Reply All - #179 Pandemic Be Damned

Episode Date: September 16, 2021

The Reply All team talk to people trying to break out of their mid-pandemic funk. Here is a list of organizations that offer support for anyone feeling distressed, experiencing feelings of depression... or anxiety, or thinking about self harm or suicide: https://resources.byspotify.com/ And here is a list of organizations around the world focused on advocacy, research, education, and support for eating disorders: https://www.worldeatingdisordersday.org/get-involved/participating-organisations/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey everyone. Just a quick note before we start the show. There's a story in today's episode in which people are sharing their experiences living with depression and eating disorders. So if that kind of stuff is hard for you to listen to, you might want to skip this one. I also just want to take a second to point to some resources in case you might be struggling with an eating disorder. If you're in the US, the National Eating Disorder Association has a hotline you can call or text at 1-800-931-227. Once again, that is 1-800-931-223. If you need immediate help, text N-E-D-A to 741-7-4-1-7-4-1. Once again, that is N-E-D-A to 7-4-1-7-4-1. If you're not in the US, we'll leave a list of country-specific organizations in our show notes. Okay, let's start the show. From Gimlet, this is Reply All. I'm Immanuel Jocchi. So a couple weeks ago, I woke up very, very early to jump on the phone with someone a wall. away. Hi. Hi. How's it going? Can you see me and hear me okay? Yes. That's Javon. She's American, but she's lived in Japan for 13 years. She is no stranger to the complicated math of time zones.
Starting point is 00:01:23 My friends on the East Coast and my family in the central time zone, for sure, whenever we make arrangements, I'm the one who does it. It's easier for me. So when the pandemic started, Javon wasn't worried about not feeling close to people. She's basically a pro at the whole long distance thing. But the reality of the last year and a half has been pretty different for her. I just, I feel disconnected from my friends and family. In a way, I never thought I ever would. It's like we went on these diverging paths from around March of last year. And it's been diverging ever since where I can't catch up with them or they can't catch up with me. But I just, I feel disconnected. No matter how hard
Starting point is 00:02:11 Javons followed along with the other black women in her group chats, no matter how closely she keeps up with breaking news back home, she can't shake the feeling that she's just been a bystander to events that she should be actively living. Take June of 2020, for example. When the marches started happening, just, oh, I want it, I want it to be there. I have like two monitors at work. Yeah. And one monitor is showing all my work stuff.
Starting point is 00:02:40 And another monitor is showing some other work stuff. But in the corner is a YouTube video tab. And it's just showing riots and marches all day. I couldn't stop consuming it. I couldn't stop watching it. I'm sure my coworkers must have been worried about me. What is she watching all day? But I wanted to share the frustration with my friends.
Starting point is 00:03:07 wanted to add something to the conversation. I wanted to feel like I was a part of them, with them. But she didn't. That feeling of being connected, feeling like she can be there for her loved ones, has been really elusive. When the board is closed a year and a half ago, Javon told me that her first thought was to her family. Please don't let something happen and I can't get to you, she prayed.
Starting point is 00:03:34 That stuff has happened. I've lost a grandmother and two cousins. I'm really sorry. Thank you. But it's okay. It's weird. I always have to end a sentence with butt after, you know, something negative. It's something Japanese taught me.
Starting point is 00:04:03 I don't think you have to qualify. it can be, it can be sad. It's, I mean, it is sad. Yeah. The thing Javon is talking about, the thing that she says Japanese taught her, it's a concept she says is built into the language itself. That you often don't end a sentence completely in the negative.
Starting point is 00:04:24 It's too abrupt, so you soften it. You can say things are bad, for example, but you'll add that things might get better. Make it kind of positive. But as positive as Javon is, She told me what she's really been feeling this whole pandemic, even as things have gotten better in some ways, is this other complicated emotion, which, funnily enough, there's actually a word for in Japan. It's moya moya. Moya moya.
Starting point is 00:04:49 It's this word used to express something intangible, this feeling of frustration and uneasiness that feels like a cloud or a fog. just sitting in your heart, in the back of your mind, hovering over your thoughts. Moya Moya has many meanings. It's actually also a word for a sickness. But the moya moya Javon's talking about, it's a state of being where you're not really sure how to think or feel. You're just kind of stuck. For Javon, it's a frustration she feels when she's trying to be optimistic and grateful
Starting point is 00:05:28 about her life, but her life is still feeling really hard. It's like, when something bad happens to you, one of the ways to deal with it is to be like, well, other people probably have it worse off. But that often doesn't make you actually stop feeling sad about your situation. Instead, I feel like you just end up in a vicious cycle where your brain is telling you to be less sad already. But your heart is like, nah. Your heart is like, no, we're going to be sad or we're going to be mad about this thing.
Starting point is 00:06:01 But I thought moya, moya would go away. I thought I would figure it out. I thought it would figure itself out. I thought these feelings would just dissipate somehow. But they're still here. And I just felt like I wonder if there's anyone else out there who also feels this strange. Yeah. I mean, you're talking to one of them?
