On Purpose with Jay Shetty - Jada Pinkett Smith ON: How to Move from Shame to Self- Acceptance & Ways to Heal From The Past
Episode Date: October 16, 2023Do you want to transform shame into self acceptance? Do you want to learn how to forgive in order to heal? Today, Jay sits down for an extremely powerful, vulnerable and transformative conversation ...with Jada Pinkett Smith. Jada is an actress, producer, musician, host, author and advocate whose career has spanned over 30 years. Jada is also one of the hosts, on the Emmy award-winning talk show titled Red Table Talk. Today we are talking about Jada’s new book is out now called “Worthy” Jada fearlessly shares insights into her marriage, shedding light on never-before-heard truths, including the 2022 Oscar's incident. We also explore the notion that our relationships serve as mirrors, reflecting our inner selves, and delve into the transformative power of embracing greater love to conquer life's challenges. In this interview you’ll learn: How to let go of the old version of you Why self love is so important How to remain courageous in adversities How to turn shame into self acceptance How to overcome your past and thrive With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty In this interview, we’ll discuss: 02:48 Jada On How Writing Her New Book Was A Healing Process 09:48 On Growing Up With Young Parents Who Struggled With Addiction 14:31 “I wasn’t a priority… I felt unlovable” 20:40 *Trigger warning* Jada On Struggling With Suicidal Thoughts 32:11 Jada On Her Journey To Hollywood & Facing Disappointment 39:32 On Her Friendship with Tupac Shakur 42:59 The Difference Between Sexual Chemistry & Energetic Connection 52:54 A Realistic Approach To Love & Marriage 01:03:53 The Complicated Timeline of Jada and Will Smith’s Marriage 01:11:27 On Self-worth & Self-love 01:13:49 Jada Speaks About Jaden and Willow Smith including a *Surprise Letter From Willow* 01:23:58 It’s Important To Show Your Flaws & Humanness To Your Children 01:42:00 Friendship Built On Healing & Personal Growth 01:45:50 Be Okay With Your Victories & Your Challenges 01:49:52 How Jada & Will Are Healing Together 01:52:19 Why Jada and Will’s Marriage Hasn’t Ended In A Divorce? 01:59:09 Romantic Love Is An Aspect Of The Highest Form Of Relationships 02:02:57 Letting Go Of The Romantic Love 02:07:13 Marriage Is A Partnership That Works For Both Partners 02:15:23 Despite Living Separate Lives There Is A Strong Bond 02:19:52 *Surprise Moment* Jay Reads A Letter From Will 02:22:59 Married Young With Different Needs & Visions For The Family 02:29:11 The Fear Of Embracing Our Humanness You can purchase Jada’s book here https://ourworthyjourney.com/ Episode Resources: Jada Pinkett Smith | Youtube Jada Pinkett Smith | Instagram Jada Pinkett Smith | Tiktok Jada Pinkett Smith | Facebook Jada Pinkett Smith | Website See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Eva Longoria.
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I'm on purpose with Jay Shetty.
Hey everyone, welcome back to On Purpose.
I'm your host Jay Shetty and today is an extremely special episode for me because I'm sitting
down with one of my dearest friends, my sisters.
Someone that I deeply love and admire in this world. And she's gone out and created
something that I believe is going to be a gift to anyone who reads it. I've just spent the last
couple of months reading through her new book, Myself. And I can tell you this, it is a journey of healing, it's a journey of growth, and it's a journey of
learning to accept and embrace the discomfort that life brings to each and every one of us
in so many different ways.
And for that reason, I believe that when you read it, when you take out time to hopefully
share it with your friends, your community,
maybe you can make it the next pick for your book club and dissect it and analyze it and
reflect on it together, which I think it would be really powerful for.
I hope that this book is going to help make you happier, healthier and more healed because
I really believe it has the power to do that and guide you towards your
greatest, higher self in all areas of your life. Whether it be your career, your relationships,
as a parent, as a friend, I really believe that this book has the ability to uplift you as a person,
as a parent, as a partner. And ultimately, as a human trying to live and walk on this
earth that can be chaotic and crazy. So I want to welcome to the show, one of my dearest
friends, Jada Pinkett Smith, who of course needs no introduction, but is an actor, producer,
musician, a host, now author and advocate whose career has spanned over 30 years. In 2018, Jada added a new element to her multi-highfinite talents, one of host on the Emmy Award-winning
talk show titled Red Table Talk, that I've had the fortune of being a guest on so many
times was one of the highlights of my career when I was first invited on.
And on the series, Jada alongside her wonderful daughter Willow and her mom, Adrian, take a multi-generational
approach to discussions that speak to social and cultural issues, which have encouraged
open discussions and dialogue among hundreds of millions of people.
And a new book is out right now.
It's called Worthy.
It's a beautiful cover made of so many wonderful images and a mosaic of tiny little pictures of Jada,
but I want to encourage you all to grab a copy of this book. Welcome to the show, Jada,
Pinkett Smith. Jada. Jada. Now, J, before we start, go on. Can I tell a story? You can. Okay.
I had to let your audience know how this book even became okay. have to know Jay okay all right so I
visit you I'm here visiting because swamis here right enough swamis here and you had often said
jada you should write a book I'm like Jay I don't want to so this day once again you'd like
jada you should write a book I'm like, I don't want to write a book.
You're like, well, you should write a book, J.
I don't want to write a book.
We're going back and forth like siblings.
Rod and Nath comes into the kitchen
because Roddy's making a beautiful lunch for us to eat.
He comes, he sits down and he goes, J,
if Jada doesn't want to write a book,
she doesn't have to write a book.
And you go, well, I think she should write a book.
And I was like, oh, did he just talk back to her?
Why?
But I'm going to tell you something.
That was a really a moment for me, right?
Because I said, because I'd been pushing back
for a long time, and you talking to me about it.
And that moment, I was like, OK, I need you to take that home
and I need you to think about it because James your brother.
There's something here that you might not be seeing.
And it was really that moment that put me on pause.
And a couple of days later, I was in meditation and it came to me and I said, oh my goodness,
my journey from unlovable to lovable is a worthy story to tell. And I called you and I said,
Jay, I got it. Thank you. But you were so persistent about it, right? And I just want to thank
you because honestly, and I'm not, you know, if it hadn't been for that moment, that book wouldn't be here right now, right?
And you really were on my neck about it for a long time.
So I just wanna say thank you because you also made it clear.
You were like, you made it clear to me,
I would get a lot out of it and I have.
So I just wanna say thank you.
It's been such a deep healing process for me
in ways that I could have never imagined.
And what you said before, we even started in the introduction,
just that hope of, it's so hard to find authentic happiness
in this world.
Even through my journey, my 52 years
and just trying to figure out how to be authentically happy
has been such an excruciating process.
And one of the purposes of this book is like,
if I can help in any small amount of way,
in any way possible, to help somebody have an easier
or just leave like little breadcrumbs,
kind of like not a blueprint,
because everybody's process is different,
but just little breadcrumbs of how to find that for yourself,
because it has been really difficult for me.
So thank you, thank you, thank you.
Well, thank you for sharing that with me.
And I think I blocked that memory out,
I don't think I've ever tried to stand up against
rather than as long as I'm a teacher.
My teacher before, I think that would,
so I've pretended that it is.
Yeah, that did it.
For me growing up reading autobiographies is what changed my life.
And I think one of the things that I feel we struggle with today is that people's narratives
are being told from so many different angles apart from their own.
And when I grew up and I was reading the words
of Martin Luther King or I was reading Malcolm X,
I found there to be so much power in
reading the words directly from an individual.
And so, even if that wasn't their autobiography,
if it was their work, their words,
you felt so intimately connected with that person.
And I feel that when people move on
and we don't have them on the planet anymore,
it's almost like you lose this treasure house
of experience and memories.
And I also think that if someone's listening
or watching right now and you're thinking,
well, Jay, I would never write a book,
I'm not a public figure, I'm not a book. I'm not a public figure.
I'm not a celebrity.
I'm not a musician or an actor.
I don't have a career path.
That means I should be an author.
I still think that telling your story,
whether it's your family, your kids, your,
is so important.
I could not agree with you more.
I think it's actually imperative that looking at your life
on the page, like you forget experiences.
You know, you forget like, oh my goodness, I did that.
Oh, I went through that.
Oh my God, really?
I came through that.
It's like, it's almost like an homage to yourself, honestly,
to really be able to look
at your life and go, wow, what a life.
I think everybody should take some time, even if it's just one, like, even with worthy,
I took one line which was unlovable to lovable.
So anything in regards to my life that was on that arc,
I talked about, but there's so much more,
so many other parts of my life, right?
So even if somebody says, you know what,
I just wanna write down happiest moments of my childhood.
And I wanna just look at that on paper, right?
But whatever journey somebody decides to pick from from their life
and to examine thoroughly on the page, I would definitely suggest that because it is really powerful
and it's so healing and it will teach you so much about yourself. Absolutely. I can't agree more.
I can't agree more. Let's let's dive in. Okay. Because that
journey of being unlovable, the lovable as you're tracing there, I think is a journey that we all
have to walk in our own ways. And I think when, you know, I met you, I think five years ago now,
we've just spent a lot of time together in the last five years, hence we have a deep connection.
But when I first met you, I was looking at you from the outside.
And over the last five years, I've got to know you through an inner journey
and through family as well, and through spending time with your family.
And what I found was that we often lose context when you view someone's life from the outside and when you get closer,
the greatest thing you get is context.
And so I wanted to start off, and this book does that so well, but I want to start off
of, what does it feel like growing up with a teenage mom who has an addiction?
Like I think that that is so formative in so many ways and it's so easy to forget that that's where you started
because of your career.
Growing up with my mother, a teenage,
it's like we grew up together.
It's almost like having a big sister.
I mean, even to this day, you know, it's like,
it's like I get to have two roles in my mom.
Like sometimes she's still my big sister
and then sometimes she really comes in
as your as my mother.
You know what I mean?
As you saw in the book, it's like,
I had all this freedom, running crazy in the streets
of what have you,
but there was such pivotal moments
where Adrian came to the rescue as my mother, right?
And she still does that to this day.
But it was, you know, I did a lot of having to
raise myself. And there are parts of that, it's pros and cons to that. There's a lot of pros.
It's like, that is the part that made it possible for me to come to LA at the age of 18,
all my own, and figure this Hollywood game out, right? Just with no fear, completely fearless.
you this Hollywood game out, right? Just with no fear, completely fearless.
But then also kind of growing up with certain ideas
of what I thought love was
or certain survival mechanisms that, you know,
as I got older, didn't quite serve me.
But I think that we all have that
no matter what our family background is, you know,
and I'm saying we all have that no matter what our family background is. You know what I'm saying? We all kind of pick up things that along the way that
don't serve us for the entirety of our journey. I tell you, I learned a lot having a young mom
at an early age. I really do think that even with our trials and our challenges that the great
Supreme gave me,
the mom I was supposed to have in the most perfect mother and the journey that I was supposed to have to prepare me
for other parts of my journey.
But you know, it was challenging and beautiful at the same time.
Yeah, and I love Gami, so I just want to put that in.
Yeah, we all love Gami, we all love Gami.
Yeah, but it's really interesting. There's one line in your book that really kind of cemented
that feeling of unlovable to me from that time.
And you said, there was a time when you felt like
you were not being a priority to the two people
who gave you a lot.
Yeah.
That was hard.
Yeah.
That really hit me because I was like, yeah.
That was probably really difficult.
And like you had two parents who drugs were
their focus and the lifestyle that came with it. You know, I also talk about in the book
when my father told me, it's seven years old, I can't be your father. And it's just like,
wow, okay, what do I do with this? What does a 7-year-old do with that? You just kind of internalize it and you kind of go,
okay, what's wrong with me?
What is it about me that I'm not enough
for these two people to look at me as a priority?
Because I see everybody else's parents
and it looks like their kids are their priority. So what's wrong with me?
So you kind of, I internalized this idea of not being enough, not being lovable. And it's strange
because it's not that that I didn't feel like my mother didn't love me. It's just that
It's just that am I lovable enough to be the priority, am I lovable enough for you to show up for me as the mom that I see other moms be.
So I definitely internalized that and I think that I took that into the world of like, I'm
just going to prove constantly having to prove myself. internalize that and I think that I took that into the world of like I'm just gonna prove
constantly having to prove myself and I'm lovable, I'm lovable enough, I'm lovable enough. And I think that was some of the messaging that I took
from my childhood and to my adulthood.
And I appreciate you going back to that seven year old self because
in hindsight and now looking back you can make sense of it.
Yes.
And you can connect the dots, but it's like when you're actually in that position, it's
very natural, as you said, to just internalize it.
And I think that what's really interesting with your journey is we all have to develop
the emotional skills our parents didn't have.
Yeah.
And the earlier we do that, the easier and simpler life becomes, but often most of our energy
goes in thinking, well, I wish they had them or they should have had them.
And when I'm listening to you, what I'm hearing is that it's not even the belief that they
don't love me or love me enough.
