How To Fail With Elizabeth Day - S18, Ep7 Gillian Anderson on sex, body image and rebellion
Episode Date: October 18, 2023Continuing this season's line-up of ICONIC AND INCREDIBLE WOMEN, I am veritably trembling with delight to bring you today's guest: the extraordinary Gillian Anderson. Her 30-plus year career has taken... her from playing FBI Special Agent Scully in The X Files to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in The Crown. She’s been a dogged detective in The Fall and an unembarrassable sex therapist in the Netflix hit show Sex Education. On stage, she has been everything from Blanche duBois in A Streetcar Named Desire to Margo Channing in All About Eve. It’s almost easier to list the roles she hasn’t played than the ones she has. Owing to the ongoing SAG-AFTRA actors strike, we don't talk about any of her acting roles. Instead, this liberates us to have a fascinating chat about life, fame, womanhood and everything in between. We talk about her failures to look after herself, her addiction to work, how she coped with global celebrity in her 20s and how this affected the way that she saw herself. Plus: why she thinks wellness culture is making us ill and why her natural instinct when someone tells her what to do is to say 'F** off.' -- Gillian's healthy soft-drink range, G-Spot, is available to buy here. (Not an ad but it tastes EXCELLENT). -- I'm going on tour! To AUSTRALIA, mate! You can now purchase tickets to see me live at Sydney Opera House on 26th February 2024 or the Arts Centre Melbourne on 28th February 2024. -- How To Fail With Elizabeth Day is hosted and produced by Elizabeth Day. To contact us, email howtofailpod@gmail.com -- Social Media: Elizabeth Day @elizabday How To Fail @howtofailpod Gillian Anderson @gilliana Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Make your nights unforgettable with American Express.
Unmissable show coming up?
Good news.
We've got access to pre-sale tickets so you don't miss it.
Meeting with friends before the show?
We can book your reservation.
And when you get to the main event,
skip to the good bit using the card member entrance.
Let's go seize the night.
That's the powerful backing of American Express.
Visit amex.ca slash yamex.
Benefits vary by car and other conditions apply.
Hello and welcome to How to Fail with Elizabeth Day, the podcast that celebrates the things that
haven't gone right. This is a podcast about learning from our mistakes and understanding
that why we fail ultimately makes us stronger. Because learning how to fail in life actually
means learning how to succeed better. I'm your host, author and
journalist Elizabeth Day, and every week I'll be asking a new interviewee what they've learned
from failure. At high school in Grand Rapids, Michigan, Gillian Anderson was voted by her
classmates as most likely to be arrested. And although she did actually get arrested on
graduation night
for trying to glue the locks on the school doors,
she was not destined for a life of petty misdemeanor.
Oh, that's what you think.
Unless all is about to be revealed.
Not publicly, anyway.
Instead, Anderson went on to become
one of the greatest actors of her generation.
Her 30 plus year career has taken her from playing FBI Special Agent Scully in The X-Files
to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in The Crown.
She's been a dogged detective in The Fall and an unembarrassable sex therapist in the
show Sex Education.
On stage, she has embodied everyone from Blanche Dubois in A
Streetcar Named Desire to Margot Channing in All About Eve. It's almost easier to list the roles
she hasn't played than the ones she has. Her work has earned her two Emmys, two Golden Globes,
four Screen Actors Guild Awards, an Evening Standard Theatre Award and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. She's
also an honorary OBE, having spent many of her childhood years in the UK, which is where she now
lives. But today, because of the actors and writers strike, it is her world beyond acting that we'll
be speaking about. Earlier this year, Anderson announced two projects. One was G-Spot, the saucily named soft
drinks company which makes wellness beverages. The other was a project, Dear Jillian, where she's
asking women to write her letters about their sexual fantasies that will later be turned into
a book. Because, Anderson says, when we talk about sex, we talk about womanhood and motherhood, infidelity and
exploitation, consent and respect, fairness and egalitarianism, love and hate, pleasure and pain.
Gillian Anderson, welcome to How to Fail. Thank you. It's nice to be here. It's so lovely to have
you here. I wanted to end on that quote because it was such a powerful one.