Starting point is 00:06:33 Oh, really? Yeah. Really? I mean... Yeah. I've been feeling hell-o-moia, especially after this thing that happened to me a couple weeks ago. I was sitting on a subway platform in Queens,
Starting point is 00:06:46 late at night, far from my apartment, when the remnants of Hurricane Ida ripped through New York. It was chaos. There was flooding across the city. There were no cars. It was unclear if there were buses. The train wasn't coming. And so I was just stuck there with about a dozen other people,
Starting point is 00:07:03 waiting it out, trying to figure out how the hell I was. going to get home. And I just felt completely overwhelmed and helpless. I did get home eventually that night. It took me four hours. I took a couple of buses as far as I could towards my house and just walk the rest of the way, trying my best to stay out of the flood waters. And I feel so grateful that I got home. I mean, people died that night. And so many people had and still have it much worse than I do. But I've been in a real funk. That helpless for you. feeling I had in the subway station won't go away.
Starting point is 00:07:38 It's like, the longer this pandemic goes, even as COVID restrictions ease here, but worse I seem to get at handling the sheer relentlessness of it all. That hurricane was just one thing happening in this country that week, right? There was the anti-abortion decision in Texas, Delta cases were continuing to rise, their ongoing wildfires, like all these things that my brain knows there is a path forward on. But my heart, it's exhausted. And I'm not alone in that. Over the course of the pandemic, we've heard from hundreds of you all around the world.
Starting point is 00:08:10 You've written to us about your coping mechanisms, your fears, your dreams, the thoughts that keep you up at night, and so, so many of you are lost in a bit of a fog. So today, we're going to get into it. This episode is about the moya-moa so many of us are feeling and how we're trying to shake it. You'll hear from different folks on our team talking to people in unexpected places, talking to people who are looking at parts of themselves they've stayed away from, or just trying things they've never tried before, all to get out of the funk, pandemic be damned.
Starting point is 00:08:47 One of the people on our show who's been talking to folks about their pandemic lives in the last few months is my co-worker and producer Anna Foley. Like everyone at the show, Anna's been working from home since the pandemic hit the US, and it's been pretty difficult for her because there's a very specific reason that going to work in an office was safer for her than staying out. home. And in the last few months, Anna's been following a whole community of people on the internet who've been stuck in a similar situation. I'll let her take it from here. So back in March of 2020, we found out that we were getting sent home from the office in the
Starting point is 00:09:20 middle of the day. Supposedly, it was just for two weeks, but it sparked a little bit of chaos in the reply-all offices. Damiano and Emmanuel were debating whether or not they should shave their beards to avoid catching COVID. I was frantically running around trying to figure out how on earth I was going to get my desktop monitor on the subway, Fia actually seemed most concerned with whether the plants were going to be watered while we were away. But in the middle of all of this hubbub, the thing I actually remember thinking myself over and over again was, am I going to be able to get myself to eat when I'm working remotely? Because if I look back at the moments of my life where I was the most isolated, when I first moved to college, when I was super depressed
Starting point is 00:10:03 in grad school, when I first moved to New York and didn't know anybody. Those were also the moments where I was restricting what I ate the most. The reason isolation can be so difficult for me is because the thing that helps me with my eating disorder the most is just having a routine. Like a couple times a week, when I get off the subway, on my way to work, I'll stop in a coffee shop and I'll grab a croissant or a muffin or just whatever looks good in the pastry counter. Around one, I'll walk over to Whole Foods and I'll grab lunch, and then I'll eat that lunch sitting next to Alex Goldman, who honestly is probably spilling a soda all over himself. At the end of the day, I'll go to the gym, but only if I feel up for
Starting point is 00:10:43 it. And these may sound like really basic things, but I worked hard to build them into my life. But when I was sent home from work, the rules and habits that helped me eat every meal instead of staring at calories and nutritional facts, convincing myself I wasn't hungry, they were disappearing and that was terrifying. In the middle of all of this, I actually came across somebody who, like me, was scared and confused about her eating disorder. But during the pandemic, she actually started managing it in a way that felt pretty radical to me. And it left me with a lot of questions. So I called her. When you found out that quarantine was happening and COVID was a real thing, do you remember what your first thought was?
Starting point is 00:11:26 I think my first thought was just like fear which isn't an emotion but like I was just really scared that I was going to be really isolated and really lonely because the worst parts for me of my depression and my eating disorder have been like I would be when I was isolating myself anyway so like to have that sort of forced upon you as like wasn't like a great a great idea yeah this is Aona she lives just outside of London she's been recovering from an eating disorder since she was about 19. Basically, she struggles with restricting her eating too much, both how much she eats and what she eats. And she also struggles with over-exercising, too. Iona says at the beginning of COVID, she would wake up every day and just not know what to do with herself. She was supposed to be at college finishing her last semester and said she was at home with her parents. Therapy helped, but she just felt like she didn't have anywhere to hide from her anxiety, from her depression, and from her eating disorder. Can you kind of tell me what a day in like early quarantine was like for you?