It's the belief that somewhere inside, I am not loveable.
Yes.
Yes. Right?
It's so inside you.
It's not even about them.
Absolutely.
Yeah, it's like, I'm not valuable.
I'm not.
Yeah, it's because that's your mirror at first, right?
But it's so complicated and nuanced.
Do I believe my father loved me?
Of course.
In the way that he could, I think that he felt
the most loving thing he could do was tell me, I can't be your father. And I respected that even
at seven because I was like at least somebody's telling me the truth. I've always respected hardcore
truths. That is one thing about me.
I respect hardcore truths.
Doesn't mean I always like them,
but I freaking respect them.
I got that in style.
That's against their hardcore truth to tell a child.
But then at the same time,
that seed within me that is like,
well, are all men like that?
Like, if my dad doesn't love me,
how is any man gonna love me?
I didn't realize that as seven.
That's when I started getting into like 16, 17,
when I started having those kind of intimate relationships
with men and realizing, oh wow, this area is,
this area is quite unhealthy.
You know what I mean?
I've just like how I viewed myself,
I was either giving too much or not enough.
I mean, the hot or super cold.
You know, emotionally.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so trying to regulate and understand
because my understanding is that a young
girl's first relationship and understanding of love is with her father.
I didn't have that at all.
So I'm still learning.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm still really immature in that area of just emotional development
around intimacy with masculinity.
I know that now, whereas before I didn't know that.
Yeah, you know where?
I'm not aware, like, this is just what it is.
And then growing up in an environment
with so much violence and so much aggression
and oh man, it was like what
do you do with all that?
And trying to just like unpack all of it to just figure out like, oh life is about love.
It's not about power and ego and winning and losing.
I mean, it's taking me, I'm 52.
Just now understanding that.
It's been a wild ride, but you know what?
Every day I thank the great Supreme for the journey
and just forgiven me the awakenings,
the little awakenings that I get about love
and just my willingness to have it,
really wanting to understand what love is all about,
but I do have to give my grandmother a lot of credit.
I was gonna talk about that.
Yeah, Marianne really, I had all these different seeds
that were planted in me.
And Marianne's seed, that goes to show you how
the legacy of love will overpower everything.
It is the legacy of love that my grandmother instilled in me
and also the desire to search.
She always had me understand that the world is full
of treasures, get out there and find them.
She instilled that in me at a very young age.
And she also instilled in me that I was special, but I was her first
grad child. You know, I was her first grandchild. There you go, make it excuse me.
I was just saying, you know, I was her first grandchild. So she, she really made me
think that I could be and do anything, be in the child of two addicts on one side. And then my grandmother and stealing in me like, no, I'm telling you, you got something, kid.
You know what I mean? And so just being able to hold on to those seeds that she put within me.
And then of course, my mother encouraged me along the way to my mother saw some really beautiful stuff in me as well. And she's been one of my biggest cheerleaders and champions
throughout my life. Absolutely. If your grandmother saw you today, what would she say?
Oh my goodness. My grandmother would be so proud of me. Do it all. Like with the good and the challenges, she had a very challenging life,
extremely. And what she was able to make out of her life as a immigrant, you know,
child of two immigrants from Jamaica, she became pregnant at 13. To this day, we don't know how that happened.
We do believe that it was a mistake.
And it wasn't that she was raped or molested or take,
you know, I never got that from her.
I always got that it was her lack of knowledge
about sex that created that circumstance.
And she had that baby on her own.
She was pretty much abandoned,
and she was taken in by a family through a foster,
a white family, who she worked for as a maid.
And got herself to Howard University.
And was able to go to India as an ambassador.
Yeah, she went to India and came back in my grandfather who was studying to be a doctor
aster to get married.
So I think she would be and is very proud of me with it all.
I love that.
That's that's special to feel that that it's supposed to look back.
So Jayda at the start of this book, you talk about how you were, and this broke my heart,
you were talking about how you were planning taking your life, but then how it could look like an accident.
Yeah, that was 2011. That was my 40th birthday, my 40th year, actually.
When I was reading that, I was just thinking to myself, I was like, what were you hoping that would achieve?
Like, what were you hoping that would solve?
Tour us through that.
Yeah, it's funny because when you're in those states,
you're not clear.
It's not like it's gonna make rational sense, right?
You want out of the pain
and you cannot imagine your only way out is death
You think in your mind you've tried everything and you're like
So I like God I can't do this. I can't keep doing this and so that's your only solution
And I tell people all the time you know, we've had a lot of
And I tell people all the time, you know, we've had a lot of different spotlight of people who have taken their life.
People cannot believe it.
And I'm like, you just never know what somebody's going through.
And there are certain people that have a high tolerance for being able to put on a good
face in order to not burden people.
But what is really interesting is that
when you have a plan,
sometimes that gives you enough energy
to just keep going, because you're like, okay,
I got a good plan.
So if this gets really bad, I know where to go.
And you're like, okay, I'm just going to keep trying to figure this out. I'm going to keep trying to figure this out, but I got this plan.
And it's really tough because you don't want to, for personalities like myself,
you don't want to burden anybody.
And you're like, look, if I can't figure out how to get out of this,
nobody else is going to be able to figure this out either.
That was a really, really painful time. I'm sorry. I'm really grateful that I found a way out. But I think about people who
that will find it. And I wish, I wish there was like one thing I could say, one
piece of advice, you know, like, what would you tell somebody in a situation like that?
And all I can ever say is, please just keep going.
Keep trying, keep walking.
Trust.
Because if you trust, and I know how difficult it is, you know, for people who are in it,
like, that's easy for you to say.
But if you keep trusting,
the universe will open a door.
And I know how hard it is to just wake up
and keep it going.
Cause for me,
it was hard just waking up in the morning.
If I could get to four o'clock,
I was like, okay, you made it another day. Being able to
have enough strength to just get up, get out of bed, put clothes on, get through your day
and let no one know that you're struggling, it is so hard.
I feel really blessed.
You know, when plant medicine came my way,
it saved my life.
And I know that it's still a lot of whatever
around plant medicine, but I'm gonna tell you like this.
And I'm not saying that that's for everybody,
because my way out was a rugged
four nights. And it was just my thoughts. Thoughts about myself. It was just my
self-hatred. The level of self-hatred you have that I have had to want to take my own life.
And I had to walk four nights to clear up, look at, be with that level of self-hatred.
And I was like, you want to talk about walking through the valley of the shadow of death.
But I'm really grateful for that experience because after that one night, I never thought about suicide again.
Yeah, after the ceremony.
After the ceremony.
And it was really my last resort.
I was like, okay, this has been brought my way.
I'm gonna try this and it worked.
Praise God, thank you.
That's a really painful place for me still, and just thinking about how many people
are sitting in that place. It really breaks my heart. Trusting God. That's those moments where I
just have to just be like, God, these are your children, you will take care. And I pray that God, you will provide the door.
You have provided for me.
Thank you for being so vulnerable with us.
I want to give you a big hug.
Can I call you a big hug?
You can give me a hug, Jack.
I love you.
Oh, I love you.
Thank you.
You've been such a wonderful friend.
I really have.
You've been by my side through some really tough stuff.
Only for it.
More tough.
Only for more challenges to come along the way.
I'm so glad.
I wouldn't have had the fortune of getting to meet you.
And I'm really glad that you were so vulnerable with us just now, because I really feel like there's more people
than we think that have those thoughts.
Trust and believe it.
Yeah, there's your trust and believe it.
There's people, there's people that you see every day
that you would never believe.
It's so funny to have that level of strength and that level of
vulnerability and just, you know, despair and at the same time that level of like helplessness
that could drive you to do something like that.
But a lot of times we just don't know how to communicate it.
I didn't know how.
I know when you like the will. I didn't know how.
I know when you like the will,
you can't, like it isn't over anymore.
No, no.
You're mom.
They knew I was very unhappy.
Yeah.
That wasn't a secret.
And people didn't understand why either.
So let's talk about that for a minute.
The shame that comes with those feelings.
And specifically, like everybody feels that level of shame,
I don't care what station of life you're existing in.
And I would say I'm unhappy,
and people would look at me like I'm crazy.
What are you unhappy about?
And so then I just went in even more.
Cause I was like, they're right.
Look what you have accomplished.
You've got this great family.
You've got a great life.
You got the house.
You got the house, the car, the this and the net.
What's your problem?
So then that's a hot cup of shame.
So then you just, I just shut down.
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That's such a great note to put out there because I think so many times we think like that
about maybe our friends.
Yes, it's like you have someone that really knows you.
You have someone that knows you.
Yeah.
That language can be so.
Yeah, and I would suggest to anybody.
Don't say that.
Yeah.
Don't say that to somebody who's saying,
I'm having a tough time, I'm struggling.
Yeah, there, you have that.
No, what's going on?
Tell me, help me understand.
Yeah, as ridiculous as it may sound to you.
Right.
To that person, that thought has been repeated so many times.
Absolutely.
That it's become their reality.
Absolutely. Even if it seems ridiculous to you. Yeah, it can be so far and I get it.
But that is somebody trying to step out and talk. So and that is like, that's tricky too, because
really being able to
meet somebody where they are
versus trying to meet somebody where you're at.
And that in itself is a skill set.
Just being able to go, okay, hold it.
What am I missing here?
Let me just take a minute. Let me, hold it. What am I missing here?
Let me just take a minute.
Let me blend with you.
Let me join you.
I didn't have that and it's nobody's fault.
You know, I'm hoping that anyone who thinks
anyone in their life is struggling will share
what you just shared with us with them
to start a conversation, to open up that dialogue
because I think you just said it now,
and it brought a thought to my mind that real love or real compassion is when you help someone
get to the next step in their journey, not in your journey. And that means being able to be present
with them wherever they are, if it seems like a foreign alien land to you, I really feel like if anyone has anyone
in their life who's struggling, please send that to them.
Please share that with them because they need to hear it from someone else who's been
there sometimes also because if you've not been there, you may not know how to say, and
I think that's the other thing, right?
The other side is one side is we say, oh, you should be happy, you're fine. The other side is we
try and fix it. Yeah. You can't, right? Yeah, you can't, and that's... You can't solve it.
There is no right. You can't solve it. The best that we can do is like, you can try to meet them
where they are, and let's get help, we can do it together
and hold hands and get them to someone professional. I will say it's really healing when someone
can join you. It's also having that boundary of understanding too, that you can only do but so much as well. A person has to
really want help. And that's why I would tell the person that might be struggling to just stay
open to try everything. You know me like I tried everything until I found the thing. Yeah.
And just keep walking until I found the thing.
And just keep walking until you find the thing.
That obviously happens a lot later on
even though you start the book with that.
But there was a time when you believed
that Hollywood having it all would do it.
Even before you get to this point.
And also what I find fascinating is, you grew up
where drug dealing was normal.
You were in that scene, you were meeting people, everyone around you was in that scene.
You weren't, as from what I gathered from the book and the time we've spent together,
there weren't a lot of people who were breaking that mold.
Yeah, no.
What was it that made you, A, believe that you could move to LA when you were 18 and break that mold
and that you didn't have to fall into the pattern
of everyone around you.
And at the same time, secondly,
what was it that made you believe that that would solve it,
that that was what was missing?
Thank goodness along the way.
I had great mentors like Donald Hicken,
at Baltimore School for the Arts,
that was like,
JD, you've got more talent in the pinky of your little pinky
that most people have in their whole bodies, you know?
That he forced me to go, you know, into that audition
for North Carolina School for the Arts
and that's what got me out of Baltimore
so that I could just get away from that lifestyle
and break that mentality, right?
And then once I got immersed again into my arts, I was like, wow, I really love this.
And once I click into something, like my mind goes, peer, roll, you know what I mean?
And then pop came to LA. Well, he wasn't in LA. He was in Northern California.
And pop kept saying, you gotta get out here.
It's poppin'.
You know what I mean?
And now he's like, you gotta come out here and visit.
And so I was like, all right, I'm gonna get out there.
Pop was another one too that was just like,
you got it, Jada, you got it.
And I'm like, all right, I'm coming.
You know what? So I told my mom, I was like, you got it. And I'm like, all right, I'm coming. You know?
So I told my mom, I was like, you got two choices.
Cause I still wasn't quite sure yet.
You know, I was like, I could go to LA and see if I can do this
Hollywood thing, or I could become a lawyer and take all my
dramatic, to the court, to the court house. And she said, we're going to LA.
Wow. Once I got to LA, I was like, you're here. Make it happen. And part of what made me think
that I could do it wasn't just about talent, but was just my perseverance and just my go.
I'm a pit bull when it comes to, when I want something,
and especially in my youth.
I'm not so much a pit bull anymore.
But in my youth, once I put my mind to something,
I was like, go get it.
And I really felt like how everybody else feels.
Like, yo, once I make it,
once I'm rich and famous,
all my problems are gonna be solved.
Do you know what I mean?
My problems are gonna be solved.
My mom's problems are gonna be solved.
You know, everybody's problems are gonna be solved.
I got this.
You know what I'm saying to sow?
