The Daily Stoic - Author Evelyn McDonnell On Joan Didion’s Life and Legacy (Pt 1)
Episode Date: February 7, 2024On this episode of the Daily Stoic Podcast, Ryan talks with writer, academic and associate professor of journalism, Evelyn McDonnell. Together they discuss the resurgence of psychedelics, how... will you deal with tomorrow, the job of the artist, and her book The World According to Joan Didion.Evelyn McDonnell, professor of journalism in the LMU Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts, has been appointed the inaugural faculty director of Media Arts & A Just Society (MAJS), effective January 2024. The acclaimed journalist, essayist, critic, feminist, native Californian, and university professor who regularly teaches Didion’s work, is attuned to interpret Didion’s vision for readers today. Inspired by Didion’s own words—from her works both published and unpublished—and informed by the people who knew Didion and those whose lives she shaped, The World According to Joan Didion is an illustrated journey through her life, tracing the path she carved from Sacramento, Portuguese Bend, Los Angeles, and Malibu to Manhattan, Miami, and Hawaii. McDonnell reveals the world as it was seen through Didion’s eyes.Signed copies of The World According to Joan Didion are available at The Painted Porch. ✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Check out the Daily Stoic Store for Stoic inspired products, signed books, and more.📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, FacebookSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast, where each weekday we bring you a meditation inspired
by the ancient Stoics, a short passage of ancient wisdom designed to help you find strength
and insight here in everyday life.
And on Wednesdays, we talk to some of our fellow students of ancient philosophy,
well known and obscure, fascinating and powerful. With them we discuss the strategies and habits
that have helped them become who they are and also to find peace and wisdom in their actual
lives. But first we've got a quick message from one of our sponsors. Hey, it's Ryan.
Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoic Podcast.
Growing up in Sacramento, I don't know if there was that much to make me proud
of being from Sacramento. I mean, I remember when the Kings were good and we played the
Lakers, there was a lot of defensiveness when Phil Jackson said we were a cow town. And
so there was always this sort of underdoggy sense of Sacramento and then also a sense
that it's pretty slow and boring. there it's weird as I've gotten older
You think about where you're from differently
but I
Feel like it always did a bad job
communicating how
What a kind of an interesting tradition it had
Supreme Court justices were from Sacramento, some of my favorite bands
from Sacramento. A great novelist was from Sacramento, where his wife's family was in
Sacramento and he based one of his novels in Roseville. I'm talking about someone I
rave about here a lot, John Fonte. But then Joan Didion is from Sacramento, like really
from Sacramento. She has a great book called Where I Was From, but her family came to Sacramento with the Donner Party.
So they go way, way back.
And yet there was never a peep about this growing up.
And so I came to Joan Didion sort of embarrassingly late,
but she's become one of my absolute favorite writers
and someone I've read all her stuff.
And there's incredible stoked themes in Blue Nights, Year of Magical Thinking,
her essay on self-respect, I quote, in Ego's Enemy, I think, and a couple of my other books.
I think she even has a great book about road tripping through the south.
So I was very excited to see that Evelyn McDonald was publishing a book called
The World According to Joan Didion.
And I asked her if she wanted to come out and do the podcast. And she did. She's a professor
of journalism at Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts. She's a native Californian and acclaimed
journalist, essayist, critic, feminist, and someone I think uniquely suited to interpret
Joan Didion and what she means
and life lessons we can learn from her trace and her wonderful book, The World According
to Joan Didion, which I read, my wife just read. It traces Didion's journey from Sacramento,
Los Angeles, Malibu, Manhattan, Miami and Hawaii. And you really get a sense of what
made Joan Didion tick, what made her great, how she was flawed, her determination,
her inherent lowercase stoicism, and then also the tragic nature towards the end of
her life.
Just the way fortune, they say, don't count someone lucky till you know how it ends.
And it was a rough go for Didion there at the end, which I talk about in this two-part
episode with Evelyn McDonald.
You can follow her on Twitter at Evelyn McDonald.
And you can follow her on Instagram at MissLadyEvelyn.
And you can check out her new book, The World, according to Joan Diddy in which we have signed
copies of at the painted porch.
You can grab it in audio or anywhere books are sold. Check it out.
I remember very specifically I rented an Airbnb in Santa Barbara. I was driving from San Francisco
to Los Angeles. I just sold my first book and I've been working on it and I just needed a break.
I needed to get away and I needed to have some quiet time
to write and that was one of the first Airbnb's
I ever started with.
And then when the book came out and did well,
I bought my first house.
I would rent that house out during South by Southwest
and F1 and other events in Austin.
Maybe you've been in a similar place.
You've stayed in an Airbnb and you thought to yourself,
this actually seems pretty doable.
Maybe my place could be an Airbnb.
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a ski getaway this winter or you're planning on going somewhere warmer. While you're away,
you could Airbnb your home and make some extra money towards the trip. Whether you use the extra
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So I thought we'd start, I have what I think is my case for Joan Didion as a lower case stoic, right?
Like the sort of, what we call like maybe American stoicism,
that sort of pioneer lowercase stoicism.
So a couple examples.