Starting point is 00:12:31 Yeah. I procrastinated a lot. Because I still had to do, I had to revise for five uni exams and I was still doing my dissertation. And I just couldn't focus on any of it. So that's when I started baking. Were you gravitating towards like certain types of baking? Pastry.
Starting point is 00:12:49 Pastry. Yeah. I got, I started sort of when I was really stressed last year, I started making pan of popular. Like croissants. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And it was just like, I'm not to make pot pastry. Don't do that today. Or like ice cream. I think I made ice cream by hand without an ice cream machine. Oh my God. It may sound counterintuitive that somebody with a difficult relationship with food is spending all of their time making food, but I understood it. Iona loved to cook, but when it came time to actually eat what she'd made after spending a long day in the kitchen,
Starting point is 00:13:26 That's when the problem started. She'd suddenly feel sick, anxious. She would look at all of the pies and the cakes that she had made and just not be able to touch them. And so she came up with a tactic for facing this problem. It was one that when I heard about it, I found extremely cool, but also extremely intimidating. She decided that she was going to make all the food and the drink that scared her the most. She was actually going to eat them. But this time she'd be doing it in front of an audience. She was going to film the whole process and put. put it on TikTok for other people to watch. So I have an eating disorder and one of the things I struggle with most is breakfast. This is one of Iona's early videos. A lot of them start this way. Her saying flat out, I have an eating disorder. I remember watching them at the time and thinking, wow, this person is really brave. It was really difficult for me to sort of start saying that. But I also think it's kind of important because eating disorders are so stigmatized.
Starting point is 00:14:22 Particularly in the black community, like I literally couldn't find anyone else who was black or mixed who was talking about eating disorders. And if they were, they were talking about like binge-easing, which was really important, but wasn't what I was dealing with. Totally. So I made the choice to put myself out there. I'm not particularly sure why. She makes more videos, launches several different series. I've decided to kick my eating disorder recovery up-notch and really start challenging myself. So welcome to this new series where I'm going to be cooking with and eating fear foods every day for a week. Some of my favorite videos of Ayonas are about fear foods. I think a thing that may be hard for some of y'all to understand is that for some people who have disordered eating, like me, certain foods can just have this weird power over you.
Starting point is 00:15:04 For me, at times, it's avocados. It started with me saying, oh, avocados, that's too much fat. But then it morphed into avoiding avocados at all costs. The very thought of an avocado could make my heart race. So I basically started taking fear foods that I have and also asking people who follow. me to send me their fear foods. And I've just started making recipes with like one specific
Starting point is 00:15:30 fear food for a week. So I started with peanut butter which was probably one of the most eye-opening ones for me. How so? It was because it's like been a fear food of mine since I was like 13. It was one of the first things I think I remember learning to be scared of.
Starting point is 00:15:47 And like I did, it wasn't a fear I challenged because it freaked me out so much. So I decided to ease myself in with some peanut butter granola bar. Well, I thought I was easing myself in. I was not. I was very anxious about everything that was in that pot, but it's fine. We persevered and it was worth it. But I do find it funny how over the top my anxiety... Week after week, I went into her kitchen and made foods that maybe even a year ago, she would have been afraid to be around. Things like butter, bread, pasta. And I ate these videos up. I watched every single one. Videos about brownies.
Starting point is 00:16:19 Aside from the elite combination of serotonin and energy that a good brownie gives you, It could be easy to think that brownies have no purpose and therefore we shouldn't eat them, but I would ask you to rethink that. And elaborate milkshakes that Iona painstakingly decorated with melted marshmallows. Now I'm very vocal about the fact that I think every aspect of diet culture is trash, but if I was going to pick just one damaging thing that I think has ruined so many lives, it would be the concept of liquid calories. I posted a video like a week or so ago, two weeks ago, about milk shakes
Starting point is 00:16:47 and the idea of drinking your calories. Because I knew that's quite a triggering topic for a lot of people, with rough relationships with food. Yeah, I mean, I wanted, when I was thinking about talking with you, I wanted to talk about the milkshake video because, like, I had to, like, confront that within myself. But then the way that you were talking about it, I was confronting something, but also I felt extremely comforted by you. And so, yeah, it was really nice.
Starting point is 00:17:11 Also, your milkshake was beautiful, like really, really beautiful. I really tried. Watching Iona's videos became a comfort for me. but Iona had also set out to make these videos to challenge herself, and I wanted to know if she felt like it was working. I'm curious for you, like, does posting to TikTok help you? It has helped me more than any other stage in, like, my eating disorder so far. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 00:17:41 Which I literally did not expect. Yeah. What Iona was doing uniquely helped her. Of course, it might not work for everybody. Iona's also in therapy. I've been in therapy. Obviously, therapy is not accessible to everybody. So I just want to say, there's no one-size-fits-all solution to treating an eating disorder. For Iona, at the time, these videos, they did make a difference. And they were making a difference for a lot of folks. Her videos were blowing up. Some of them were getting half a million views. I think that was in part because Iona and I,
Starting point is 00:18:14 we weren't the only ones who felt like our eating disorders got worse during COVID. At the beginning of the pandemic, Calls to the National Eating Disorder Hotline went up 70 to 80%. There's millions of people who are struggling without the normal scaffolding in their lives. And every time Iona posted a video, there were more and more people tuning in. And so the pressure, it just kept building. There were always more people commenting, asking for help with their eating disorder. Iona wasn't a doctor. She was just a person making TikToks.
