inadequate, because in my head, it exists a certain way. And no doubt the way it exists in my head is
completely different from what actually went down. I think that understanding that storytelling isn't just the stories we tell other people,
they're the stories we tell ourselves. And so recognizing that our memories and those core
things in our brains that like, okay, this is the most important thing that ever happened to me.
This is the time that my heart was broken. This is when I became a better person. This is when I overcame adversity. All those things are still stories. And as authors,
we do have some agency over them. And so remembering, yes, I'm a storyteller, both to
myself and to other people. I think it makes it a little bit easier to understand and approach
when it comes time to tell your truth. Because knowing that I have my truth, it's my interpretation
of it. This is the way I see it. And this is how I'm going to communicate it. I think it's healthier
in a way than trying to set yourself up and be like, okay, my truth is going to be everyone's
truth. And, you know, I'm going to try to force the way this person sees it because that's how I
see it. Letting that go and sort of being, having the humility to sort of accept this person sees it, because that's how I see it. Letting that go and sort of being having the
humility to sort of accept this person's going to interpret it a different way than how I interpret
it, because that's how stories work, I think is really freeing. And it makes it easier to
communicate yourself. We've got more with John Paul in just a moment. But first, we're going
to tell a short story that is called podcast ads.
That starts right now.
And we are back.
What makes good advice?
What are some of the practical pieces that make advice be helpful and not harmful?
Because I think a lot of people,
when they hear the word advice, they think about unsolicited advice, which is like condescending
or triggering or just annoying. And I don't think that your advice ever comes into that. And of
course, it's clearly solicited since they're sending a letter in. But I'm sure you've thought
about what makes good advice and what makes bad advice. Oh, my God, all the time. Well, you know,
I'm sure you've thought about what makes good advice and what makes bad advice.
Oh my God, all the time.
Well, you know, after I kind of broke into the advice column as a medium,
a genre that I really didn't have any business being in,
I was like, okay, let me start researching the history of the advice column. Because now that I'm here, I should probably become a student of this advice giving business.
Because, you know, I don't want to be a fraud the whole
way through. Being a silly fraud at the beginning, that's fine. But at some point, if you're going to
engage in a genre, you should have some respect for the genre. And if you're going to break the
rules, you should be aware of the rules. I read Dear Abby, of course. I read Cheryl Strayed,
of course. But I went even deeper. I found the roots of the thing. And the root of the advice column is very funny to me.
So most sources point to the Athenian Society.
I believe it's like Victorian England, where the people who gave advice were college-educated
men, and it was used as a prototypical Google.
So the questions were sort of like, where does the wind come from?
That was the advice people wanted.
And so someone would say, oh, my dear fellow, here's how the wind works.
Back then, obviously, good advice looked like whatever was factually correct.
But as time went on, the advice column started dealing more with emotions and etiquette and matters of the home.
And so the men who ran newspapers were like
well we're men we don't want to deal with this let's have women do it and so the advice column
became this rare form where women could actually make names for themselves as writers the advice
column has always been where the misfits go it's where people who aren't allowed to write about
other things go because yeah no one trusts you to write big breaking news stories no one trusts you to write
like big cultural essays about what it all means but we'll trust you enough to run an advice column
and so it's always been voicey it's always been this character forward place it's accepted people
who don't have bylines anywhere else and so it's kind of funny that i fell into it as like a gay
latino man who didn't have connections in media and came from rural oklahoma and it was the place
that had open doors for me i just didn't know that was why and came from rural Oklahoma. And it was the place that had opened doors for me.
I just didn't know that was why and that there was historical precedence for it.
But it quickly became the case that good advice looked like whatever was the maximally appropriate thing to say,
given the situation.
And so it's less about like, here's the advice that I think would fix you.
And it's almost more about the advice columnists themselves flexing about how culturally astute they are, or how much etiquette
they know, or like, I can read the room really well. And so an advice columnist knows how to use
the letter that was given to them as a prompt for discussing something broader, something that
affects almost everyone. Because usually in whatever era of media you're talking about,
people have questions that involve,
how do I be a proper member of society?
And even me, who's dealing with people at the margins of society most often,
so it's people who are like LGBTQ,
or people who feel like they don't belong, or they don't fit in.