And that was a trip because that wasn't the case.
And I think that that's still prevalent.
People feel like once you get to a certain level of success,
you are exempt from the human experience.
You are exempt from the human condition.
And the truth is, that is not the case.
And let me tell you, I had an existential drop And the truth is that is not the case.
And let me tell you, I had an existential drop
in realizing, hold it, wait a minute, hold it.
Like, my career is popping.
I got money.
I'm hot.
People are pursuing you.
I got every dude, everywhere wanting, one, you know what I mean?
Like, I can have anybody I want.
Why am I not happy?
God, now this wasn't the plan.
I couldn't believe it, because that was the whole idea.
You make it, you put yourself up by your own bootstraps,
you make it in life's great.
And thank goodness at that particular point of time,
I had Pock that I could go,
like we could share that together
because he was going through the same existential
disappointment.
He thought the same thing.
That was like the beginning of just like,
wait a minute, then if it's not this, then what is it?
It's incredible, you had a supportive friend in Tupac.
You had this amazing friend who was saying,
you've got this, you're talented, and that can really help.
Yeah.
And at the same time, there's a whole other inner journey
that has to happen with it.
So that was externally, it was empowering,
it was inspiring, it was great to have someone
believing you. And we all need that. Yeah. And at the same time, it was like this other
reminder of the inner world was not together. Yeah. At all and being completely ignored.
You know, and it would take me years to realize that that, oh, no, it's not just about
what's happening on the outside Jada. But if you're in a world, it's not your foundation,
it's all sandcastles.
You know, I had a nervous breakdown,
and I moved to Baltimore, I get a farmhouse there,
and I'm like, okay, I'm just gonna get out of LA.
So I'm making a geographical move.
I'm like, I just gotta get back to my roots.
I gotta get back to my roots.
And then, will comes along.
And I'm like, maybe that's it.
I need a man, you know, that is like latch onto that.
It's like, okay, that's my new pro's act.
Will, you know, he's gonna, now it's his job
to make my life better.
That doesn't work either.
So the ego was just attached to all these
different exterior things until eventually I had to crash into really having to
look at the shambles of my inner world and rebuild and rebuild it. And I say
rebuild it because I feel like when we're born that inner world is intact. And I say rebuild it because I feel like when we're born, that inner world is intact.
But I had to really strip it all down, Jay, to the bare bones, the bolts and just start
inwardly from the bottom and just build. And it's been a wild ride. It's been a wild ride of what that means and what that looks like.
When it comes to your friendship with Tupac, which you speak about so beautifully in
the book, and it's so wonderful because we get an insight into him in a way that you
don't as just a fan of the music.
So as someone who grew up listening to him myself, it's like you
get a certain perception of someone who's intelligent, but then also has this gangster lifestyle
persona, etc. But then again, when you get context, and you get to know about someone through
someone who actually knows them. And what I really appreciate, which I found fascinating was just how you had the wisdom at that time
To know that someone would be a special friend
Without being romantic with them. Yeah
It was about because I feel like a lot of people struggle. Yeah, he was obviously into you and when you first met
Etc. The way you describe it, but it's like
and there's even one point where you dare him to
and I wanted to tell that, but but what I find fascinating and what I want to help people with here is like, how were you able to create and build a relationship with someone?
Knowing initially that it was based on some attraction, but, you knew there was so much more to it.
How were you able to allow that to unfold?
Because I think so many of us get so scared.
If we're not into someone, we go,
oh, I'm just gonna push them away.
Yeah.
Or that person eventually tries to make a move anyway.
But here it was like this beautiful respect,
this, you both created that.
Yeah, we both did.
We both had the intelligence. You know, we were both created that. Yeah, we both did. We both had the intelligence.
We were both really young.
So I think the great supreme for this too, that there was no physical chemistry between
us.
I mean, literally, it was like, and I tried to explain this to people.
It was the same for Pock. It was just like,
when I dared him to kiss me, he was, I mean, it was like ill for us both, right? And we look
as like, how can that be? How can you feel so connected to someone of the opposite sex?
There was just this beautiful understanding,
you know, when you can just sit with somebody in the room,
you don't have to say a word.
And there's just this level of comfort.
We just knew each other.
The moment Pax saw me and our eyes,
and I saw his peanut head across the room,
and bought more scoffiarts, it was like I knew him already. We just got each other.
I just understood him in that understanding. And he understood me so we could pull each
other's co-tails, but we could also join each other. When I talk about that joining, when
you can sit with somebody and really feel like they see you, they understand you, they care about you, and they're going to be there
by you, no matter what.
That was Tupac.
He was going to ride with me, no matter what.
He was so authentic and it's rare that that level of authenticity and he was so yet more
as hard on his sleeve.
And there was just this amount of loyalty between us.
And I think also the fact that we both struggled
with mothers who were addicts.
And we tried to compensate for one another
of not having that peace.
And we didn't boohoo about it.
We understood how to fill in the voids without getting all hallmarky about it.
You know what I mean?
You know what I mean?
And so we just kind of knew how to flow with each other in a way that was very comfortable.
It's always hard to kind of explain
because it was like, it's almost like he,
he was really a kindred.
That's the only way I can really explain it.
And I feel so lucky and so blessed
that I got to know a being like himself in that way,
because he was such a dynamic person.
But you can feel it, because his music is still lasting
for generations now. Absolutely. You know, so he was just a treasure. Teacher, what's the difference
between sexual chemistry and energetic connection or authentic connection? Because I think we often think that to get close to someone, you need that.
And here, it's not just about the fact that there wasn't attraction or there's more to
it in that I feel like there's a subtle difference in how you were able to accept that there
is a authentic connection, but it doesn't have to include a physical chemistry in order to have a deep energetic
connection.
If that makes sense, is it?
I actually think in my experience, some of the deepest connections that I've had with
men have not included sex whatsoever, right? And I think that sex sometimes can cloud things. A lot of a lot of things come in
that a lot of people don't understand. So you know, whether it's like certain levels of emotional
trauma, all these kinds of things. Energetically, the heart to heart spirit space has a level of purity to it, where even if
things get difficult, like when things would get challenging with Pock and I, we could
get to it fast.
And there's just a level of purity.
And it's not attached to, I want to make things right with you so I can sleep with you.
That's it.
You know what I mean?
It's not that agenda.
The agendas are pure.
They're more pure and it has more space.
It's like, I love you, but you got to live your life.
I can't be truthful.
I can't be truthful.
I can be honest.
I think that with us, I could be more of myself because one thing that I can be honest. I think that with us, I could be more of myself
because one thing I knew about Park,
I never had to worry about, you know,
when we had big blowups, which we did all the time.
He's coming back.
I never worried about that.
I never worried about, oh my god.
I'm too pretty.
No, he wasn't listening. Weve
us a year, weve us a year, a week, three days. I had to love all that
Pock was. He loved all that I was, the good and the bad. And he
was going to be right there with that. And vice versa. That was one
of the most beautiful aspects of our relationship. We didn't have
to fake it. We didn't have to pretend to be other things. And we could be honest, he could
pull my co-tails. I could pull his co-tails. I could give him all the praise and love on
him, all I wanted to and not have to worry about. Oh, now we're going to have sex. You
know, like none of that. Because that wasn't happening. We just didn't have the chemistry.
We just didn't have it.
I think if Pock had survived Vegas,
he and Will would have ended up being really good friends.
They would have had a lot to offer on another.
And funny enough, Will was the only person
when I started dating him,
Pock never said anything.
If I dated anybody else,
Pock had had something to say.
He didn't think anybody was good enough,
which I understand, right?
But when I started dating Will,
he didn't say anything,
which meant to me in his own way, he approved.
Yeah, wait, that's for anything.
Right, he doesn't say anything, which was like, okay, a not a word, which made me believe
he approved.
Yeah, no, I think it's so beautiful to reflect on that friendship because I think it's
so hope giving to so many people who, you know, sometimes lose out on those kind of relationships
because we don't see where else it can go.
Oh, we can go so much value.
There's so much value to that.
And there's the, you know, the part in the book where you
talk about how you never got to be there when Vegas happened.
Like you weren't there.
You hadn't talked for a year, I think, at the time.
We had a big, yeah, We had a big blow up.
What would you have said to him or what would you say to him?
Or what did you want him to know?
Or what were you so sure that he already knew
and you're thinking to yourself,
I just wanted to remind him of this.
What would that be?
I didn't have to remind him of anything.
He knew it.
Park knew.
I adored him.
I have no doubt in my mind that
He left this world knowing that not what a great feeling. Yeah, that's never been the issue for me
We did that dance a lot
Sometimes have blowups and we were we're both very stubborn and I'll let people read the book to yeah
that blow up and yeah what to that. But I think sometimes
what sometimes still hurts is that me feeling like maybe I couldn't do enough once he left.
Like I'm thinking to myself, oh my god, what would Pock have done? Like, if it had been me in a car in Vegas and God, you know, he would have reached
havoc so that ego sometimes comes into play like just feeling so helpless that he was
taken in that way and there was nothing I could do to this day that nausea at me.
You know, for what it's worth, I really believe that the way you write, and we, by the way,
everyone who's listening and watching, there is so much more to unpack in the book, which
I highly recommend you read as you're going through it and you'll come to this part,
but I really believe that the way you honor and appreciate and respect your dear friend in the book is really beautiful and special and it's
like it's hard to describe as well but it's a really wonderful lens into a human that is so
you know larger than life in so many ways and I wanted to also kind of there's been so many misconceptions
about our relationship
because people are like, you know, have a difficult time understanding that he and I could
actually be friends, but just wanted to give people such just an insight on, you know,
the beauty of our friendship that I just cherish to this day so very much. And I wanted to give people a different outlook
just of who he was.
And I'll say who he is, because he still exists.
Of course.
But so I really wanted that to come across.
Yeah, well, we've got to understand him,
I think, through you, through the perspective of not a rapper,
not an icon, not a better human and a friend.
And what he was like as a friend, and I think that that's a very intimate way to know about someone.
So I love that. I wanted to talk to you about, you mentioned there, you were like,
Will was the only person that two parks didn't have an issue.
Yeah, that I did.
And I love that. And you know how much, I mean know I've always been open about it and we've talked about it and I met will through you and it's like I
I've always said that when I met you and the whole family and and when I met him you were everything in more all of you are everything in more. And what I mean by that is everything I wanted you to be
plus so much more.
Right.
And he's that too, in so many ways.
And I think that it's really interesting because
when you're talking about in the book of like,
I love the conversation you refer to and you're like,
you're mom's like, you know, get him off the phone.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's one of our moments, being angry.
Yeah, that's exactly it.
But what I love about it the most is that it is true
that from the outside, as you said it up,
it looks like a fairy tale.
And it felt like that.
And what I find really fascinating about this again
and again, pretty much with everyone is that
there is no fairy tale love.
Any way on planet.
No, on planet.
And in our own little way, I always talk about this
with me and Rady too.
It's like, we'll do an interview together
where Rady will tell me all the challenges she has with me
and she'll be crying and upset.
And then everyone in the comments will still be like,
you guys are so cute.
No, no, no, we're not trying to say we're cute.
This is like real issues, like real stuff
that we've talked about, obviously,
used to be a ton of time in me and Roddy.
And so I think for me, what's really interesting
is that yes, from the outside,
when you see two incredible actors,
performers, artists, talent, get together,
you're like, wow, powerhouse couple,
everyone projects their expectations,
you have beautiful adorable kids, you know, like Jaden's acting and he's like the cutest thing in the world.
And the willow too. And it's like, it's so interesting because we also, we like to build up our
dreams in people. And we like to project our dreams onto people because I think as viewers,
it makes us believe that it's possible.
Yeah.
And we live through people and we aspire for it.
Not that we aspire for the success and the fame,
but that we aspire for the like,
well, if they can get it right, then I can get it right.
And it's not, it's an innocent belief that we all have.
It's not a, we all have the inside of us.
So we have, we all have this, I know that I had that. Like, you know, I was searched the other day
and it's a term, it's Disney Princess Syndrome.
And I was like, I've had Disney Princess Syndrome,
like myself, like a ton of times.
And it's so fascinating to be,
for anyone who doesn't get the reference,
the point is that every Disney Princess
is always looking for her friends.
Oh yeah.
And I would say regardless of gender, that's true.
Like I feel that way where I've been looking for my princess
or my win or my award or whatever it may be.
And I wanted you to walk us through like,
what were the stages and how would you define the stages
as you do in this book?
Your stages of your relationship with Will.
Because I feel that that's the part that people get blurry because they're looking at it through their lens.
But you both have been so clear about stages of your relationship internally,
which I actually think is the hardest part. And so how would you define the stages of your
partnership with Will that help people people understand the conversations that you're
having behind the scenes from being madly in love to.
The stages of getting to the most authentic and this difficult.
I just want to honor that for a second. like it's almost like talking about relationships
and the romanticism around the idea of relating
is sometimes as detrimental as talking about politics
and God because it's such a staple in how people
look at marriage and relating culturally, right?
And all of the romanticism around it.