Starting point is 00:18:42 She wasn't qualified to be giving medical advice. And when I was talking to her about all this, it sounded like managing her TikTok was a full-time job, especially once the troll showed up. I made a video about something to do with race. I can't specifically remember what it was. But I got a lot of hate, a lot of hate, just because the more people interact with a video, the more it sort of B.Rone pushes that video to people with similar interests. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:12 And yeah, I had a couple of videos kind of pushed to the kind of racist side of TikTok. Right. And for a couple of days, I was just getting, like, abuse, like, racial abuse, sexist abuse, just, like, calling me stupid and stuff like that was just very overwhelming. Yeah, totally. Like, when you're trying to make other stuff and you've got, like, trolls coming to all of your videos, like, commenting stuff. And harassing other people was actually more of my issue, was that they were harassing, like,
Starting point is 00:19:40 kids on the internet who were just trying to, like, engage with stuff about recovery. When I was talking to Ayona, she said she wanted to. keep making the videos. She had a lot of ideas that she wanted to put out into the world. Like, for example, when we were getting off the phone, she was going to head into her kitchen and film the first day of Butter Week. She was going to make some garlicy, buttery noodles. When I got off the call with her, it seemed like she was in a really good place. But of course, as with any mental health issue, including eating disorders, progress isn't linear. A few months after our interview, in June, I was scrolling through TikTok and I saw that she posted a video called
Starting point is 00:20:19 a bit of an update. Hi, so I relapsed. There's not really a more subtle way to say that. This isn't really something I'd usually like announce because it feels a bit weird to do that. But seeing as this platform is basically all about recovery, it felt weird to not say something. Basically for the last five months,
Starting point is 00:20:40 I've just not been in a good place. And in the last sort of two or three months, things have just gotten quite bad really quickly. Iona felt like what she was doing online, making positive videos about food and her relationship to it, that was no longer matching up with what was happening in real life. Her eating disorder had come back louder than ever. This is a pattern I know all too well.
Starting point is 00:21:03 I've been there. I've had moments in my life where I feel on top of my eating disorder, like I've outsmarted it or I've worked around it. But sometimes it feels like the moment I relax, the voice in my head that says, do you really need dinner? We ate a late lunch. Or do you know how much fat is in that? it just gets louder and louder and it's exhausting.
Starting point is 00:21:26 Sometimes it feels like agreeing with it is just easier. And then suddenly, I'm right back where I started. I know I'll work my way back. I'll get better again, but it's just the road to get there. It feels long. And it was painful to watch Aona basically have to start her own journey again. Slowly she did. A few weeks later, she returned to TikTok.
Starting point is 00:21:48 She started making new videos again. There might be a day where Aona decided. once and for all that making these videos doesn't help her anymore, just like I might wake up one day and decide I'm not going to watch them anymore. We're both going to have to keep trying a bunch of bizarre, strange, maybe scary things to make living with an eating disorder just a little bit easier. But until one of those days comes, I am going to keep watching because every time I do, I see a little piece of myself. And for now, that's enough. A lot of us have fears about eating, eating on our own, eating in front of people, eating in public, and I've realised this is a fear for me too.
Starting point is 00:22:26 So I decided to start challenging it, and today I decided to spontaneously take myself out to Starbucks to eat on my own. I can't explain to you how anxious I was, but this is a fear I've had for years, and for what? Also, yeah, as soon as I sat down, ketchup went all over me, and I realised no one was watching me, no one cared, so I just decided to start eating. I got a breakfast sandwich, I got some watermelon, I got a chai latte, I was kind of scared that the girl, like, at the till, was judging me, but she just, didn't really say anything. So it was fine. I was scared someone would judge me for what I was eating or for like sitting and eating on my own, but literally no one cared. Producer Anna Foley. Just a reminder that if you're someone struggling with an eating disorder, one place that might be a good resource to you is the US National Eating Disorder Association's
Starting point is 00:23:17 hotline. You can call them or text them at 800-931-2237. Once again, that is 800-931-2237. if you need immediate help, text N-E-D-A to 741-7-4-1-7-4-1. Once again, if you need immediate help, text N-E-D-A to 7-4-1-7-4-1. And like I said at the top of the episode, if you're not in the U.S., we'll leave a list of country-specific organizations in our show notes. So, like I said earlier, we've heard from tons of you our listeners since the pandemic began. And deep in the middle of winter last year, we asked you to send us your best self-care strategies.