It's almost the same thing.
I get a lot of letters from people being like,
oh, hi, I'm like a bisexual woman.
Am I allowed to be in a gay bar? It's stuff like that. It's still the questions of like,
where am I allowed to go? What am I allowed to do? What is the culturally appropriate way for
me to act in this situation? And so the advice columnist is sort of this like,
Oracle of manners, who is like, oh, my dear fellow, here's how you should behave in that
situation. But they're talking to the person who wrote in the letter
as much as they're talking to a broader audience,
because it can't be super specific.
It has to be general enough that a reader can come in and find themselves in it.
But also there has to be a degree of spectacle.
I think that's why you have a lot of advice columnists
whose whole thing is like wittily cutting people down or bringing people to task. It's just like, oh, you fool, why would you do that? And that you sort of like dress them
down in a way and people like that because they like this idea of someone with authority coming
in and sort of saying like, you're in the wrong. So one of my most read advice columns I've written
in the Substack era and the Cut era of Olapapi
is this guy who wrote in and said, hey, I'm in this reading group, and I was reading some fiction
from some of the people who submitted, and there was this element in one of them about a daddy
fetish, and I got so uncomfortable with that because I thought it was predatory and
wrong. And so it touched a little bit on this broader trend of people reacting to literature
as if the characters within the book are real people. And so people sort of chastising this
character for doing a bad thing. And the writer must be a bad person because you wrote a person
doing a bad thing. And so I was able to turn that column into like, you're all crazy. You're all
infantilizing yourselves. You need to get over it.'s not real it can't hurt you you're not a child
you need to be able to read stuff about people doing bad things without having a mental breakdown
so that was like a piece about something very specific that got turned into a broader cultural
piece about how we are responding to literature in the social media era. So I think,
yeah, there's good advice that you could give to an individual that maybe helps them with their
life and their situation. But as an advice columnist, your job isn't always to give someone
the perfect advice. Oftentimes, your job is to make sure that more people can read it. And even
though the situation is specific, you give them a little something as well, or you give them your
take, you give them your opinion on how people should be behaving in society right now.
But I also imagine that as an advice columnist, sometimes your friends come to you and say,
hey, not for the column, but just for my life. Can I get some advice? Do you have any thoughts
about how to give advice one-to-one what does it say about me that my
friends don't really do that maybe they know you well yeah it's funny i don't have a lot of times
where friends come up to me and like okay take the olapapi hat off i need advice right now it's
almost exclusively through olapapi it's great when i get a letter that is like really unhinged
my favorite letters to get i remember I got one that was like,
Hola, papi.
I've been dating this guy for several months.
I'm really into him.
He's Colombian.
I'm Latino as well.
The only issue is he invited me home for Thanksgiving
and I met his family and they are decidedly not Colombian.
They're just white people from Massachusetts.
What should I do?
And it was like just this man who'd been lied to
for several months about being Colombian.
Like letters like that are few and far between,
but they're my favorite ones
because they're not just that perennial,
like, yeah, I don't know.
Talk to your partner.
Although honestly, that one is still like,
sounds like you need to talk to your partner.
That's a communicate more one as well.
In an extreme case, yeah.
Now that I think about it, you're right. It's the like, sounds like you need to talk to your partner. That's a communicate more one as well. In an extreme case, yeah. Now that I think about it, you're right.
It's the same thing.
Who do you go to for advice?
It's always my mom all the time because she always gives me the same advice, which is
she asks me, have you slept?
And I often say, no, I haven't slept.
And she'll just tell me to sleep.
And it always works.
I wake up and everything's better.
Incredible.
Yeah.
Anytime I'm like suffering, I will just call my mom and she'll give me that really bare
bones like, oh, you're not taking care of yourself probably.
And she's right.
Well, I want to just share two of my favorite hola papi columns.
So this is from January 2021.
Someone wrote in and they said, I'm 27 and I just admitted that I have a crush on a long
distance friend and they also have a crush on me, but I'm worried because I'm so awkward at flirting
and I'm worried that I'm not going to communicate properly. And how do I tell if I'm saying
something weird or, you know, all of this kind of stuff. You know, you said to them that language
is imperfect at its best. It can give form a texture to the abstract thoughts as they surface from our
depths.