And Will and I have been what I would consider kind of the relationship goals, This romanticized version, I had to, in my own relationship with Will,
dissolve my romanticism around what I thought marriage would be, should be, and honestly, we
really never had what I would consider the ideal honeymoon stage, you know,
even though you do have the honeymoon stage,
but our relationship started with some challenges,
because he was divorcing.
And then our life just took off like a rocket ship.
We just took on this huge life in our early 20s and where his
focus was really about, hey, I want to be the biggest movie star in the world. And I
knew that going into our relationship and I knew that would be sacrifices with
that. And then the long the way, and I'll talk about this in the book, just having those different
perspectives and really trying to figure out how to reconcile those different perspectives.
And also deal with a lot of challenges.
So I think one of the things that I address in the book in regards to people thinking
that we've had an open marriage.
And we haven't had an open marriage. And we haven't had an open marriage.
Talk about starting off pretty much early on in our marriage of having the need for transparency.
And that is a big difference between, hey, you can do whatever you want, you
know, versus like, hey, here we are. Very young people in this place called Hollywood that
has a lot of temptation. Let's have a partnership around this. Let's be very realistic of what
this life is. If we're talking about we're going to be together forever and
ever and ever, that means there's going to be some temptations that come up. Let's be in partnership
and let's talk about that. I didn't go into my marriage like, I am going to be. My husband is never ever ever going to look at anybody else. Like I just I am just a
realist in a lot of ways. I know what it's been like for me. Right? When I first came to Hollywood
and I could go into the clubs and have anybody. Just the level of just like, that just, that like, you just intoxicate.
It's so intoxicating.
That's one.
Now what I do believe that what people don't know that I talk about in the book a lot is
that there have been several breakups between Will and I. Will
talks about it my 40th birthday, which was a big break up for us. We were actually looking towards
separating and divorcing. And we separated. The world just didn't know. Then we had a reconciliation.
And we had a reconciliation. And then 2016 came.
And we had the ultimate break.
But the world did it now.
And I think that that's where some of the misconception about having an open marriage
came into play because we were living lives as single people.
And the world didn't know.
Over the span of 12 years of just trying to figure out
this thing called love and marriage between Will and I,
it's been a trip.
And I think that even with that entanglement piece,
which I talk about extensively in the book,
how I played a part in the misconception of that narrative,
of allowing myself to be portrayed as an adulteress,
allowing myself to be portrayed as someone
that had betrayed will, and that wasn't the case.
We broke up in 2016.
He went on to live a life as a single man.
I went on to live a life as a single woman.
And then when we had the talk at the red table,
I was gonna go at the red table,
I was gonna go to the red table by myself
to talk about the entanglement.
But Will decided he wanted to come with me.
And we were going to then tell the world,
hey, we haven't been together.
And this happened during that time.
Well, when we got to the table, well, wasn't ready. He
wasn't ready. He wasn't ready for the world to know that. I had to respect that. Well, I
didn't have to, but I wanted to. But I was ready. I was ready to let go of the persona
I had created around myself that had put me in a golden cage. I wanted
to let that go. And so I had to stay on my journey. I had to stay on my path while also
respecting. That will wasn't ready. So I said, you know what? This is my mess anyway.
I'm going to take this heat because guess what?
The heat is coming either way.
When we decide to get divorced,
when we decide to separate whatever, whatever.
This is my practice run.
Strip it down.
Let it go, Jada.
And then, unless she was left,
I didn't have to put that particular show out,
but I had already gotten myself so ready
for that journey for myself.
And to me, that was moving closer to my freedom
than holding back and creating a narrative
that I felt like was just gonna trap me more.
And it's difficult as it's been, because the irony is I spent so much of our relationship
having this open communication between, between he and I, creating this beautiful friendship
of authenticity and honesty. And so to be labeled as someone who cheated on him,
was devastating, but it also put me in a position
where I had to learn how to let go
of what anybody thought about me
and really be tentos down on understanding who I am
and being able to walk in that,
no matter what anybody thought about me.
But I needed that journey for myself.
It's kind of like, that is the walk,
when they talk about walking on hot coals.
It's like creating that level of, when they talk about walking on hot coals, it's like creating
that level of when we talk about that inner world work and creating that like strong foundation
within yourself of knowing exactly who you are, no matter what other people think about
you.
I mean, I've gotten that to a certain degree.
And so that was a very challenging moment. And I talk about it in
the book because I feel like so many people are challenged in that way of like, how can I just walk
in this world and be okay with myself no matter what. And I talk about the journey really extensively
in the book, but there've been so many misconceptions
about my relationship with Will,
but I think that everybody suffers misconceptions.
Once again, whether you're head of the PTA
and your husband's that doctor and you're the lawyer. You're like the crumb
delacrum of your friend group or of your community. So everybody's expecting you to have a certain
kind of marriage and marriage is a journey. And it's a journey towards learning how to love yourself and learning how to
love your partner. And there's not one way to do it. And everybody, I think we do that
journey, a real disservice of trying to make it this cookie-cut thing. Like, no, no, no, you can only do it this way. And it's like
each and every person in their relationship, they have to look at what their relationship
is calling for in regards to what is needed to get your marriage to the love, to the strength, to the understanding, to the friendship, and to that unconditional
place.
And the unfortunate part is that we think once we get married, like somebody is ready
made, they know how to love you, even though they don't know how to love themselves.
They don't know how to love themselves, but you better know how to love me. Yeah, I wanna highlight because I think it's often,
it can be missed at least, is, you know,
when you had that conversation on Red Table Talk,
it would have been so easy to not have that conversation,
obviously, because people would have their rumors,
it would blow over and then it would be over.
And I'm only raising this because I know how much for you, it was part of the work you were doing. And that's
why I'm raising this because I think what's really interesting is that when someone's
trying to do deep inner healing work, actually more often than not, their external way will not make sense.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
Because it literally looks like you're setting yourself up to fail.
Yeah.
Because when you're really trying to dismantle the ego or you're really trying to deconstruct
the false identities that we all build up me included all of us like
When when that is there and it's being deconstructed someone who looking you be like, why would you do that? Like why do I need to know and really I just want to highlight and I want you to share about that that the intention
Was healing the intention wasn't to save face or the intent and I know this because we were talking about it
Yeah, the intention wasn't, uh, yeah, wasn't to save face and it surely wasn't and I need
people to know.
I didn't ask Bill to come to the table.
Yeah, yeah.
That was not my idea.
Will wanted to come to the table because he didn't want me to be there by myself.
He had all the best intentions.
And God there and was I think his trauma response kicked in like, I'm not ready.
So many people were like, don't do this. And I'm like, nah, I'm doing it for myself,
for myself, because I want to live because I'm ready. I don't want this whole thing anymore.
This whole Jada will, I'm done with that.
It was part of the work that I was ready for
and it was what I needed.
And everybody's in different places in their journey.
Also, that's also a dynamic I had to look at
within myself in regards to so
it's two things. There's this healthy Jada is like tear it down. I'm wanting, I don't
want that person anymore. I tear my ego down and there was this other part of me that's
like, oh my God, I need to pretend, you know, he's not ready, you know, he's not ready.
My, you know, codependency kicks in and I go, this is what I do, I'm the martyr.
I can do the martyr thing.
So once again, it's both things. It's healing.
Like, I'm ready.
Like, I'm ready for, I'm ready for the tear now.
And then this martyr that's like,
and I wanna make sure,
will as long as you're okay, I'm okay.
That's part of my relationship with my mother's addiction
that I brought into my relationship with Will,
that created a certain dynamic within myself,
in my relationship with him
that I also needed to get my eyes on, that I didn't see,
that that needed to be healed as well.
Without that table,
without that moment,
I would have never recognized that.
As painful as it was for people to watch,
existential disappointment in a collective.
So sorry, I wish it could have happened another way.
I'm sorry that it had to be so messy in front of everybody.
I'm sorry.
But I needed that.
What I got to clear up, what I got to clean up,
what I got to see, and to be able to sit here with you today
and embrace it all
and have so much acceptance for myself for all of the choices I've made.
And people ask me, if you had to do it over again, would you do it any different?
I don't think so.
Something about Mary Poppins?
Something about Mary Poppins.
Exactly.
Oh, man, this is fun.
I'm AJ Jacobs and I am an author and a journalist and I tend to get obsessed with stuff.
And my current obsession is puzzles. And that has given birth to my new podcast, The
Puzzler Dressing. Dressing.
Oh, French dressing.
Exactly.
That's good. that's good.
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We are living in the golden age of puzzles.
And now you can get your daily puzzle nuggets delivered straight to your ears for 10 minutes
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Every day on the puzzler, short and sweet.
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Listen to the puzzler every day on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
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That's awful and I should have seen it coming.
All on my hand, this is Wormer Vaj about the Rama Executive Producer of the new podcast
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Part of IH Radio's Michael Tudor Podcast Network, each week host V. Cortes and Abuelita
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Let's see if Qi's bus will fly
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Listen to Dave Mayawali the first
on the IHAR radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Listen to comeback stories.
I'm Darren Waller.
You may know me best as a titan for the New York Giants.
You may also know me for my story of overcoming addiction and alcoholism.
You may have heard a few of my tracks as an artist or producer.
And you may have seen the work that I've done through my foundation.
And you may know my friend and co-host Donnie Starkens as well. He's a mindfulness teacher, a yoga instructor,
a life coach, a man fully invested in seeing people reach their fullest potential.
And we've come to form this platform of comeback stories to really highlight not only our own adversity but adversity in the lives of well-known
guests with amazing stories. Catch us every week on Come Back Stories on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Honestly, knowing and talking to you, I found it to be so courageous and so full of strength
because it was putting yourself on the spot like in no other way. And I can't even
begin to understand how uncomfortable it is. I only came from the conversations we
had. Well, you were right there with me, Jake. Like the level of discomfort that you were willing to put yourself in.
Yeah.
In order to let go of an identity,
in order to let go of a perception.
Like, I'm saying it in these words because I just want everyone who's listening
watching just to think about it for a second.
Like imagine you had to go in front of everyone you knew,
your family, your friends, your school,
whoever it is that you're around, your people at work,
and you had to share a secret that wasn't a secret
between you and the person you're with,
but was a secret to them.
To them to the chest.
Just think about that whatever that secret is.
Right.
Every other secrets, every other something, to them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. them. To them. To them. To them. To them. them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. To them. them. To and letting go of shedding identities as uncomfortable and I'm not comparing my experience to yours at 12
because it's not the same in any way.
But I'm trying to explain how like a tiny PDA,
like my kind of a version of it is still as big.
I remember the day I told my friends and my family
and my teachers that I no longer thought I could be a monk.
And it sounds so small like now.
No, yeah, but at the time, I someone who was like,
I was dedicating my life, you've met my teachers,
you know, I'm dedicating my life,
I'm like doing this big thing,
and then all of a sudden I come to the conclusion
that this thought in my head of,
I'm not good enough, I'm not a monk,
I'm not meant to be, like this isn't my path,
I have other desires, whatever it may be,
I think I should get married, you know, all this stuff, and you're so,
you feel so much shame.
Yes.
Around the fact that you're not good enough,
and what are people gonna say?
Yeah.
And even for me, that was just my temple community
and my friends and my family.
And even then it was like a ziff.
Someone was ripping my ego out of my chest.
Yeah.
Because that's what it feels like.
It feels like an extraction of,
oh absolutely.
Not that I'm ego less now,
but that was such a big way of crushing
that part of my ego.
And so I just want people to think about it
through that perspective.
And I'm saying it because I think that
we all go through periods in our life
where people misunderstand us.
We all go through periods in our life where the people we thought loved us and adored
us will now be let down.
We all go through experiences in our life where we have to let go of someone that we thought
we were or what people thought we were.
And those are going to be the hardest, most painful times.
And actually, if we can learn to be graceful, instead of when our friends are getting divorced
and we're like, did you hear so?
We had that.
A couple of people in my community back at home,
just got divorced.
The whole community is talking about it.
And I'm just like, guys, like,
we have no idea what was going on for the last 10, 20 years.
Let's give them grace,
because you never know when that could be you.
You have no idea when it could be you.
It's so easy to judge and throw stones at anyone and everyone.
I just really feel that if we have the ability to be graceful and compassionate when other
people are doing that, we'll actually do it with ourselves.
And because we're hard on ourselves,
we're hard on others, we're hard on ourselves. And I just, for me, I just want to see more people
be graceful for themselves and for others because there's so much human experience wrapped up in it.
Yeah, that's my hope too, you know, that people can have more grace for themselves. But I tell you, I think one of the saving factors was that, you know, there were no secrets
between will and I.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And there were no secrets between my kids and I.
Yes.
So the fact that my family was absolutely aware
of the entire journey, it was a saving grace for me.
Whatever the world wants to think is whatever,
will knows he was not betrayed.
And my kids know that I did not betray their father.
And that to me, all that matters.
But it was quite a exercise of having to walk in the world like that, you know, having
people think that that's what happened.
Just having that exercise in that experience has offered me.