One, in her famous self-respect essay,
she has this great line, she says,
character is the source from which self-respect springs,
which I think is a lovely line.
And then there's the commencement address,
which was mostly lost.
And I read after I saw it in your book,
as it actually happens,
my in-laws were at the class of 76 at Riverside,
but they couldn't find out where she gave that,
because there's multiple colleges.
They were like, we would have remembered
if Joan Didion spoke at our commencement,
but the address, she had this great,
she was like, she was saying that, you know, our she had this great, she was like,
she was saying that, you know, our job
or the job of a thinking person, she says,
it's to like sort of strip yourself of illusions
and all the things you think about the world.
Right.
And that you have to get rid of those blinders
because although it's easier to live in the world
as you imagine it to be,
you have to live in the world as it actually is.
And to not deceive yourself about who you are
and how other people are.
I thought that was a beautiful idea.
And then she has this other great line in that speech
where she says, you have to throw yourself
into the convulsions of the world.
We tend to think of intellectuals,
and now unfortunately we think of philosophers
as these people who are apart from the world,
just thinking about it in the literal ivory tower or not.
But she's saying that you sort of have to throw yourself
into it.
And then I thought the last words she basically says
to her husband are pretty stoic.
They're leaving the hospital,
their daughter's in the hospital.
She's struggling with this professional identity,
his personal identity, his health isn't good.
And he says, I don't think I'm up for this.
And she says, you don't get a choice.
Right.
And then the last one, the most beautiful and haunting,
which is this sort of memento-mori exercise,
she talks about this in Blue Nights.
She's at the church watching her daughter get married.
She's with her husband.
It's the happiest moment of her life.
And she sort of does this rumination
about how none of the people know in this moment
of peak happiness and peace,
basically what fortune has in store for them.
And that inside of what, a year or two years,
two of them would be dead.
She would be a shell of herself.
And that that's sort of what life does to a person.
But what's so impressive is this little old lady
basically is so tough and such a fighter
that it doesn't break her.
She has her biggest success ever after that.
Sure.
I mean, you're right.
Yes.
I'm not thinking.
Yes.
You know, she becomes famous in a way
she never quite had before.
That's right.
I mean, like a best selling kind of mainstream audience
that, you know, a book that's like continually in print.
Like there was still an element of a kind of-
It's a mencer legacy.
Yeah, yeah.
Yes.
Yeah, you, the job of the artist is to turn the worst thing
that happens into them into art.
Right.
And she does that so profoundly beautifully
with those two books.
Yeah, yeah.
Those are all great.
You've zeroed in on key things, you know, that I
wanted to get across in my book. And yeah. Because you don't, you think
she's an interesting character and that looks are so deceiving, right? She looks tiny and frail.
She comes from this privileged background.
She's a writer, which we don't think of
as necessarily a particularly hardy profession.
And then she's successful at it from the beginning,
you know, incredibly successful,
lives in this sort of rarefied world,
but she was a tough lady.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, she went to El Salvador
during the midst of a extremely brutal war,
bodies on the street and decay and beheaded
and traveled,
went on political campaigns,
rode the bus with all the other reporters.
And yeah, she was kind of fearless.
I love that the throw yourself into the convulsions
of the world because we do think of her as,
because she was, she kind of kept to herself.
And she also famously wrote about this,
that I say very little so that people,
in order to fill the gaps, the silence,
start spilling the beans, essentially, right?
Start talking.
And so she had this weird passivity to her,
but she was doing what a journalist does,
what a writer does, she was taking it in.
Right, because we think of writers
as observers fundamentally,
but she wasn't, she was observing
the pivotal moments of her time
and she was involved in what was happening.
Right.
And yeah, I think as much as the world we're in now
resembles that world, which is tumultuous and chaotic
and sort of dark things on the fringes,
it can be easy to retreat into ideas or theory or art, but
the job of art is to reflect those problems back to us and hopefully present solutions
or perspective, right?
Right, right.
Yeah.
And I love, I mean, I think that one of the things, I mean, one of the reasons I wrote
this book was to try to think about,
why has she had such staying power?
Why does she seem to be reconnecting with generation
after generation?
I mean, I'm a younger generation than her for sure.
And now, I teach journalism.
My students are connecting with her
and we see this in social media,
the memes, whatever, the TikToks.
I feel like journalism, it's the record of what,
the first draft of history,
it's the record of what's happening,
but then she was able to make it something more lasting.
So that we're still read slouching towards Bethlehem
about San Francisco, Haydash Berry
and the height of counterculture hippies.
And it's still a view of that that goes against a lot
of what was the mythology of Haydash Berry.
It's still enlightening.
It's still enlightening enough that like Olivia Rodrigo
writes a song based on a phrase from that, right?
It is weird because there's this sort of resurgence
of like psychedelics and when you read,
I got asked, I didn't end up doing it
because I felt like I wasn't up for it,
but they asked if I would do a forward
to the electric Kool-Aid acid test.
And I read it and I was like,
how could anyone read this
and not see how preposterous the claims people are making
about these things to, you know what I mean?
Like there's this narrative where it was like psychedelics
were this sort of groundbreaking,
world-changing sort of perspective shifting magic
and then like the repressive authorities shut it down
and then now it's like we're rediscovering them.