Starting point is 00:24:01 The stuff that was getting you through this pandemic. You're going to hear some of them sprinkled in here and there in the rest of today's show. Starting with these. Hi guys. My name's David. I live in central Victoria down in Australia. And my coping strategy has been to take up cold water swimming. Earlier in the year, I started jumping in our front dam.
Starting point is 00:24:31 At night, at the end of the day, after the kids have gone to sleep, I just slip down here and hop in the water and it helps to kind of wash the day away. You can probably hear some frogs going in the background. There's little bats flying overhead and there's a pretty full moon out so I'm going to try and slip into the water now. All right, here we go.
Starting point is 00:25:34 For me, self-care means being cozy, which can come in the form of sweaters and weighted blankets, but can also mean enjoying my torso being wrapped in saran wrap, which is happening right now, makes me feel really calm and safe. So yeah, sometimes self-care is being wrapped up in industrial strength saran wrap. Hi, something that makes me happy is every time I feed my cats, I like to sing them a little song. Cat feeding time, cat feeding time, it's time to eat, it's cat feeding time. Cat feeding time, oh yes, it's time to eat, cat feeding time, tasty kitty treat,
Starting point is 00:26:34 it's time to eat, it's cat feeding time, it's time to eat, it's cat feeding time, it's cat feeding time. story for my colleague Fia Benin, about a woman who, during her worst moments in his pandemic, seeking clarity and a purpose in her life, decided to do something she'd always wanted to do and took on a responsibility that fear felt would only make someone's life more complicated. Here's Fia. So, I recently talked to this woman. Hello. Hello, how are you?
Starting point is 00:27:23 Ooh, you are too loud for me. Hold on. I'm good. Her name's Nancy. She lives in San Antonio, Texas. She's a software engineer. And in the spring of 2020, the most intense months of the lockdown in the U.S., Nancy, like so many other people, was having a really tough time. Like, I was in a very dark place. Just like, I lived alone, but the doom scrolling was like kind of extreme for me. Like I can remember when there were six cases in Portugal. and like following in really close detail. There's this, and like county by county for a while.
Starting point is 00:28:05 I could have told you what was going on in the United States. The loneliness of the pandemic was particularly hard for Nancy because of her age. She was 36 of the time, and she felt like COVID was just stalling out any opportunity for her to start a family. You know, over the years she'd been watching her friends a couple off and have kids, and watching them do that, she felt this heartache. I don't know, like, seeing their lives. I kind of missed having the kids more than I missed having the husband that much. The partnership of it, like, would be nice.
Starting point is 00:28:45 But, like, I wanted to be a parent, and that wasn't, I wasn't going to wait anymore, basically, is what I decided. Or I wasn't going to assume that that was, like, the root toward parenthood that my life was going to take. So during this time when everybody was talking about how hard it was to be caring for children and maintaining a job, Nancy, she decided to run toward that. She decided she was going to become a foster parent and she was going to do it alone. I found this really intriguing. Like, as a parent of three-year-old twins, since COVID started, I feel like there's been this split. Like the way we think about the lives of people with kids and people without kids is so different. On the one side, they're the people without kids who supposedly are like drinking red wine, baking bread, watching hours of Love Island.
Starting point is 00:29:47 And on the other side is my group, like the people with kids who are just soaking up every bit of empathy. We're calling in sick when daycare is closed. clothes or noses get too runny. You know, in my case, it feels like I'm asking a whole team of coworkers to bend to my very rigid needs. And it's just felt like this gulf. Like there's these two groups who don't fully understand each other's experience and everybody is living in their own pain.
Starting point is 00:30:24 Nancy was this person who's going to jump from the alone side to my side to my. team. She was in fact going to sign up to care for possibly multiple kids. She was going to do it without a partner. And I wanted to know what happened when she'd done that. The first thing you should know is that Nancy wasn't thinking she was being that bold at the beginning, like, as bold as it turned out she was. I wasn't thinking to myself, like, what this pandemic is missing for me is toddlers. For sure, that's not it. Okay, that makes you seem sane. And like that's not the time.
Starting point is 00:31:04 Like, I didn't really think that we were still going to be going with pandemic now either. Like in July, I went to New York. I thought we were done. I was like, I'm vaccinated. I ate inside two restaurants in New York. But here we are. The fact that the pandemic was still going, it did not stop Nancy at all. She applied to a foster agency.
Starting point is 00:31:29 She went through the training. She got bunk beds. And in April of 2021, she got her license. And then she got a call from the foster agency saying there was a two-year-old and four-year-old. They were brothers. They needed a home ASAP. So the same day that she got that call by midnight, the boys were there. They were so cute.