And I'm not saying that anybody else should do it on that level.
You know, but what I am saying is that there are ego deaths that have to occur in order to get to a more authentic place of self-worth and
self-love.
And I want to talk about the little gurus as you call them in the book.
We start with Trey who, you know, this book is dedicated to your daughter and the daughters
of the people that read it and to your sons.
Yeah.
And to the sons of the people that read it and to your sons. And to the sons of the people that read it.
And I wonder, what is it that you think you've learned
from Tray that you've been taught by Jaden
and that you've been taught by Willow
in your journey with them all?
Because you have such a, whenever I've seen you with them,
it's, you have such a deep, beautiful, rich relationship
with your kids.
We were talking about that earlier.
I'd love to know what is it that each of them have taught you?
Trey, he has such an enormous heart. And I think what I love about Trey is his ability
to meet people, join people where they are, his ability to join me. He has a way of seeing the best in
people no matter what the best in circumstances no matter what and even in his most challenging times
challenging relationships
having the willingness
To see the person's spirit versus personality.
And he's always reminded me of that.
You know, Mom, you know, that person, you know what I mean?
And I'm like, you know what, right?
He and I have kind of been walking parallel.
We'll look over at each other and go,
I see you, and I see you.
You know what I mean?
And so, you know, we're the two in the family
that's really been on an intense walk spiritually.
And he has so much perseverance in regards
to understanding God, finding his way, understanding life.
I don't know.
I feel, you know, he's just such a light.
So Iron Sharpens, Iron, he'll walk into the kitchen and go,
Mom, look at me.
What do you think I'm feeling today?
You know what I mean?
Or he'll look at me and go, wow.
You're like, bright, what's going on with you?
Like he can just see me.
Yeah.
And he could see people, you know, and I'd be like,
wow, how did you see that?
Yeah, this is happening.
This is like, really?
You know, and he's, he's just, he's just such a light.
He's just such a joy.
And so he just is always reminding me to look for the best in people.
And I just adore him.
And that's why he's a bonus.
You know, you know.
And then Willow, oh, she's such a fireball.
I mean, she is like the mirror of the fire of my soul.
When I tell you, she is the mirror of that.
Like, I get to see that myself in her in
so many ways. What I love most about Willow is that she is to the point. You know what I mean? She is
like, she doesn't have a whole lot of play play. She's just like, no, no.
She just hits it on the mark,
where sometimes I can be very flowery, you know,
very gentle.
And I also love how she loves me.
She teaches me a lot about love.
She teaches me a lot about when I talked about being able
to join, like she teaches me a lot about how to join her
and how to join others in ways that I'm not used to.
I know how to join others in ways that I'm used to,
but me having to learn how to join her in a certain manner,
I've had to come out of my comfort zones
and really be like, oh man, I'm very deficient here.
And her patience with me, with that deficiency.
She's so patient with me.
She's like, it's okay, mom.
You know, sometimes I don't need you to talk to me, mom,
just hold me.
I'm like, oh, that's all you want me to do.
You just want me to do.
That's all.
I'm not used to that.
You know, I don't come from a family where affection,
you know, that we don't hug each other and
hold each other. That's not what we did. But Willow, I don't need your advice. I just want
to sit here, hold me while I cry. And then I have to learn how to, I've had to learn,
she's taught me how to hold tears and really be able to join with those tears and not rebel
and have them repel because then they bring and not rebel and, you know, like,
have them repel because then they bring up my tears.
And so she's learned, she's taught me how to love my tears too.
You know, those places within myself that I haven't always been willing to go.
You know, and now I cry all the time, you know, and I call it the thawing because for so
long, I wasn't allowed,
I didn't allow myself to cry, you know.
So she's taught me that.
And then there's Jaden.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh man, Jaden, he's just walking joy.
Mm-hmm.
I mean, he comes in the room and it's just like,
Jaden, you know, he's just walking joy,
but he was like that when I carried him.
I was the happiest I had ever been in my life when I was pregnant with Jaden.
And I think that had a lot to do with the energy that he carries.
He has the capacity to love everything.
And that is
difficulty
challenging people, challenging situations.
He has the capacity to love it and find the beauty in it.
And I'm talking about sincerely.
And it is light.
That's a God-given gift.
That's not, you can't teach that.
And so he just, I was just talking to him to the other day and I he just I'll sit and I'll you know
I was just talking to the other day and it's just like oh, I was reading this book
Emotionally immature parents and I was like Jane you got to read this book
Your mother has been emotionally inverse your parents
As I you got to read this book and he said um
You know what, Ma?
He said, things from afar can look a certain way.
But when you put a microscope up on something
and you look at it close up, he was like,
it is such a weird shape,
weird, beautiful shapes of things,
but you get to see the intricacies of it,
and it's so much more, and that's what you are to me.
You're like this beautiful intricate organism
that I love so much.
Don't ever apologize to me again.
That's so weird.
You thought I mean, and that's just how his mind works.
You know, and he comes over and he hugs me
and he kisses me on my forehead, you know what I'm saying?
And he's like, you gave birth to me.
You know, don't ever apologize to me.
You know, and he's like,
and I'm not reading that book.
I said, I'm gonna get you the book
and you're gonna need to read it.
You know, I'm always apologizing to my kids
about all kinds of things.
I think it's so important for parents to apologize.
Say sorry, you know, I've gotten in the habit every little, like, if I misunderstand something
or if there's like this little glip, you know what?
I didn't quite get that then, I'm so sorry.
I apologize.
I'm gonna do better next time with that.
And thank you for your patience.
I think it's important, you know.
I wish my father had apologized to me more.
My mom apologizes to.
I actually learned that from her.
She's apologized a lot.
And I actually said the same thing to her.
Now that I'm thinking about it,
stop apologizing.
I said.
But isn't that, those are the best relationships
where someone does something.
Yeah.
And the other person is like, it's fine.
Yeah.
And that's what kind of, it's that relationship
where internally you're happy you heard it,
but you know you didn't need to.
Right.
But the person still felt the need to say it.
And it creates so much clarity.
And, you know, when I told Willow you were coming on today, she sent a little note.
Oh, no.
Because I was talking to her about it, and I was talking to her about the book.
And so she sent this little note that I want to read to you.
If that's okay. Oh my God. Let me give my napkin. So she said, this is from Willow.
And Willow, if I don't read it as you would in your amazing voice, then please forgive me. I'm
also apologizing to you in advance. Mom, I am incomprehensibly proud of you. And all of the inner
excavation you have done during the writing of your book.
There were many times during the process where you would read me sections
and deep emotions would come up for us both. Learning from you, through learning about you,
is one of the biggest joys of my life. You never cease to inspire me with how wide you've opened your heart, not only to the immense
joys of life, but also to the deep uncertainties and shadows with equal gratitude and grace.
You have shown me true tenderness and true strength come from the same place within,
and that is something that I aspire to show others. Thank you for loving me. I'm so grateful for you.
And the guru, that's the little guru right there. There it is. She loves you so much and they all
obviously love you so much. But when I read that and when I was reflecting on it, I was just,
and as me and Radio always talk about this,
because we've watched you in Willow so many times together.
And it has been so inspiring to us to see
that connection you both have and the openness you have
with your kids and how well they understand you.
And, you know, as you were just saying,
you were always apologizing, but that's what they're seeing.
Yeah. And you know, as you were just saying, you were just apologizing, but that's what they see.
Yeah.
They see that because you're so willing to share with them.
Yeah, I don't keep secrets from my kids.
I've let them see my deepest flaws.
And I think that's important.
I mean, and not in a way that we have to be careful with that too, but I mean, just
as far as like, it's okay to be human,
not being afraid to show my humanist.
Because that's the one thing with my mother
that I have so much gratitude for,
that I could see her as a human being.
And my relationship with my mother being an addict
and me being able to relate to her as not just my mother,
me being able to relate to her as not just my mother, but as a woman, you know, as a person.
And I think that was one aspect that I felt like I really needed to bring into my relationship with my kids, for them to see me as a person. We're in this together.
Yeah, it comes across when I've witnessed it.
It's the most beautiful thing.
I could only have a dream that, when Rade and I are able to do that, you know, the Wii.
You will.
Have a Wii U have it.
It's really special.
It's remarkable to watch in practice.
And I mean that, you know, the message says it all.
But, Jada, I wanted, you know, I, throughout this book,
and even in this interview today, I think,
I was gonna save this to say it later,
but I'm gonna say it now.
I've been sharing spirituality with people
in different ways since I was 18 years old.
And I was so young and immature then in my spirituality,
and I still am today, and that will always continue.
And I've just been fortunate to sit
at the feet of incredible teachers and mentors.
And so any realization I've had earlier
than I should have had it is because of sitting
with elders and you know sitting
with the teachers I've introduced you to and I've rarely met someone who's as eager for
healing as you. I don't think of met a family that's more where healing is the top priority.
Right. And it's such an interesting thing to perceive in someone because you can tell by someone's language
and when their eyes light up and their body language changes as to what they are motivated by.
And ever since I met you from the first day we met backstage, green room,
for Red Table, thought series two, launch day event.
I was getting to host an interview you,
Gany and Willow.
And I remember you'd asked me like,
what did you learn as a monk?
And I'd said to you, I was giving to you the,
what I did learn as practices,
but I wasn't getting to the root of it.
So I was explaining the practices like gratitude
and meditation and mindfulness and service.
And you were kind of just like, oh, that's cool.
And then I'd said to you, because I felt a inner voice say that I should.
And it was truly guided from within.
And I said to you, I learned
how to love God. And that was potentially the first time I'd even said that in that way
to someone. And you just like your whole body language and your eyes and everything just
changed and everyone else was late. So we were just talking and you were like, I want to
learn how to love God too.
And you'd obviously already been on that journey for decades.
Like, you know, and you talk about in the book,
where you started with the ethical society.
Right.
You know, that had been a journey that had been a part of your journey forever.
But it was so interesting to me to meet someone
Anna entire family who is more focused on healing and growth
and God in their own way, in your own language,
in your own ways, than anything else. I've never had a conversation that steers too far away
from any of those things. And we have fun and we have a good time and everything.
And the reason I raised that is because I also saw that when you were talking about Oscars
Night in the book, you referred to as the Holy Slap and the Holy Joke, and you've always
looked at everything through the lens of how is this bringing me closer to the divine.
I remember one conversation we had about the feminine divine, and I'll never forget it because we, at this point, we'd
been doing, we'd been talking twice a week for like a year and a half or something. And
we were talking about a specific aspect of the divine feminine, which is often left out of forgotten or hidden.
I'd never seen anyone respond in a way so sincerely
and genuinely to a vision of God as you did.
And you said, with tears in your eyes,
you're like, I've been looking for this God for 25 years.
And I remember
just going like, I could just see the genuineness and this sincerity in your eyes. And I was
just like, wow, like, I hope I can love like that one day. Like, that's actually what
I felt like as in it was so inspiring. And I know that I've got closer to divinity through our work.
And that's because of your seeking.
And you've pulled me closer to the divine through your seeking,
which you've given me the greatest gift, like for years and years and years,
ever since I've known you.
And it's your ability to look for that.
And so I wanted to talk to you about, you know, I think when it all went down on
Oscar's night, and you talk about this in the book, and so I want to leave everyone to read about it in full.
But the perception was that you were so offended that you'd kind of urge this action, which is bizarre in and of itself for so many reasons that you lay out in the book.
But I want to hear from you like what were you actually hurt by about the condition that you were
going through. And in that gap between what we saw and what we didn't get to see which everyone
had their own theory on, what was actually
your thought space? Where were you? Let me start with, that was a really layered moment.
Let me start with also that there was so much that people didn't know in regards to
what was happening
with Will and I at that time.
And I will leave for people to get the book.
Yeah, absolutely.
Because there's so much history.
Mm-hmm.
And you go in here.
Present, yeah, break it down.
I break it down.
Hence why I did not.
Exactly, it's so much history
that I think would give people a lot more context
to understand that moment. Let me also say that I think would give people a lot more context to understand that moment.
Let me also say that I know there was a difficult moment
to watch because of history that Chris and I had
in regards to the 2016 Oscar So White.
And I'll let people read to get up to speed on that.
But when I first saw Chris' name come on stage,
come up as one of the presenters, I said,
oh boy, I look to Will and I'm like,
he's not gonna be able to help himself.
This is gonna be something.
I was like, I knew.
I already knew.
Now I was like, okay.
So, Will had been going back and forth,
backstage all night.
So, when Chris said what he said,
I looked to Will as if to say,
see, I knew it.
Right.
And then I was like, oh boy, that's not cool
to like talk about a medical condition that people,
there's nothing you can, like it's not something that can be cured, right?
And that how many stories I had heard of people,
young people committing suicide in the shame
and just how many people suffer,
and you don't even know.
Like once I had the condition
and I saw how many people around me had,
I was like, all these years I didn't know and people express the shame,
the level of shame they had around it.
I'm going to be okay.
As far as my condition, as you can see, my hair is growing back.
That's what it does. It'll grow, it'll fall out, it'll grow back again.