Do you feel that when we talk about sex, really, we talk about life?
Well, it's interesting in reading these letters, even more than, you know, we supposed prior to cross section of women, or those who identify as women in a really
profound way, actually. You know, fortunately, the letters that we received were very much,
you know, some very intimate, not necessarily, you know, sexually intimate, but emotionally
and emotionally intimate. And there's a lot of vulnerability, seemingly a lot of honesty,
a lot of discussion of power dynamics and relationships.
It's not just capital S-E-X.
It's a well-rounded sketch of women today.
And it's a bit premature to talk about actually what we're learning in the process.
And I am in the process of writing the introduction to the book.
But I think the biggest lesson is not actually what we would think that it might be.
From drawing the parallel between the original My Secret Garden, which is the instigator in a sense of this,
garden which is the instigator in a sense of this trying to have a conversation or have a look into how things may or may not have changed through the decades and there's a lot that has and there's a
lot that hasn't but there's a bigger takeaway from it actually which I can't discuss with you right
now well I can't wait to read it and to come back and discuss it when you can talk more about it you mentioned the original book there my secret garden by Nancy Fry which is
published in 1973 yeah and I suppose that's interesting because I mentioned in the introduction
you know you have had this 30 plus year career although you don't you wear it very likely
and I can't believe that you are 55 I know but it's because
30 years ago was like the 1990s it's madness yeah but I wonder how you feel personally
your sexuality or your comfort level with discussing it has changed over the years
yeah I mean it's changed a lot it started started to change in the process of a character that I felt like she taught me some things. She taught
me some things about, I guess, confidence in it, but also confidence in an aspect on a mixture of
femininity for me, which I, a lot of my traits are much more, you know, stereotypically masculine,
you know, and so I've never really embraced what I would think of as girly
things in my head, you know, just pejoratively, or at least I would think of them, I would refer
to them as such as being pejorative, as opposed to embracing them, those things, because actually,
it's kind of nice to embrace those things.. I actually experience it as, in a sense, treating myself.
This character wore a lot of nice clothes
and paid attention to her dress in a way that I never really have.
And, you know, fabrics and textures and stuff.
And so, you know, spending hours wearing those things
and being her and how she related
to other people as well I found empowering in a way but also did I did start to feel that
not that I was I don't feel like I've ever been square and a lot of my experiences in my life would prove that I haven't been square
but I realized that there was a whole aspect of myself that was kind of closed off in a way
you know I needed an opening I needed I needed an opening actually I didn't, I needed an opening. I needed an opening, actually. I didn't realise I needed an opening.
It's so interesting that because I wonder if part of that is because when you first became famous, you were 25, I think, and a lot of people's idea of sexiness was projected onto you. And I wonder if what we're discussing is your realisation that it
could come from within you, rather than being something that other people thought of you.
Yeah, well, I remember doing the interview. I mean, one of the big moments of that sexiest woman
in the world thing that happened was, you know, FHM, the cover of FHM and the interview that I did. And, you know, when I was doing the interview,
I was in a pair of flannel pyjamas in my house in Vancouver, Canada.
And the pyjamas had cowboys on them.
I mean, it was like as unsexy as you would not, you know,
I can't say you don't understand how can this be?
This doesn't make sense to me.
I'm even wearing cowboy flannel pajamas and
then that's not really the point the point is that one can be as fucking sexy as you want to be
wearing you know cowboy flannel pajamas it's what emanates from inside and I think as much as
anything separate from a fantasy based on nothing, nothing that I could see in reality being placed on me.
It was more of the fact that, you know, I was just a grafter.
You know, that's all.
I just had no, there was no room for sex.
There was no time for sex.
There was no, I was just working and had been from a very young age.
And so it didn't even cross my mind, you know,
young age. And so it didn't even cross my mind, you know, that kind of liberation of sexuality or spirit or sensuality, you know, and as a young mother as well, it just, it wasn't a part of my
world. And so I didn't get how people could be putting that on me. It just didn't equate. What
I saw in myself didn't equate to that I did a photo shoot that's not me
yeah you know so I wore a latex leather suit but I don't generally wear those on a daily basis
well actually if anyone isn't watching this podcast right now you're wearing one
in a cowboy patterned latex suit before we get onto your failures I want to go back to that kid you were at school
voted most likely to get arrested but also voted most bizarre girl yeah tell me about that and
whether that felt accurate at the time oh yeah yeah that that felt accurate at the time I mean I
shortly after moving to Grand Rapids, Michigan,
maybe it was a few years.