Starting point is 00:31:52 But then when the social workers left, the four-year-old started crying. Like, he was in my arms and just started sobbing. He kept, it was like his dad, his grandmother, and YouTube are what he was asking for. He kept saying, I want to watch YouTube, I want to watch YouTube. So after the bath, I let them watch two YouTube videos. One was a compilation of funny. cat videos, and one was Ernie singing. I'd like to visit the moon. And then they went to bed. Nancy had officially jumped sides. Like, she was now going to be caring for these two little boys
Starting point is 00:32:36 during a pandemic. And she wasn't getting the slow build-up that most people get with, like, a sleeping newborn. She was in the throes of, like, all of the huge emotions of toddlers. And I think a lot of the things that make caring for that age group so impossible are things that, like, from the outside, seem really pedestrian. And selling car seats by yourself is, like, real frustrating. Like, not having someone else to be like, is it me? Like, what is wrong with this? Like, the pieces aren't here that they say are supposed to be here.
Starting point is 00:33:14 Especially if you've never done it before. Like, the first time, you're just like, what the hell is all of this? And like, I can't do it and I can't bring it to the firehouse to get them to do it because I can't leave the kids. They can't come in the car. Yeah. It's a wild puzzle. She eventually got them in. But there are so many little tripping hazards like that when you're a parent that you never know about before your parent. And like on top of that, Nancy's navigating that as a foster parent. She's a stranger to this. She's a stranger to this. these kids and she has to earn their trust. So like for two weeks, she's caring for them every moment of the day, making meals together, taking them to playgrounds, middle of the night wake-ups, and like she feels like they're starting to trust her. The two-year-old, like, would put his nose up to my nose if I was holding him and he would say T-T, he would just was like really sweet.
Starting point is 00:34:16 And then one day the kid's caseworker tells her, there's a relative that's available to take the boys, which is what's supposed to happen. And of course, it's also really hard. Like, after the caseworker picked them up, Nancy cried all night. She really missed them. Then sometime later, two new kids arrived. This time, a three-year-old, and two weeks after that, a one-year-old.
Starting point is 00:34:43 Both of them are still with her now. How do you feel like this has changed you? Well, like one thing that's different, I definitely have a different kind of empathy for parents than I did before, especially like during the pandemic. Just feeling I didn't really understand how impossible it was. I do still feel like people who were not living alone the whole time also didn't understand how impossible that was. But like, I feel more empathy for like the other version of it now. There are so many times as a parent, like especially during this pandemic where it's all just felt way too hard. Like if there was a way, I would love to cry uncle.
Starting point is 00:35:42 But that's not an option. And for Nancy, it is. Like, she could decide to stop fostering or she could opt to put it on pause until the pandemic's over. But Nancy says she's not interested in that. Like, she wants to keep going. I, like, I can't explain it to you. Like, I, like, if somebody told me, I think I want to have kids, but I'm not really sure I'd be like, don't do it then. Like, you'll have a better life without them.
Starting point is 00:36:09 Yeah. But you won't follow your own advice. Well, I'm not on the fence. Like, I feel fully in. Yeah. I kept asking Nancy. are you sure it's worth it? And she said she couldn't exactly say why,
Starting point is 00:36:29 but she was clear she wanted to keep going. She said there's a lot of joy in what she's doing. She even will sometimes just scroll through old videos and photos from her time with those first two boys, and it makes her happy. At first that didn't really make any sense to me. Like some happy videos and memories didn't seem like it was enough to offset
Starting point is 00:36:51 like the challenge of Nancy's situation. But then I remember this thing that happened to me back in June. My partner, Matt, had just torn his Achilles. So I needed to go to the pharmacy and I had to bring my three-year-olds with me, which is something that I had been avoiding the entire pandemic. Like we hadn't gone into any stores with the kids until that day. And so when we walked into Walgreens, one of my daughters stopped. sort of like took it in and said, it's so beautiful.
Starting point is 00:37:26 And then she kept saying it as we walked through the aisles, like past the makeup and the candy, like, back to the back where the pharmacy was. I think the thing that's gotten lost and, like, all the sympathy that parents have been getting through the pandemic is that even though it's been, at least for me, like, wildly hard having kids right now, I'm also happy that I have them. And I'm happy for Nancy that she's getting to care for little kids too. Hi, I'm biking along the river. On my right, there's a row of trees. And because I'm biking every day, I can see them changing according to the seasons. And on my left, you have the garonne, because I live in Toulouse in France. I am a very happy and positive person, but yeah, I'm angry all the time these days.
Starting point is 00:38:46 And actually it's because I'm sad and so just makes a weird combination of a tiny angry person. All right, I'm almost home and the scenic route is almost over. So I'm going to leave you guys here. You ask, I'm doing my favorite type of self-care, which is called smelling my dog. She smells like old corn, dirty old corn. And it's the most relaxing smell in the world. And I have allergies, so it's definitely a bad idea. But just being close to her makes me feel so much better.