Pieces of my eyebrows, a fall out, grow back, you know,
I'm having a good moment right now.
My alopecia is not as extreme as most people who are dealing with that condition.
And I just felt like that's not okay.
So I wasn't upset about me.
And I don't remember actually rolling my eyes.
I think what people saw was me looking at Will going,
I told you, I knew he was gonna do that.
And oh boy, here we go again.
Yeah, that was kind of the thing.
Yeah, you know, oh, here we go.
But I wasn't upset about me.
I really wasn't, it wasn't about me.
It was just all the stories I had heard
and that I continue to hear about people
who have suffered from this
condition.
And obviously you didn't want what happened to happen.
Like I think that is just clarifying.
I know that.
I'm just clarifying you.
Of course.
It wasn't like I looked at Wilson.
You know, you know.
I know.
But and that's the kind of, you know, those are the kind of moments of context.
Yeah.
I lost sometimes.
Listen, there was an aspect of that that I was as shocked as anyone because Will and I hadn't been referring to each other
as husband and wife since 2016.
I was like, wife, me?
That's right.
Yeah, I'm okay, that's right.
I am your wife.
And that kicked in.
I'm like, yep, here we are.
In that moment that that did happen,
I was like, we came together, we leaving together.
You know, that part of me that put everything else aside
and it's like, this is gonna be something.
I need to make sure, wills okay, we're gonna get through this.
I had no idea that that was none whatsoever.
And I came as family.
I actually didn't go to the Oscars as Will's wife.
And I know for people that's weird,
but what was going on behind the scenes?
Will and I had been like, we weren't living as husband and wife.
Since 2016, I was happy he asked me to go.
I was happy he wanted to share that moment with me still. And I was going to be by his side.
And I think also people weren't really aware of the journey that had taken place
after emancipation as far as Will's concern. It was a really difficult movie. And afterwards
he decided to get into therapeutic settings and he asked me to join him.
Because a lot of stuff was coming up.
A lot of stuff from his past, childhood stuff.
I think people didn't understand that there was a history there between he and Chris as
well.
So, there was a lot of context that people just didn't have.
You know, and I'm going to tell you something else.
I understand why people thought it was me.
I understand why people blame me.
I don't think it's right, but I understand.
Considering the narratives that were out there
that I was part of, I have to take responsibility for that.
And I talk about that in the book.
Me being the adulterous wife that had pushed will
to his limit.
I get it.
So I couldn't even take any of it personally.
And I had to put myself in the shoes of the audience
and go, if I was looking at this,
what would I say?
I'd probably would have said the same thing.
And then that made me really look at like,
oh man, like culturally, we're always blaming women.
Like I had to really go deep into that.
Why do we do that?
That men of power that have so much of their oneness in their life, but when something
bad happens, it's a woman's fault.
You know what I mean?
It's so interesting.
I really started to examine that, but more so just looking at that narrative
and taking responsibility.
And at the same time, there was love and compassion
for Chris, there was that.
Oh yeah.
You know, I talk about that in the book.
I've worked with Chris, I know Chris.
Am I always a fan of Chris's stage work?
No, but Chris is a person.
He's a sweet guy.
There was a moment when Chris came down to the end
of the stage and you have to understand,
I'm in deep confusion.
I don't know what's going on.
Because of me understanding the context of Will and I
behind the scenes, what just happened on the stage,
I'm worried about Will.
I've never seen that from him.
I don't know what's going on.
But Chris comes to the end of the stage,
and he looks at me deeply sincerely.
And he says, Jada, I met Noah.
And it was so sincere in his eyes.
I'm like, that's the Chris I know.
That's the Chris I've experienced.
That's the Chris that a lot of people don't get to see
because people just see Chris on stage, don't what Chris does.
But I'm glad I had that moment, because with everything else that transpired afterwards,
you know, his Netflix, certain comments and all of that, I could hold on to that sincere
moment.
So when we talk about looking past personality, and when somebody has had that opportunity
to show you their heart, to show you their spirit,
that's the truth.
Not all the other stuff that hurt, misunderstanding, confusion might bring up.
So where my feelings hurt, when I heard what was happening as far as the Netflix,
of course, my feelings were hurt
But I didn't take it personally
Because I remember I can see his eyes right now as I'm talking to you
And that's the truth
Of Chris's spirit
Jada met Noharm
I talk about it in a book. It's like
You got to have grace When we're hurt, I'm not saying that I
agree with how it was handled. I don't agree with it, but I understand.
And so my hope is that there will be such a beautiful opportunity for healing. And my hope is that there will be such a beautiful opportunity for healing.
And my hope is that that will occur as time, everything needs time.
You have two beautiful men who have hurts and who have hurt one another,
but they're both beautiful men.
And as I said before, my hope is that these two,
very capable, beautiful men, at some time,
figure out how to resolve this whole thing
of the present and of the past, you know, because life is about
healing man.
It's like life's too short.
And you know, sometimes conflicts can really amplify love.
They really can.
I know it has for me.
And that's why I called that chapter, the holy slap, the holy joke, the holy slap and
the holy lessons because through all of this conflict
that I've been in the midst of,
all this misunderstanding that I've been in the midst of,
it's helped amplify love within my heart.
It's made my heart more elastic.
Hate, and I really have been able to understand
how hate has a ceiling.
You know, hate aggression.
Wow.
You know, it has a ceiling, whereas love is, oh.
Wow.
But it takes so much courage and it's so easy to go into aggression.
It's so easy to go into, you know, hateful feelings. It's easy.
And I can't blame anybody for doing it and I have no judgment because guess what?
Been there, done that.
You know, Jada, when you started today, you said that, you know, this is your journey from being
unlovable to trying to find love again.
And it's really the true story of all of our lives
of just we're all on that journey of being unlovable,
thinking that if someone loves us, we'll be fine.
Then thinking that if we get or achieve this,
we'll be fine, then thinking,
if I love this person perfectly perfectly then I'll be fine.
And it's so we keep filling in that the sentence between unlovable to lovable with so many versions.
And I think what this book, this memoir does so beautifully honestly is you show us every
version that you tried to fit in that gap. Right? Every version. Every version that you tried to fit in that gap. Right, every version.
Every version that you tried to fit in that gap, you're just showing us the reality of
what that comes with.
Like the pain that comes with trying to fit everything into that gap.
And I appreciate you for doing that because it's hard to not turn every story into a fairy
tail ending or a perfect ending.
And there isn't that here.
And I think that that's what truly makes it relatable.
It's what truly makes it applicable wherever we are
on our journeys on that spectrum and anyone else's.
And it's why I said that I really hope
that anyone who's on that journey themselves
will pick this book up and be able
to notice which gap they're trying to fill it with and come back in if that feels right.
That's really right.
Hi, I'm Ellie Kemper.
And I'm Scott Eckert.
And we're here to talk to you about the things we love on our new podcast, Born to Love.
Each week we'll have a guest join us to talk to you about the things we love on our new podcast, Born to Love.
Each week we'll have a guest join us to talk about something
and even in the world that they love.
And of course you and I also we get to talk about the things that we love. So it's a love fest of sorts.
Total love fest and to give you guys some background.
We met in our college in Prove Troop.
We were hilarious.
And here's a fun little fact Ellie.
When you were filming the movie bridesmaids, you were hilarious. And here's a fun little fact, Ellie, when you were filming the movie, Bridesmaids,
you were an actual Bridesmaid in my wedding.
I was at the same time.
I can tell you about something I loved this week's Scott.
Oh, lay it on me.
FOME ROLERS.
For my own mind, you're not talking pool noodle.
Oh my gosh, no, thank you for clarifying.
Claire and I.
Listen to Born to Love with Ellie Kemper and Scott Eckert, a new podcast from Will Ferrell's
Big Money Players Network on the iHeartRadio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your
podcasts.
My name's Leverand Cox.
I'm an actress, producer, fashionista, and host of the Leverand Cox Show.
You may remember my work winning first season?
I've been pretty busy,
but there's always time to talk to incredible guests
about important things.
People like me have been screaming for years,
we gotta watch the Supreme Court
what they're doing is wrong,
what they're doing is evil,
they will take things away
and I can only hope that dobs
is that like Pearl Harbor moment.
Girl, you and I both know what it took
to just get through the day in New York City
and get home in one piece.
And so the fact that we're here
and what you've achieved and what I've achieved,
you know, that's momentous.
It's not just sitting around complaining about some bills.
The only reason that you might think, as Chase said,
that we're always measurable,
is because people are constantly attacking us
and we're constantly noticing it.
Listen to the Leverand Cock Show on the I Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
Be sure to subscribe and share.
It's like, because you're right.
It's like all these, it's like, okay, that didn't work.
Let me go over here. Let me try this.
And then it just, nope.
You got to heal you.
And you got to really get with a power higher than yourself.
And I wanna thank you for really being so helpful
in so many ways, Jay, in regards to you talk about.
I mean, we've been on such a beautiful journey together
in that way of just learning and deepening our relationship
with God individually together.
I so appreciate you for that.
I mean, you have been so instrumental in that way.
I genuinely can't take any credit.
Like I'm not even, I'm not even, that's not me being
humble or modest.
It's me just saying that in the same way as you feel
people came into your life to, you know,
accelerate that journey and reconnect you,
like you did the same for me and Roddy.
Like in a physical way, all of you have given us so much family. We've celebrated so many thanks to you. You did the same for me and Roddy. In a physical way, all of you have given
us so much family. We've celebrated so many thanks, given us. We've had you over for Sangha,
every, you know, for days and days and weeks and months and years and, you know, you've given us
so much. And I don't, I think that's what I think this book does. I think that's what we'll do
for our friendships is that I got the opportunity to build a friendship with you that was based on nothing else, but's nothing else that would have made our parts cross.
We don't work together, we don't do business together,
we don't have the same friends.
But this.
But this.
This, right.
I'm so grateful to watch someone do the hardest work.
And I'm going, yeah, I need to do it too.
So, no. And I admire it because I see it
from that perspective with you. And I always have that you're not trying to take the easy
way out. You're not, you're not just looking to fix it with a bandaid. You're not just
hoping it will go away. You're like, no, I'm going to sit there with it. That is just, I just, that is such an uncomfortable place,
naturally for 99% of people.
Yeah.
I mean, all of you because of it, and I always will be.
And I'm just, I'm so happy that you decided
to put it into writing because this isn't about clarifying.
It isn't about people getting a sense of what really happened.
That's not what it's about.
It's about how can we sit through that discomfort that we're going through in our life and
choose healing and growth even when it's the hardest thing and the farthest thing away
from us.
Listen, things get cleared up from reading this book.
Great, but that's not the purpose because I actually don't think you can.
You can, yeah.
You can't.
It'll just be more stirring up whatever other things, right?
And it's really, which is why it's even more important
to really be able to have a strong sense of self, right?
And not to be looking for external things,
to be, to substitute what you have to have inside in order to know your place in this world.
This place is crazy.
And should try to make the material space, the material world line in a way for your comfort.
That's, it can't start there, it has to start within yourself,
that how you see and what you attract to you is an alignment
with what is happening here, right?
But looking for the world to buoy you up or accept you in a certain manner,
nah.
Yeah. Like I said before,
this can just give some little bread crumbs
to help people get to a sense of self-worth
that gives them that comfort,
no matter what is happening.
You know, if you've brought freaking
chocolate chip cookies with peanuts in them.
To the school fair, even though kids might have allergies
in the school, then wrote you a letter and said, don't bring products with peanuts.
And you made them with love. And now the mom group is on your neck.
You can be okay. You can be okay with your victories and you can be okay with the inevitable challenges
that life is going to deliver.
It's okay either way.
You're okay.
You're worthy.
You're lovable.
Peanuts and all.
So, Jayda, one of the things that you mentioned was that you went to the Oscars as family, but
not as a wife.
Yeah.
And I wanted to ask you, how do you define the status of your relationship now and what
is it like?
You know, right now, of course we've had,
it's been an intense two years,
and we've really been doing some deep healing together.
And that's why I was saying before the idea of how
just really disruptive situations can amplify love in a certain manner, because it kind of forces you
to have to dive a little deeper. That's what we've been doing. We've just been growing together
and see what happens then. See what grows from there, you know, but like I said in the book, it's like we have this beautiful friendship and we
really look at our marriage as being the cornerstone of family. We're both kind
of coming up with different definitions of what marriage means for us. We're
still figuring all of that out.
Yeah, but the beautiful part
is that there's been some really deep healing going on.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, I mean, at the end of the day,
that's what it's about.
Marriage is so much about growth,
like really learning how to grow emotionally, like emotional maturity, spiritual
maturity, and there's this spiritual bond there.
I mean, we've tried our best to get away from each other.
I mean, our best, and we just don't want to. So we are defining it the way that works for us.
And I think getting comfortable with not being concerned
about what anybody else thinks about it.
We have this life partnership.
And every day, we're trying to figure out what that means.
You've both talked about how you feel like you're a mirror for each other.
Yeah.
And when I've spoken of Will as well, it's like he feels like you're the person who knows him
to his core.