Because you've been in London for 11 years.
Yeah, I have been in London until, yes.
So I was born in the States,
grew up between ages two and 11 in London,
and then went to Grand Rapids, Michigan.
And so moving there at 11, I think by the time I was 14, I was pretty heavily into the
punk scene. You know, I think there were a small handful of us in the city of Grand Rapids,
Michigan that hadn't seen anything like it before. And so my, you know, so my Mohawk and nose ring
and attitude was a big part of who I identified as at the time you know
so I was in high school as that young woman I was probably the only one it was a high school with no
sports and no theatre it was an academic high school and so there was you know obviously it was
a bit less ready prepared for somebody like me to walk through the doors.
Did you have friends?
I had friends outside of school. I had a couple inside, but one was a naughty friend. Yeah,
I had friends. Then I got in with this gang outside of school that was, you know, we'd go to
punk rock concerts and stuff and go out of town
and go to concerts and then I met my boyfriend at the time who was considerably older than I was
in a punk band and we were kind of the couple in that world and that was my world for a while
until I discovered acting. God definitely not square. Yeah no no no no no no no no I won't
go into into stories. Did you have a strong sense of self? Yeah yeah I did I think from quite a young
age trying to think I've never really been asked that before I don don't think. I'm trying to think when it formulated itself.
Something shifted, something definitely shifted for me at a certain point where I, I think it was
actually around the time that I found acting, where I suddenly found something that I could do
and wanted to do. And it definitely gave me a sense of self-worth. I mean, I'd always been outspoken.
And my mom will say that, you know, there was no telling me anything.
I was in control, I think, sadly.
A lot of it came from, you know, identifying the punk rock scene as being where I felt like I fit in and I'm sure having attention in that realm and and feeling you know somehow
grounded in it that there was something that I fit and it fit me. The reason I ask that is because I
in a former life have interviewed you a couple times you've always been an utter delight and
one time was when you had co-written a book and it was an event for women and we were talking about female
empowerment and you talked about imposter syndrome and how you had felt it very keenly
in one of the roles which we're not talking about and I think it was pegged to the fact that you'd
had your first child and you went back to work pretty quickly and you felt that you didn't belong or you weren't worthy of the amount
of attention being shown you or the amount of pressure that was on you yeah and I wonder if
you could talk a bit about that and yeah I think through high school and through college I'd found
a place of self-identification that was quite other and separate and always you know in college you know never
living in dorms always living in a you know i shared flat that was separate from that speaks to
a certain level of confidence and self-confidence in a in a way that you know i only realized in
retrospect was present i have found that the first day or two, I always think that I'm going
to be fired on something. And then once that's done, you kind of got your feet under you.
I knew that the only way that I was not going to feel like I was failing on a daily basis doing it
and therefore that I was the wrong person in it or an imposter was if I prepared
within an inch of my life. And so I have found that Uber preparation is a good salve for that.
Will no one rid me of this troublesome priest?
This is a time of great foreboding.
These words supposedly uttered by a king over 800 years ago.
These words supposedly uttered by a king over 800 years ago, set in motion a chain of gruesome events and sparked cult-like devotion across the world.
I'm Matt Lewis.
Join us as we unwrap the enigma and get to the heart of what really happened to Thomas Beckett by subscribing to Gone Medieval from History Hit.
Peyton, it's happening.
We're finally being recognized for being very online.
It's about damn time.
I mean, it's hard work being this opinionated.
And correct.
You're such a Leo.
All the time.