Starting point is 00:39:37 Okay. My name is Vivian. I'm in San Paul, Brazil. I thought about this a lot It's going to be very minor You may laugh But taking off my pants I just
Starting point is 00:39:57 I often forget How amazing it is To take off your pants If I have a problem Like a difficult email I need to send Or I'm cleaning my room And it's stressful
Starting point is 00:40:09 And I'm trying not to think about My country burning Did I mention I'm Brazilian And then I remember take off your pants. Now it's fresher. Everything's better. So that's my trick. Hello, I'm a saltakou. Oh, ko'i no, Kimo Watanabe. I'm a hookaniyahu, Ikeki, ka, ki-kha-a-alu. So, hello everybody. My name is Kimo Watanabe, and I'm in Salt Lake City, Utah,
Starting point is 00:40:41 and during these unusual times, I try and wind down at the end of, of the day with by playing some slack key guitar even if it's just you know five 10 minutes at the end of the day it's a nice way to relax and unwind we're going to take a short break when we get back Alex and I attest for the limits of our luck okay okay so here we are at coney island I am on the pier It is a beautiful, beautiful Tuesday afternoon. It's a little windy, but honestly, I will take it. I feel so refreshing. Back to me, out on the boardwalk at Coney Island the other day,
Starting point is 00:42:19 late for my first in-person hang out with Alex in a few months. It was like 86 degrees and the sun was beating down. But Alex was wearing exactly the same thing he'd been wearing the last time I saw him back in March when it was 60 degrees outside. Alex! Dude, how are you wearing pants? What? What do you mean how am I wearing pants? It's so hot out here.
Starting point is 00:42:40 I don't wear shorts. I mean, you are really, you're really dressed for summer. You need to have sleeves. Look, we're off work at 4 p.m. It's still, I don't care what people say. It's still summer out here. I asked Alex to meet me in the middle of the workday because those acts of self-care you heard earlier
Starting point is 00:42:57 got me thinking about the one thing I'd done over the course of the pandemic to stay sane. Fishing. So we headed down to the end of the pier to get started. All right. and go out here with the big boys. The big boys I'm referring to are the older guys who always seem to be around,
Starting point is 00:43:13 the guys I wanted to emulate when I first started fishing last summer. I spent every summer in New York City going to beaches by the water, playing basketball by the water, and when it felt like I might need to stay away from the crowds, I realized I needed to find a new hobby, something that I could do that would get me out by the water, but I could do by myself. I needed something that would bring me some peace,
Starting point is 00:43:34 and fishing really did the trick. I went out almost every day last year and I got good at it, caught multiple fish. It was like this daily injection of joy in my life. But this year, as the pandemic rolls on, I found myself growing out a lot less because I have a problem. I've caught just one fish in the last nine months. You know what we're going to do today? Are we going to catch a fish? We're going to catch a fucking fish if it kills me, mate.
Starting point is 00:44:04 I mean, how big are we talking? Literally, I just want any fish. All right. Well, you're keeping your expectations. If we catch a minnow, I'll be ecstatic. I've tried everything. Like, I've tried fishing apps that tell me where are the people have caught fish. I've tried the advice of old men at the pier who took pity on me for losing my hot streak.
Starting point is 00:44:24 None of that worked. But the day I took Alex out, I was hopeful. The reason why I have picked you, Alex, is because I feel a good feeling. I have tried many things, but I have not tried. you out. It's so funny that you pick, like, probably the most negative person you know, who's insistent that everything is terrible and beyond reprieve. And you're like, this is the guy, this is my talisman, the one that's going to get me the fish that I've wanted for so long. I really don't know what I was thinking. Alex is right. Like, Alex is not the person who will
Starting point is 00:44:56 talk you out of your funk. He is a validator. He will meet you in the funk. I love him for that. He's also maybe on paper the worst person to take fishing. Which I was reminded. ended up as soon as we started doing it. Like, we started getting set up. Here's a rod for you. Okay. We started putting baits on hooks. What is that?
Starting point is 00:45:14 Shrimp? Yeah. It's still pretty, it's still kind of gross for me, because it's still got the legies on. Wait, you get grossed up by the, like, cooked shrimp with legs on it? I tried to walk him through the basics of public safety when fishing. Oh, well, careful, you got a hook in your knee. Oh.
Starting point is 00:45:29 Me. And, to be fair to him, like, Alex really tried his best. Whoa. Oh, I thought I had something, but really. but really it was just hanging in the air. Fishing, obviously, is not for everybody. I mean, when I tell people that I've been out fishing in New York, they're normally super confused.
Starting point is 00:45:48 My first question I feel like I get a lot is where? Like, where in the city would you go fishing? Which, I don't know, is a fair question. I don't think people think of fishing when they think of New York. But we do live on a series of islands off the coast of the Atlantic Ocean. You can fish more or less anywhere. It's simple, really. It's just you, the thing.