It provides a foggy window into our desires,
our motives,
and the unknowable architecture of our souls.
When someone replies,
crush me with your thighs,
daddy on your Instagram friends,
close post.
That's what's happening.
But then you also say,
you know,
you don't have to suddenly switch languages with this person because it's a different type of relationship.
Right. Like that's not how language works.
If we are all just people trying to do our best, trying to communicate and it changes.
And I think that's so great because like obviously there's a hilarious joke in there.
You're going somewhere where other columnists maybe wouldn't go totally.
But in a much more recent column column you someone wrote in and said that
they were concerned that their friend group was too online and they said in it you know we do go
outside we touch grass and in your response you said basically if you use the phrase touch grass
you are already terminally online it might be too late for you which i just thought was absolutely
hilarious and loved the the touching grass community
isn't aware they're touching grass at all. You know, that's exactly how you feel. That's so good.
I love that. That's so funny that the people who actually touch grass don't call it touching grass.
They're just outside. That's so, so, so good. Okay. Well, I want to ask you a couple of, uh,
advice scenarios that came up from the team that works on the show. Someone who works on the
show said, a lot of times the advice I seek is more about whether I should be asking anyone for
input about a personal struggle at all. It takes a certain amount of vulnerability to ask for advice.
And in your columns, you're often quite vulnerable in return. So what's your advice to someone who's
sometimes too scared to even pose a question or put themselves out there to be seen?
Yeah, it brings me no pleasure to report that oftentimes the good stuff in life is outside
your comfort zone. And so whatever it is, if you're slightly anxious about it, if you're kind
of afraid of it, I think of this all the time in terms of plans that I've made. So I will agree to
do some sort of like, after work happy hour with some person that I've been dying to
meet for a long time or maybe like some writer that I'm very eager to talk to and as it approaches
I'm like I just want to stay home it's like kind of raining I don't want to do this anymore but
every time that I've sort of forced myself to get up and do it, something good has come out of it. And so it doesn't make me happy
to say that sometimes the good things in life, you have to risk a little something or you have
to compromise or you have to just suck it up and do it. And vulnerability is one of those things.
It's something you practice. It's not something that you can just like one-off do every once in
a while. I think you really have to prove to yourself, like I am willing to do this.
I think that it can bring me good things.
And then sometimes when you get burned,
you have to acknowledge like,
yeah, that's part of living life.
We're going to get nicked a bit.
We're going to get a little banged up
as we go through this.
But the important thing is that I have proven to myself
that I am willing and able to do that
if it means getting the reward for it later. Okay, this is another one.
Yeah, I was like so following up until the end when he became a mercenary.
That's fun.
I mean, I i'm gonna be honest
with this person i'm not gonna pretend like i'm above this sort of thing him having a dangerous
job would just get me over there faster which i know says something not so great about me
um that's just a bonus in my my little world okay so the answer to this one is absolutely yes and
you got to get there before jp is there yes also like imagine me being like oh my god absolutely do it girl and then like
months later there's this news story about like international like espionage incident occurred
ola poppy implicated that's so good honestly that could only be good for the brand
well john paul bermer this has been an absolute pleasure.
I can't tell you how delighted I am that you've made time to be on the show.
And it's been an amazing conversation.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I really appreciate it.
That is it for today's episode of How to Be a Better Human.
Thank you so much to today's guest, John Paul Bramer.
His column and his book are both called Hola Poppy.
I am your host, Chris Duffy,
and you can find more from me,
including my weekly newsletter and other projects
at chrisduffycomedy.com.
How to Be a Better Human is brought to you on the TED side
by the Carrie Bradshaws of audio,
Daniela Balarezzo, Ban Ban Cheng,
Chloe Shasha Brooks, and Joseph DeBrine.
This episode was fact-checked by Julia Dickerson
and Mateus Salas, whose advice is always
to tell the truth.
On the PRX side,
our show is put together
by a team
who will never reveal
which one of them
asked which of those
hypothetical advice scenarios.
That is Morgan Flannery,
Nor Gil,
Patrick Grant,
and Jocelyn Gonzalez.
And of course,
thanks to you
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Until then, take care and give good advice.