So if you're looking for a home for your worst opinions,
if you're a hater first
and a lover of pop culture second, then join me, Hunter Harris, and me, Peyton Dix, the host of
Wondery's newest podcast, Let Me Say This. As beacons of truth and connoisseurs of mess, we are
scouring the depths of the internet so you don't have to. We're obviously talking about the biggest
gossip and celebrity news. Like it's not a question of if Drake got his body done, but when. You are so
messy for that, but we will be giving you
the B-sides, don't you worry. The deep cuts, the
niche, the obscure. Like that one
photo of Nicole Kidman after she finalized her
divorce from Tom Cruise. Mother. A mother
to many. Follow Let Me Say This
on the Wondery app or wherever you get your
podcasts. Watch new episodes on
YouTube or listen to Let Me Say This ad
free by joining
Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.
Let's get on to your failures.
Oh, please.
Yeah. These failures were concise, but huge. And that's my favourite kind.
The first failure is your failure to move your limbs. Tell me more about that.
On the one hand, I would say that it's because I'm lazy. But anybody looking at me would say,
you are not lazy.
No, you just talked about the amount of preparation you did. Yeah. You know, failure to move my limbs has definitely meant that I've had more time sitting on my ass to do so many of the things that I do involve myself in.
But it has also meant, you know, the amount of lectures that I've got from people or, oh, my God, I can't believe what you must, you know, whatever the conversation is,
there's a lot of conversation about it. I think particularly for an actress, I just haven't. And
I feel like I'm starting to realize and actually made me think about it in trying to, it came out
very quickly as one of my failures. And so then when I had time to dig into what exactly, why,
what I had to say about that was I realized that any time
somebody tells me to do something, I'm going to say, fuck off.
More than ever, there is a wellness culture right now
which is actually potentially making people even sicker yeah i
think for a very long time as people have gotten more and more and more and more and more and more
into you know exercise and eating well and dieting and macro and you know you name it i mean it's that's everywhere at every stage along the way I have basically said fuck you don't tell me
that I am not okay if I am not exercising oddly what's happened is that at now 50
keeps 55 but I might be 54 I think I'm pretty 68 68 that was 2006 I'm 55 so now that I'm 55 I'm finding it
for myself and part of that yes is that there is a plethora of stuff out there but there's a
plethora of stuff out there for people particularly my age and above just basically saying you know
talking about longevity and and if you want to properly live longer if you want to be able to pick up your grandchildren or if you want to you
know that you really should just move your limbs a bit you know and so in that context i feel like
okay i'm actually i'm ready i'm ready now i'm ready now I have the privilege of choice and I am going to as with
you know my stubbornness before I am going to do it the way that I want to do it and that feels
good for me so there's there's good at the end at the end of it obsessed with this whole thing
I cannot thank you enough for talking about it because you're
completely right that it feels so oppressive that at the same time as we're meant to be
striving to be zen we've also got to ensure that we've got our 10 000 steps and everything is
monitored and it feels that we all have to be these units of production in health as well as work yeah and I
love that this has been an act of resistance on your part a very very feminist act in so many
ways and yes there's a whole separate side which is like it's good for you we'll come on to that
but I'm very intrigued that as an actress when you must have had a lot of pressure on you I imagine to
look a certain way or to present physically a certain way that you've resisted it every single
juncture so have you never really done exercise there was one period of about a year when I had
a very hot boyfriend and he was an actor and a model and a surfer, and I got into working out at that juncture, and I got very fit.
Okay.
Yes, I got very fit at the time.
But I also, in the process, got an injury,
which it was recently because of that injury coming up again,
every few months, sometimes a few years,ral iliac joint lower right back tiniest
little thing happens and i'm in pain for days and really struggle to sleep and yada yada so this
all happened around the same time that i was making a bigger decision to embrace an aspect of wellness for myself that I had embraced a tiny bit here and there,
et cetera, over the years. But it was more to do with whatever the reasonings behind it were at
the time. But I feel like something has shifted. And something shifted in part because I suddenly felt like I was 80 with this back injury that goes back to my 20s.
And I was ready. I was suddenly ready to go, okay, I'm going to listen. I'm going to listen
to what the conversations are that are going on right now about people my age moving their limbs and doing it, you know,
in order to, one, not have that pain and be stronger in my core and myself,
but also, you know, thinking ahead,
thinking ahead about eventually lifting up a grandchild, et cetera,
and thinking, you know, I actually do want to.