Starting point is 00:46:06 and the water, which I think we're starting to get to Alex. You feel something? I thought I might have, but who can say these days? This last year and a half, honestly, there's been a lot of stuff to deal with. It's hard to center in on any particular feeling beyond the fog, so many of us are under. It's like trying to find one note in a cacophony, only you're not even sure what the note is supposed to be. When bad things happen, people talk all the time about how there's no right way to be feeling
Starting point is 00:46:36 at any given moment. That's true, but lately, that advice hasn't made me feel that peace with my feelings. As I said at the beginning of this show, in the past couple of weeks in this country alone, we've seen a hurricane, delta cases are still pretty high, there are ongoing wildfires, we saw the functional end of Rob versus Wade, like all crises that to differing extent we can act on. There is still time to limit how bad climate change is going to be. There are people who've been fighting for reproductive rights in this country who will
Starting point is 00:47:04 keep on fighting and more will join them. But even as we do these things, how are we supposed to spend the rest of our time? Like, it's funny, I feel like I grew up learning to fear the end of the world, learning that there might be a time when we'd have to fight for our survival. And somehow I thought it would be all-consuming. Like, no one ever talked about what free time is like in the apocalypse, how you're supposed to recharge, how you're supposed to heal without feeling like you're relaxing on the deck of a sinking ship. Last summer, I used to heal by sitting out on a pier at dusk. I'd stare at the water as the darkness encroached, looking at first at the schools of minnows making their rounds below me, until all I could make out where the bubbles
Starting point is 00:47:44 and ripples they made, until I couldn't really see anything except the hint of my fishing line in the darkness. I'd feel gratitude, calm. I don't know why, but even if the ritual didn't get rid of my anxiety, it would focus it, help me know what to do, help me keep it pushing. Alex and I, though, that night on the pier, it felt like we had nothing going. So we just talked. Yeah, man, I felt like last year, all of this stuff felt easier somehow.
Starting point is 00:48:15 Like, I come out here and I feel the gratification and catch a fish. And that would make me feel better about my ability to make myself feel better. You know what I mean? It's interesting that this is, that you're struggling in this time because I just feel like I've, I'm just like, well, this is, life now. That's sort of like I've really adjusted to the idea that this is what it's going to be going forward for a while. When you say that, what do you mean? I don't know. It's like having kids in this period of time is really instructive because they haven't really known anything
Starting point is 00:48:47 different. Huh. And they just don't get upset about it. Wait, something happens. Yeah. You lost, yeah, you lost your shrimp. I lost my shrimp. I'm not going to say the thing that I'm thinking. No, do, please. How did you not feel that, my dude? What if the shrimp just swam away? You don't know. Alex.
Starting point is 00:49:20 I replaced Alex's shrimp with new bait, and sitting with him, just watching the sunset as we talked about everything, it did make me feel a little better. It was a nice brief break from my moya-o-moa. Well, that and this. I think I might have something. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:49:44 Oh my God, I'm a fisherman. Alex called a flounder fish. I don't think I've ever seen his eyes so big as he pulled it on of the pier in front of a small gaggle of tourist children and jealous fishermen all craning their next to see what Alex would do next. Do you want to hold it? There you go. Oh, hey, buddy.
Starting point is 00:50:05 Calm down. Oh, my. It's okay, calm down, calm down, calm down, come up. I'm so proud of you, Alex. Thank you. You did it. I have a picture of this moment. Alex is there, finally holding the fish, naturally doing the thing fishermen on Instagram do
Starting point is 00:50:23 where they hold the fish close to the camera to make it look bigger than it actually is, grinning from ear to ear, not pictured, me behind the camera, hyping up my guide to anyone who would listen. This is his first ever fish, yo. Yeah. Away. Okay, now toss her back. She's the small one.
Starting point is 00:50:41 Okay. That's it. You just toss it back now? Yeah, just toss it back. All right. There she goes. Swim away! I hope you survive.
Starting point is 00:50:52 Nice job, dude. Thank you. All right, now it's down to you. Oh, man. I didn't catch a fish that day. I taught someone else how they catch one instead. We'd highly recommend. This episode of Reply All was produced by Anna Foley, Fia Benin,
Starting point is 00:51:42 Emmanuel Jochi, Lisa Wang, Tim Howard, me, Norgill, and Hannah Chin, who just wrapped up her internship here at Reply All. She did an amazing job, and we're really gonna miss her. Today's show was edited by Damiano Marquetti, and of course it wouldn't have happened without the rest of the reply-all team,
Starting point is 00:52:00 Alex Goldman, Jessica Young, and Esperanza Rosenbaum. We're hosted by Alex Goldman and Immanuel Jochi. This episode was mixed by Rick Kwan, with fact-checking by Isabel Cristo. Music in this episode is by Luke Williams, Mariana Romano, and Tim Howard. Special thanks to Bridget Tramating,
Starting point is 00:52:18 Mohini Madgalker, the Jed Foundation, Jasmine Elliott, Dr. Laura Sprock, Bumi Hadaka, Rebecca Reby, Julie Cedarbaum, Sharon Meshihi, and Bethelhabte. And lastly, thanks to everyone who wrote to us for today's episode, especially everyone who talked to us. Thanks so much for listening, and we'll see you in a couple weeks.

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