Absolutely.
And he knows you to your core.
Like you know everything, potentially there is to know about each other. Everything. And, like you know everything. Yeah.
There potentially there is to know about each other.
Everything.
And you're obviously still learning.
Yeah.
What's really interesting about that is some people would say,
well, why not just get divorced?
Yeah.
Everybody's always like, why don't you just get divorced?
Yeah.
And it's like, that's like quitting.
I don't think there's any person that could embrace the best
and the worst of me and be
able to be willing to hold space in the way that will hold space for me and the way that
I hold space for him.
And I know that most people probably go into their relationship as like, you are here to
please me. And yeah, our relationship isn't quite that.
You know, it's like it's more about there's no greater mirror I could have than will. He doesn't,
I can't, I can't get around myself. Just like he can't get around himself with me. And I think that that's just been what this has been all about.
Like it's been a deep clearing, like really having to look at yourself in ways in that mirror
that sure, we talk about this all the time.
Would it be easier to go and find somebody else and have a more pleasing, more comfortable relationship?
Maybe. But would that get me to the person that I really want to be?
I don't think so. And I'm not saying that everybody's relationship is supposed to be that.
I'm not here to say that. I'm just saying that that's what my relationship is.
That's something I desire to get to a deeper part, a more spiritually
sound, emotionally sound, and really understand love unconditionally. And the thing that I've
learned about unconditional love, you can't really understand what unconditional love in ideal circumstances
to really get to what it is to love, yourself and someone else completely, with all that's divine, all that's human, all that's perfect, and all that is deeply flawed,
and have full acceptance for it all. I'll tell you, this is...
You know, marriage is not for the faint and hard. It's just not. And it is definitely,
I believe. I believe.
You know, different people get married for different reasons.
So I'm not trying to say why anybody else should be married.
But for me, the holy path of getting to a divine aspect of myself in partnership with
Will, and it seems like Will wants the same for himself.
And it's taken us, you know what I mean, we got together at what?
I was 23, okay?
23 when I first decided to commit myself
to Willard Carol Smith, oh Jesus.
Okay.
So young. So young, we were babies, babies trying to figure this out. And you know
it's interesting about young relationships. You create these young patterns that get
so like these really young immature patterns in yourself and how you relate to your partner and then you create these dynamics between one another that it takes
a while to like really be willing to look at that stuff and dissolve it and let it go and mature
and grow. It takes some real like self inventory, patience, courage, right?
Because you're breaking down everything,
all your romantic ideas, everything you thought,
you know, relationship or marriage,
all your romantic fantasies.
You know, just blow up in flames,
but it's really been freeing.
It's really been freeing to see what's more true.
Right?
You must say that I know the truth yet.
I just feel like I'm seeing more of what's true, you know, as records to what love and partnership is about.
Because I was definitely one of those people that's like, you're here to make me happy.
And when you don't do it, that's a problem.
And that's a normal set up. That's how we believe relationships are. And, you know,
I've talked about it before and I put it forward in my book, this idea that we think pleasure is the ultimate gift
of a relationship, but really purification is,
and that's a really tough idea for anyone,
including me, I like Iron Perfected that idea,
for me to wrap my head around.
And I can honestly say that I love Radi,
and you've seen us both together and everything but
the greatest gift Radi gives me is a mirror and a purification of Radi can call out my ego
better than anyone or anything and I know it's coming from a good place.
Radi can show me my flaws in the nicest most supportive way possible and can receive it back from me.
in the nicest, most supportive way possible and can receive it back from me.
And then I feel like because of her,
I'm trying to be better, getting better, not for her.
That's right.
For myself, it's almost like the person
that you live with knows you so deeply
or the person that you've seen has seen you
in all circumstances, in all situations knows you the deepest.
I would say, Radhi knows whether I woke up and meditated in the morning.
Yeah.
Like, Rady knows whether I got angry or frustrated at night after a phone call.
Like, Rady knows that.
And if I use that to my advantage of, am I becoming, am I growing?
But it's such a hard concept for people to understand because it's so counterintuitive to the pleasure-seeking
mind that we've been conditioned to chase.
And again, I'm not saying we shouldn't have a pleasure in relation to that.
Oh, absolutely.
That's not the point I'm making.
I'm just saying that there's more to it.
There's another level.
There's definitely more to it.
And I think we've talked about this before, you and I, as far as people believing that
romantic love is the highest form. Now, I believe
that romantic love is an aspect of a higher form. But I don't believe that romantic love
itself is the highest form. I believe within the highest form, you can have romantic love itself is the highest form, right? I believe within the highest form,
you can have romantic love,
but that romantic love is not of the highest, right?
And that's all I've been examining
and exploring with Will.
And really trying to understand the power
of unconditional love, friendship.
Like, there's something about friendship, familial love that is beautiful.
But when two people can have an agreement around divine love, like love of a source greater than yourself, that you
want to be connected to, and then you decide that your relationship is going to be connected
to that same source.
Oh boy, now we're on to something. Now we're on to something.
But to think that romantic love can hold all of the difficulties and challenges alone.
And I think that's why so many of us get into these power struggles and why there's so
many divorces
and why that, you know, just all of this strife in relationships.
You brought up something that was really important.
And it's the idea of Roddy when she can kind of pull your co-tails with love.
And I think that's, it takes a lot of work to figure that out, like to not be offended
when someone shows up imperfectly.
And those are those kind of pieces within relationship.
We feel like people are supposed to come ready made.
You walk down the aisle and it's like, he knows how to love me.
You know, I know how to love him, you know, and not making room for that space of growth
that is inevitable.
People are going to mess up.
People are going to do stupid stuff.
People are going to say stupid stuff.
Now when it comes to abuse and all of that, that's a different story, right?
But people who are willing to learn how to love each other, because I really do think
that's what committed relationships about.
Marriage or not.
I'm committed to learning how to love myself, learning how to love you, right?
And then learning how to cultivate this relationship that we have with that essence,
with those components, then that's a beautiful thing. That's what I believe the holy path of
relating is all about. And not everybody wants that. Yeah, totally. You know, some people really just want the romantic version of it. And that's okay too.
Absolutely. Absolutely. That's okay too. You know, but for me, definitely
on that path of looking for something deeper within myself mostly.
within myself mostly. Yeah.
How did you let go of that desire for romantic love
but then hold on to the friendship?
Because I feel like that's a journey that is so hard
whether someone stays married or gets divorced or like you both are
you described yourself as best friends.
Yeah. How did you hold on to friendship
being able to let go of the mirage that you
had earlier, or even not even the mirage, the reality of what you had earlier, as you
talk about in the book, the chemistry, the spark.
I think so many of us are trying to hold on to that, but you've let go of that and then
you're saying, but we've held on to the friendship, the mirror, the work, the growth.
That sounds like the hard way through it. I think it's how people show up and people don't always show up perfect clearly.
But one thing about will and I, we're just not willing to give up.
It's like I'm lucky that we just want to have each other in one another's life, right?
You have moments of disharmony.
But if you know that you're not willing
to not have that person in your life,
you know you've got to put forth the effort
and you've got to put forth the work
to transform whatever is not working.
So we always make the decision to take that one step closer to diving more deeply, to
learning how to love.
And most of the time, it has more to do with self inventory, having to go in the corner and look at oneself
and then come back and go, I was tripping. Whether it's I'm sorry or I had a misunderstanding,
can we look at this now together? Because now I've looked at it in my corner alone
and I've seen my part.
And I wanna talk to you first about my part.
ABC and D, right?
And then inevitably, usually your partner go,
well, you know, I could have done such a, such a, such a,
such a, such a, such a, such a, such a, such a,
and so when you have an agreement that's really unspoken of like, I want you in my life,
and I want to have good times with you, and I love you.
Then that's the energy that nurtures and keeps one willing to just keep working at it. So there's that
deep love and the great thing is that Will's got a great sense of humor. You know
I mean he's got a really good sense of humor. So he has a way of being able to
help me get out of my funk.
But I'm kind of like, you talk about this a lot with Roddy, where I kind of have to take
my time.
Like, I'm not always ready to talk right away.
I need to like sit, I need to be with myself, I need to kind of like work through my thoughts
and all of that, where Will is always ready to talk.
I like to go deep, he likes to get funny.
The great thing about him, he can go deep. Totally, absolutely.
And there are times that I really like to play and have fun.
So we're like these energetic fields.
I'm earth and he's sky.
We are your typical Yin and Yang.
You know that there's this great chemistry there between us.
That just works.
But when it doesn't work, oh man.
Oh man.
Oh man.
You know what I mean?
Those moments where there's just like, ah.
But I think that's just inevitable in every relationship.
Yeah.
But it just doesn't look traditional. I think that's the point. That's the part where. Yeah. But it just doesn't look traditional.
I think that's the point.
That's the part where it's like, it just doesn't look traditional.
It works because there's trust, there's commitment, there's understanding.
And at the same time, it doesn't look.
It doesn't look traditional.
I don't know.
I'm being honest with you.
There are aspects of traditional relating that absolutely work.
But I think in this day and age, I don't know too many marriages that are traditional.
I really don't.
Everybody is trying to figure it out, right? And I think everybody's so scared to talk about all of the different
ways that they're trying to figure it out. I know so many people who are like married,
but not living together, married, but have decided to have other partners. I know so many people and have for a long time that are trying marriage in so
many different forms. And my whole thing is, figure it out for you. Marriage is not a
cookie cut out like formula. Besides, I do think that there's some staples. You know, love. But even that, let
me take that out for a second. There's some people who are married strictly for business
purposes. I've seen that too. As long as there's agreement between two people and how they
decide they want to be together. Stay out of it.
It has nothing to do.
I tell people all the time,
don't look at my marriage as being contagious.
Whatever I'm doing, does it mean you gotta be doing that?
You gotta be doing the thing that works for you.
And I feel like every partnership,
two people have the right to figure that out for them.
And it's so different in norms and different cultures and different backgrounds.
Like for me and Rade, we spend a lot of time apart because
she likes to be back with a family in London and I travel for work.
And so we discovered and agreed very early on in our relationship
that when I work, she would often visit her family back in London
and she loves it.
And she wants to be with our mom and dad and a niece and nephew and a sister and brother
and a daughter and everyone.
And I love my purpose and I want to be traveling.
I want to be working and I want to be moving.
And I remember so many times in our relationship, people were like, is everything okay?
Yeah.
And then we go back to London and people were like, why is your wife not with you?
People were like, why is Jane not with you? And everyone starts thinking that there may be something
going on and it's actually like, well, no,
this was our agreement.
This is something we've sat and talked about
and figured things out.
And actually, we love this thing
because we get excited to see each other again.
It's refreshing, it works for us.
And again, it may not work for anyone else.
Someone may say, I need my partner by my side every day, fair enough. Right. And someone may say, I want to travel more than you do
or less. But we just found that having honest conversations between us and knowing why we were
making certain decisions, even though they were abnormal to our community, the community that we
grew up in, right? Where the way we live is very abnormal, even though it's just about time apart,
the point was we had an agreement that worked for us.
And I think getting to know you both,
I can honestly say that I feel like you guys are both always
honest and communicative with each other
and what your agreements are.
Absolutely.
And that's what we have been discussing today as well.
That, you know, there's always been that openness to do that.
Oh yeah, well, I talk about it a lot in the book.
Absolutely.
And I think that a lot of people had a lot of misunderstanding
as we talked about earlier, I believe, in regards
to open relationship and being able to be with whoever
you want.
No, that's not what was happening.
And I think a lot of times that people just didn't know that we had agreed to not be together.
As we were trying to figure out, are we going to be separated?
Are we going to be divorced?
Then we would reconcile.
And then we would break up again.
And it's all this back and forth between us that we didn't share with the world a lot.
And I think now people are just gonna have to be okay with.
Our marriage is not traditional,
in the sense of here we are married, but not,
you know what I mean?
And as I'm on my path and wills figuring his
thing out, we've decided to hold space for each other. And as we're trying to figure
out who we are, wills lived a lot of his life for other people. I've definitely lived my
life a lot for other people. Really having this time
for me, I need this. What I've been able to discover about myself in the last five years,
six years I think now, I've needed this time to really concentrate on me and really developing like
me and really developing like a relationship with myself. And I feel like the better relationship I have with myself, the better relationship I have with everyone else in my life, including
well. And so I talk about that a lot in the book, you know, just a lot of the misunderstandings
that have occurred rightfully so because it's been a lot of mixed messaging and then people are like,
well, you know, you guys have been on the record, you know, and all of that, we see you, we never knew
there was a breakup. You weren't supposed to. That was between us. And at the end of the day,
we're always family, no matter what. So I think that the way we are deciding to be in a union, people just
going to have to get with that. It's probably not going to look like what someone else is
doing. And that's just the truth, it doesn't matter. You know, and we're good with that.
I can definitely say that whatever relationship anyone is in that we all get to a point in our relationships
romantic or otherwise
where
Growing together becomes the greatest priority
It doesn't matter how we got there. Yeah, how we got there. What's happening?