I'm going to do some things now because I want to,
but it's got to be pleasurable for me you know yeah there is power in pleasure I think and I love that if it doesn't in some way then it
won't last and also so much of the pleasure of it has been taken out in all of these, you know, this obsessive thinking and all of the shoulds and have tos and
in the toxicity that is often out there, I think, today with the in the wellness industry. So
anyway, so I'm, it just is quite fortuitous that I'm at a time that I am, you know, starting to
engage in that bigger conversation conversation both in an entrepreneurial way
which maybe we'll talk about later yeah i'm also is my real experience in a personal way as well
so interesting because it feels like you finally have agency and this is your body now and you're
not being told by a studio you're 20 something you need to look like
this yeah yeah so that entire time apart from that single year when you had the hot boyfriend
you didn't have a PT you didn't go to exercise classes nothing never exercise class it's not
gonna happen now would you walk places would you like no no there was a period of time another
period of time where I did a stronger for a little while.
Yes.
And over the years, that has been a go to thing that I would do for a week and then drop.
And my excuses, no time, I got busy or just, but so much of it has been, I'm just not going to do something that I feel I'm being told I have to or I should do.
And if I can find a way to want to actually genuinely want to,
and whether it's want to because I suddenly realized that,
yes, it is better for me and I want to feel better, or I want to because I actually feel it brings me joy in some way,
or I feel healthier, more alive, more connected, more present, you know, but it really, I've discovered needs to be my own individual journey with it. It's my choice. You know, it's my way. I need to be doing it my way and listen to myself and what it is that I want and what feels good. And there is incredible, I'm finding, discovering,
that there's incredible power in that and potential.
It may actually last, you know, because, you know,
it's made to measure in a way that even the made to measure
whatever things that you can get here and there in the wellness world,
it's even more bespoke than that
because it's it is genuinely me doing for me so it makes total sense are you doing open water
swimming or like what are you what's the things that you're what are your bespoke exercises I have
started to work with a trainer on an app. She sends me things.
You know, it's even the smallest things as not taking a lift, taking a stand.
You know, all the things that you hear.
But up until now, it's been just shut the fuck up.
I love it so much.
Wait, before we get on to the nourishment aspect of this,
I'm just so obsessed with it because we, as women particularly,
and as a famous woman I can't even
imagine the pressure that you're under for your body to be a certain way and I don't want to make
this about physical appearance but you have always looked incredible so you've always looked like
someone who would train but have you ever felt insecure about your body in those years that you oh yeah you know historically
I'm always on the way up five pounds on the way down five pounds it's just been the story of my
life yeah and as someone that's five three those five can make a you know a big difference just in
terms of being photographed and so I see it and you, that gradation has been in my adult life. In my 20s, it was a much bigger gradation. And, you know, there were photo shoots and I was on with-obsessed about my weight,
completely distracted.
I remember so clearly there was one photo shoot that I did
that I think was either for us or for details
and they had brought these baby animals.
So a baby donkey, what do you call a baby?
A foal maybe.
Yes, yes, and a baby chimp and another baby something.
Soft fur and, you know, huggy, chimpy.
And I remember they were cutting through the shame
and the self-hate that I was feeling at the time
because I was so, I remember my head was in either grass
or fake grass
at one point for one shot and you look at that picture now and I see of course I see
youth and beauty and I think god you I remember how tortured you were inside this head at that
time and and yet almost by the grace of god you can't see it because that would have been such a shame with all of that beautiful animals around it. But I think back at the time wasted, the time wasted in that kind of beating up of self and for naught. the same today something shifted at some point along the way that said I'm not doing this anymore
I'm not doing this beating up anymore I couldn't tell you when that was but then there was you know
that anarchic part of myself just suddenly was like I'm not going to care anymore because
life is too precious to be stuck in that kind of self-obsession and if I walk out of the house and
I haven't brushed my hair for a week that's so be it that's my choice I may look at it and go oh
shit I really should have and it's a light moment rather than a this far no further yeah
we're talking about what you take in and what you reject
brings us on to your second failure which is your failure to fill your body with nourishment
which i imagine is allied to the first one yeah but will bring us on to g-spot yeah what you wanted
to do there yeah so talk to us about your history with nourishment have you eaten anything for the last 30 years
it's not so much that I haven't because of course I have but for the longest time I have been
addicted to a high caffeine high sugar soda soft drink you know I've got this ritual it's like you
cannot because I don't smoke I don't drink
I've got all these other reasons why I allow myself to then you know eat prawn crackers or
exist on a protein bar have you never smoked or drunk oh yeah no no I have I've done plenty
oh right yes I think part of my refusal to be told what I can and cannot do was also in terms of what I would and would
not put into my body. And there was nobody who was going to, you know, that, you know, I was
almost waiting for that, you know, that blood test to come back or that something to say,
you've really fucked up all these years. Fortunately, well, I think, I mean, it could happen any day, but as far as I
know, that hasn't been the case. But I did start to think, actually, I'll try. I haven't drunk much
water in the last couple of decades. And I was really bad at it for a long time. So I don't
drink water. I drink full fat Coke. I eat shit. I'll have a meal
with my kids and I'll eat a whole meal. But for the rest of the day, I'm working. I'm running.
I'm just, you know, while I'm cooking, I'm eating the prawn crackers and, you know, whatever.
And so I'll try to find something. Is there something out there that will solve at least
two of these things, which is the Coke and the lack of water. And I just couldn't
find anything, not only something that would give me the obvious, you know, when you've got that
much sugar and caffeine, there's a higher hit that you get. But also, I crave the taste. I crave all
of it, the whole thing, absolutely every drop of it. And there was nobody who was going to tell me, you know,
to stop, let alone cut down. And also with the water. So anyway, I went looking, and there was
nothing that I found that did the trick. And so, you know, somebody suggested to me, somebody who
ended up becoming my co founder suggested that I create something of my own that solved both of those problems in a sense that dealt with my
craving in a way and also you know was predominantly filled with water as opposed to all the chemicals
that were in coca-cola and so we started that journey together and in the process also started
to learn about things like adaptogens and nootropics and functional ingredients, which I
didn't know anything about until my daughter had introduced me to them. And so I went on a journey
into labs, drinks labs, and, you know, ingredients that actually can help with your cognitive
functions and help with focus and stamina in a different way and also help your
immune system and help with anxiety and de-stressing and all of those things and so
then the challenge was potentially to create something that didn't just taste like a bunch of
mushrooms picked from a field or powders but actually tasted good that actually I mean
initially would make me move from four fat coke to something else and we did you know we've created
this low sugar alternative that does have functional ingredients that are actually good
for you and I'm really proud of them you should be are you still eating the
prawn crackers I'm not no no for me there had to be a moment almost like a an aha moment for me to
fully stop that and fully stop the full fat coke do you think that you'll have more products in this
area because obviously you have conflicting views about the wellness
industry yeah yeah and this is almost a riposte to that i imagine yes no i mean part of our
messaging is about embracing your choice that many of our drinks they are pleasurable you know
that leans into pleasure.
There's one called Lift, one called Soothe, and one called Protect.
And then we've got a fourth one that's coming out very soon.
A lot of our messaging is about you choosing, that there's power in choice.
There's as much power in saying, I'm not going to the gym today.
Yes. As there is in,'m not going to the gym today. Yes.
As there is in I'm going to the gym today and that it's okay.
It's all okay.
And to listen to oneself, to liberate oneself from all of the diatribe of messaging around it and the shoulds and that and the you know often toxicity in there and
start to really look at you know what makes me feel good what yeah has being in your 50s
enabled you to let go of shoulds oughts and guilt oh yeah long time ago really yeah actually
probably probably my 40s yeah tell me when it happened was it 45
because i'm about to turn 45 so it'd be great i don't remember when it happened i can't remember
i'm gonna try to because you know since talking to you today i thought i really need to figure
out when that was because there was definitely a moment i'm not sure when it was i think for some
some women seem to say that it's linked to menopause, that ultimately they just unhook from everything that they don't want to do.
I haven't gone through menopause yet.