It's just that I think that is the key I was saying to that when I was writing my book
A rules of love it was like
The journey I went on through writing it got me to that point I was writing my book, it was of love. It was like, the
journey I went on through writing it got me to that point of recognizing that yes, the
goal of every relationship in my life is simply to teach me something I have been unwilling
to learn. And the people that I'm closest to. Come on, Jay. Yeah, the people that I'm closest to, are the only ones that can push me,
or pull me to seeing that,
whether it's your mom, whether it's your dad,
or your sister, brother, partner, whatever it may be.
And for me, I also discovered through the writing of the book
that the greatest love story,
and I really, really believe this when I was writing it, I was like, the greatest love stories in the
world are actually not romantic.
The greatest love stories in the world are you generally human sacrificing themselves
in the service of others.
Like you see people take on great sacrifice to help people that they may not even meet.
Or you see people like taking on a mission or a movement
that positively affects so many people
that they were never even connected to.
Like those are the greatest acts of love.
Or the act of love that a parent has for their child
that they extend themselves and express
and their unconditionality.
You don't really see romantic love being unconditional.
Generally, it's interesting that trying to practice
and understand what unconditional love is
and figuring it out, which we all are including me.
But that journey was really powerful for me
to recognize that the more unwilling I become
and the more I hide from the lessons
that I'm meant to learn, the harder it gets
and the harder the lesson gets and the test gets
and it just gets bigger and worse.
It gets bigger.
And you know the truth of the matter is, it's like I'm always going to be by will side.
You know, when I think about like, if something ever happened to him, it's like,
I'm going to be right there.
If he needs me, I'm going to be right there.
Always.
That's just an unbreakable fact. That's the bond we have.
You know, we've tried to break it in every which way you can think of. We don't want to be
in this lifetime. Without one another, it's just not going to happen.
So we're trying to figure out what that looks like for us.
And there's something really powerful about that.
I got to be honest, as difficult as it's been, as there's been times that I've hated
that fact, having somebody that forces me to have to raise my consciousness,
evolve my understanding of love, to deal with the fact of that bond.
That's a God-given gift, because me and God got to get with that. God has to be my mentor on how to love, will, and myself, and care for the relationship
that we have through the eyes of the great Supreme, not the way Jaden wants it.
And so that has been a beautiful surrender that I've really
had to surrender because I really feel like it's about the decree. God was like, oh no,
in this lifetime, that's your person. Like it or not, I don't care. So it set me up to have to break certain ideas of my own personality and my own ego
and really surrender to what the great Supreme wants to teach me about love and about patience
and about care, kindness, consideration, forgiveness of myself, forgiveness of others, is deep.
And I'm so grateful. It's been a painful journey, no doubt. But the gifts that I get
on the other side of that discomfort, and when I get on the other side of the discomfort, I go, I get it. I could not have gotten that gift.
Or that understanding without that trial, you gave me.
I just ask God these days,
because you're making it a little easier.
I think I'm getting the groove of things.
You know what I mean?
I'll just like, come on, you know.
But I've also realized too that I'm getting to the point
that when things, to mulch-uous things come about,
I smile and I go, okay, you got a great one for me
on the other side of this bed, boy.
You know what I mean?
You just start to realize it's never failed in that way.
Mm-hmm. I remember asking Swami, I said, Whatever you just start to realize, it's never failed in that way.
I remember asking Swami, I said,
do you think I should get divorced?
Wow, I didn't know you asked him that. I sure did.
I asked Swami and he said, you know,
Jada, people take their vows very lightly these days.
And he said something to the effect that, you know, when we stay committed
to the vows that we make, we find what we need. And I was like, okay, and I just stayed on track.
I was just like, all right, let me, let me just keep digging, let me keep going. And he, you know, he's right.
For my journey.
Yeah.
Can't say for anybody else.
For my journey.
Cause he said, oh, this is what he said.
He said, people end up as friends in the long run,
and they're holding hands walking each other home.
And that's how I feel.
I feel like Will and I, walking each other home. And that's how I feel. I feel like Will and I are walking each other home
as life partners.
Or Jada, I wanna share one last thing with you if I can.
So earlier, I had a letter for you from Willow.
Okay.
And I also have a letter from Will.
I may need your help with,
you may have to reenact some words
because I feel like you'll be able to channel Will
better than me.
I will not try and impersonate him
because it won't go well.
But this was for you, Jayda.
I think it was when Will fouled out
that you're coming on the show.
Right.
I was happy that he was able to send this to me
and so I could share it with you.
And I'll just read it.
And let's do it in his words.
OK.
So you'll have to explain this one for us.
I know, but I won't do it in the end.
So he said, congrats, dink.
OK, so let me just tell you what dink is.
Yeah, just tell us that before we do it.
Let me tell you what dink means.
Oh, he's so crazy.
So when we play golf, he's my favorite person to play golf with.
So when we play golf, when I hit my driver, it goes,
Dink.
And so that's why he calls me Dink.
Who's better at golf?
He's definitely better.
But I'm getting to a point where I can,
you know, I can challenge him in a good way on a couple of holes for sure. All right. Okay.
Congrats, Dink. I just turned the final page of worthy and damn. I'm going to get you to do the
damn. How would he say? Damn. I just turned the final page of worthy and damn.
It is amazing to realize that despite having lived most of my life by your side, I still
found myself shocked, unstunned and caught off guard, laughing, then inspired, then heartbroken.
I was all over the place.
It's one thing to hear anecdotes at a family barbecue,
but it was truly overwhelming to take in your story
potently condensed in this way.
You are one of one, a rare blend of power and delicate sensitivity.
I know it wasn't easy to excavate the depths in that way.
I applaud and honor you.
If I had read this book 30 years ago, I definitely would have hugged you more.
I'll start now. Welcome to the author's club.
I love you endlessly. Now go get some Merlot and take a rest.
He know I can't have no more love.
That's beautiful.
That's why I can't divorce that joke.
Yeah.
There's one line that really hit me and I want to hear obviously how you felt, but he said, if I had read this book 30 years ago, I definitely
would have hugged you more. I'll start now. How did it feel listening to parts of that?
You know, one of the things I talk about in the book a lot is perspective. When we got married, we'll have to be 28, 29. We had such different needs.
Not right or wrong. You know, Will was very driven, but I got married because I was pregnant
and I wanted a family. And I must say, that was the one thing.
We both wanted to create a family we never had.
But what we thought took having a healthy family
will believe man, as long as I get out here,
make money, get the biggest house,
make sure you guys don't need anything.
That's how you have a great family.
My thing was like, no, but love and you know me and you, we got to do do do do.
You know, everything was centered around feelings, love, do do do do.
We just couldn't find agreement because we thought we had two different goals around what it took. And so to hear him say that he
would have hugged me more is me hearing him say he would have taken a bit more time to
listen and understand. And that doesn't mean that he would have to be off his path,
but just to take a little bit more time to listen and understand. And I think when we're young,
because that was the same way, I mean when we were young, you just think your way is the only way. And I think that where will and I are getting to now is
understanding that our ways, my way is just one way, his way is just one way. And then
how do we listen to each other more to blend those ways? I was very careful in not going into romanticized regret after hearing that line.
I wish I could have hugged you more, but I will do so now, right?
It's like, no, no, no.
You're not going to go into romanticized regret. Because what I know as a fact is that every step, everything that is transpired between us has been absolutely perfect.
All the beauty and all the ugly to get us to a place that we're coming to. You know?
And you could go, oh, I wish that you know I had known this
when I was younger.
That's the whole point of youth.
You don't know.
You know what I mean?
And then to really just to be able to embrace like this time
and my life and in his life and coming into newfound wisdom
and enjoy that. But I'm so glad that
getting closer to that blend between us. And that's what I'm saying. It's like,
who else am I going to grow with like that? And be able to have those
like that and be able to have those that deep cherished moment of like when you can look back at where you were 30 years ago and where we've traveled to get to this moment right here right now
at this beautiful family without him and when I've had Willow, Trey. Oh my gosh. There are no greater treasures
than those three. And then all of the magnificent experiences he and I have had together, the
great ones and the not so great ones, you know. But they're ours, part of our tapestry. One thing I talk about in in the book going to see Ruby D when I needed some marital advice
And she told me
laugh now because you're gonna laugh later
And it's so true. I didn't know what she was talking about that
But she'd been married at that time for 50 some years
But she'd been married at that time for 50 some years.
I see what's gone. I see Davis had passed on.
One of the things she said to me,
I said, what's one of your biggest regrets?
And she said, I wished I had laughed with him more.
And that never leaves my mind.
So just find ways to get through the bumpies,
to get through the bumpie stuff and let's
get back to some laughter and some joy.
J.D.
I'm going to give this to you.
In case you want to read it again.
Yeah.
And I want to thank you for your vulnerability, your openness today, and the vulnerability in the book that you
shared so profoundly today, but the book, you get to weave the tapestry together
and the lessons and where they come in your life. And I really, I really
believe that anyone who will read this book will gain access to a much deeper understanding of
themselves as a mirror and also get an opportunity to reframe, rethink, renew ideas, perspective,
thoughts about their own journey. That is all that I want.
Like, we have so much fear around allowing people their journeys because we can tend to get
hurt within them along the way, but it's inevitable.
And the more that we can have acceptance for the reality that life is a journey, nobody
is meant to be perfect.
It baffles me.
Well, actually, let me take that back.
It doesn't baffle me because I've been there.
It doesn't baffle me.
I've been there where just being afraid to allow what is to be.
And that is embracing our humanists and learning how to love each
other through our humanists, all this cancel culture and all of this. That is purely a rejection
of aspects of ourselves and a rejection of humanists. And that's where unconditional love has its most power. Right? But if we can learn to do that with us, starting with ourselves, right?
Learning how to have unconditional love for ourselves and have acceptance for our journey. And that's what I want from this book. I'm just putting it out there like, A, this is what my journey looks like and it ain't cute. This is what I've learned
along the way and this is how I learned how to gain self-worth and to feel worthy about it all.
About it all. About it all, Jay. Every piece of it and that's all I want for everybody else.
every piece of it. And that's all I want for everybody else. It's okay. It's okay. You don't have to come down on yourself. And just because we stumble and we might lose our way, doesn't mean we're lost forever.
Thank you, Charles Xavier from X-Men, for that statement.
I love X-Men.
I did too. Charles laid it out just like that.
I had to put that quote in my book.
But it's true.
That's all I want for everybody.
We are all worthy.
Embracing it all.
Every aspect of our journey.
That is the thing that makes us worthy.
We're harder on others because we're so hard on ourselves, we're hard on ourselves because
we're so hard on others, and that cycle keeps repeating itself.
Point out someone's flaw because we're pointing them out on ourselves, but not looking at
the growth we're trying to make and the growth someone else trying to make, the healing
journey that they're on and the healing journey that we're on.
As you were just saying that what came to my mind was that we all have to take the same steps but on our own path.
And I think what this book does so gracefully is show your steps which reminds us all that
even if we trip and we fall, which we inevitably will, there's still another step after that that we can take, and that ultimate step is what
you just so beautifully put, the step of recognizing that all of it was worthy, all of it was
part of that journey towards self-worth.
And that you're loved, you loved and you held no matter what. Through all of the
scrutiny and through all of the, I don't know, stones that were thrown at me as painful,
as all of that was, what a beautiful Godlet to get me to the understanding that it's only our self-judgment.
That's the true enemy.
And I got to cure so much of my own self-judgment through all of that.
It's almost like being like Wonder Woman, you know.
Peer, peer, peer.
You know what I mean?
It's like the great supreme makes it so that you're invincible to all the criticism
and anything else anybody has to say about you.
When you get that true sense of worthiness, it doesn't matter when anybody else thinks,
it doesn't matter what other misunderstandings are happening.
And I want that for everybody.
It's a superpower, but it's not given without the trial.
It's beautiful.
It's beautiful, it's beautiful.
Thank you.
I'm so grateful.
And thank you, Jay.
Thank you, Jay.
Yeah.
Thank you, Jay.
You've been so good to me through it all. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you, Jay. Thank you, Jay. Yeah, thank you, Jay. You've been so good to me through it all.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
So grateful to you too, as well, for letting me be a small part of the journey because it's
one that you give me the bravery to tread myself.
So thank you.
If you love this episode, you'll love my interview with Will Smith on owning your truth
and unlocking the power
of manifestation.
Anybody who hasn't spoken to their parents or their brother, call them right now, don't
think you're going to have a chance to call them tomorrow or next week.
That opportunity with my father changed every relationship in my life.
Listen to Comeback Stories.
I'm Darren Waller.
You might know me as a Titan for the New York Giants,
or some of you might know me for my story of struggling with
and beating addiction to become a pro-walt Titan.
With me, I have my friend and co-host,
Donnie Starkens, who is a yoga instructor
and a personal development coach.
Catch us every week on Comeback Stories,
on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts, and a personal development coach. Catch us every week on Comeback Stories,
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast. [♪ Music playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background That was good. I'm AJ Jacobs and my current obsession is Puzzles.
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