I'm still in perimenopause.
So I can't...
I can't imagine what you're going to be like when it's going to be amazing.
Oh, don't. I mean...
Oh, you mean...
Yeah, no, I think you're going to be amazing.
Everybody else who's in my life has imagined what that's going to be like
when she goes through menopause.
If this is Barry.
Yeah.
Well, come back and talk to me once this happens.
Yes, yes.
Your final failure is your failure to not work.
Are you a workaholic?
Yeah.
And where do you think that comes from?
Why do you feel that you need to work in order to earn your place on this planet i don't
quite know but i do have so i mean it's a like a protestant work ethic i'm not quite sure where
it's come from but what i do know is i feel incredibly lucky on the one hand I mean on all hands I don't mean nothing yeah I'm incredibly lucky
incredibly fortunate privileged all of that to have the choices that I have had both in my life
and my career and part of it I think is showing myself that I deserve it because I'm doing all
these things if all these good things are happening,
then I'd better be working for them.
You know, it's not coming lightly or it's not frivolous.
That's another thing actually that I wanted to talk about in terms of pleasure that I'm starting to realize too
is that so much of pleasure is perceived as being frivolous.
Yes, trivial.
Yeah, And why? Why isn't it as much of a sense of power,
you know, to lean into that, to properly embrace pleasure and make space for it and make time for
it and give it to oneself as it is the other things that we, and so I'm, you know, I'm trying
to have more of that in my life
but also realizing the degree to which so much of what I'm involved in whether it's you know
this drink or one of the shows that I work on or etc is about pleasure and the joy and pleasure
anyway I digress I think you're so right about pleasure because why can't it be as ennobling as
transformative yeah as suffering or sadness or pain yeah because it's the same thing but the
different end of the spectrum yeah exactly I mean actually I do feel like even though I am
a self-described workaholic I do get pleasure from it I do I do get pleasure from it when I'm clear
actually it turns out when I'm not eating prawn crackers and drinking coca-cola I think quite
clearly and things come to me I'm in a moment right now where and I'm sure that a lot of it
has to do with my age and it's none of wanting to leave a mark it's none of that it's just it is feeling
like hang on I've still got some things to do I've still got you know things to do that I didn't even
know I wanted to do and that is of course in roles and building a company that I'm building
but it's also just in terms of realizing that I do have a few things that I want to share with people.
And have you ever regretted working too hard or taking on a project?
There have been a couple moments when I haven't been able to stop around my kids,
you know, that had more to do with not in terms of my work as an actor but stuff on on the side or with other projects and stuff where I have felt the guilt of choosing to focus on
those things instead of having time with kids and I feel like there's a good balance right now. I feel like when I'm with them, I'm with them, you know,
and that has become more and more meaningful to me.
It's been really important to me in terms of my acting work
to always have them as part of the priority
in terms of this is when I'm available,
this is when I'm not, et cetera.
But this is different.
This is in terms of what happens with
meetings and with zooms and all those other things that end up in our days today taking sucking that
time and I've got some pretty strict rules around around all of that so that my workaholism
is something that my boys can look at as being beneficial to them because they can see,
you know, not just in terms of what I bring home at the end of the day, but in terms of
seeing me effectively building things. And they both have an interest in that. And I think it's
been really great that they get to see. And I they would say that too that to see a mum who is entrepreneurial and making things and they're teenagers aren't
yeah and you mentioned two of them are and then I have one who's yeah 28 okay
well Gillian Anderson it sounds like you're in a great place you are balanced you are hydrated you are aware of the importance of pleasure um i cannot tell you how much i have loved this
conversation and actually not being able to talk about specific acting projects has for me given
it this sense of liberation that i've really enjoyed You are such a wise and intelligent and funny,
deliberately so, person. I'm so grateful. I'm so grateful to you for trusting me and for coming
on How to Fail. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you for having me and you're wonderful to talk to.
If you enjoyed this episode of How to Fail with Elizabeth Day, I would so appreciate it if you enjoyed this episode of how to fail with elizabeth day i would so appreciate it if you
could rate review and subscribe apparently it helps other people know that we exist