But then you read like Diddyon or you read Tom Wolf
and you're like, it wasn't the,
the, the paradise that maybe we are retroactively
imagining that it was like people got themselves
into a lot of trouble.
Right, right.
Well, I mean, you know, certainly as Joan did in
her giving them to small children was not,
and will never be a good idea.
I mean, I know, I certainly know people who are microdosing
or using mushrooms and say it helps them.
Yeah, and I'm not gonna criticize those choices,
And I'm not gonna criticize those choices,
but I think too, to preach them as this panacea
and to think that they're gonna work for everybody
and that they're not without possibly very dangerous side effects.
And that's kind of what she was saying,
I think also in that commencement address,
which is play in a tree, man, you know, and she's like, the world is very complicated
and there aren't good solutions and fixing things is really hard.
And if you think there's going to this magic pill or this magic button or this magic technology
that's going to fix all of it, you're fooling yourself.
Yeah, and something I've discovered
and write about in the book is that she,
you know, she gave a few of these speeches at universities
that were really sort of pivotal moments for her.
Like, I felt like she was sort of testing out ideas
in some ways in these speeches.
And I think some of it has to do with
that she was speaking to younger people.
And this is a woman who was not interested in teaching,
just never pursued that.
A lot of writers, obviously, like myself,
work at a university, not a path she ever considered.
And, you know, she said that wasn't for her.
And yet I think that she really,
I always think of her as someone who was trying to pass on
lessons and educate people in her speeches,
and then in the writing that there was always the sense
of like, this is what I've learned about life
and I wanna share it with you.
And I think that she did that in her life too
with mentoring and with parenting.
That speech, the Riverside speech
is when she really starts to talk about her
turning away from the frontier mythology
of the Golden West, the Golden State of California,
that she as this fifth generation Californian, great, great, great granddaughter of,
essentially, of pioneers or Gold Rush,
people came into Gold Rush or settler colonizers
or whatever you want to call them, right?
That she was grown up with this mythology
that was based on the reality of her life,
but was also as she came to realize
a kind of real honey coating.
This is actually one of the things that I found
when I was at the University of Texas Library
the other day was that she was working on a book about this
for years and she originally called it fairy tales,
which tells you everything you need to know about what she thought about the way that California had been settled and had tried to
sell itself to itself. And it was particularly about, you know, the gentry of California,
the landed families, including her own explicitly.
But she struggled with finishing that book
and publishing it until her, both of her parents were dead, and particularly her mother.
And then that becomes where I was from, right?
Published like a year after her mother died.
And I think it was, you know,
her mother was the one who gave her a notebook
when she was at age five and told her to keep herself busy.
And, you know, the rest is history, right?
If you want to be entertained, go write yourself a story.
Yeah, right.
What a great piece of parenting advice.
Yes, yes.
It's so beautiful.
Yeah, yes, absolutely.
And so I feel like she really didn't want to betray her mother particularly.
Yeah, I mean...
Which is like, I mean, it's interesting, is I think of her as being so courageous and unsentimental.
But she was not, I think she also had concerns about confronting her brother.
I think family was so important to her, right?
The family she was from, the family that she built.
That I think sometimes she put that above her truth telling.
Well, I think it's a timeless thing, right?
Like I grew up in Sacramento,
I had sort of Reagan Republican parents.
You get some version of your state, your country,
your class, you know, like what my dad was a cop.
You get these sort of the, when Joan did Ian says,
we tell ourselves stories in order to live.
She wasn't, she meant like we lie to ourselves.
We tell ourselves narratives that allow us
to see ourselves as the good guys.
It justifies what we do.
It justifies our place in the world.
And it allows us to edit out the things
that are uncomfortable or unpleasant or unfair.
Right.
And so the process of shedding that
inherently means reimagining people
and places and decisions,
and they don't always come out well.
And I think that's, I mean,
you go away to college hopefully,
or you move and you start to experience
different perspectives, you read,
your bubble is shattered a little bit,
but it's a painful thing, I think,
to have to realize that your parents
weren't fully who you thought they were,
or the things they believed,
either they didn't really believe them
or they didn't live up to them, right?
Or maybe they weren't the good guys all the time
the way you want your parents or your grandparents to be.
And for her to have like multiple generations of her family
in the same place, sort of telling themselves this mythology
to have to face that would have been
profoundly destabilizing, I imagine.
Right, and she born and raised in Sacramento also
and her grandmother, Genevieve Didion,
I don't know if you were aware of who she was
growing up there, but she was kind of a grandam
of old San Francisco
on the school board for decades.
And yes, so Joan grew up with also that legacy,
that public figure, but she was actually,
she actually did write, but of course,
long after Genevieve and her grandparents were dead,
she did write pretty witheringly
of those grandparents in where I was from.
And one of the things I write about in the book
was that her grandparents were very active
in the Golden Sons and Daughters,
or the Native Sons and Daughters of the Golden West,
which is this order in know, like order in
California, like a Shriners kind of a society. And you see their emblems
everywhere in California, like they, you know, they were dedicated to
preserving the sort of the gold rust, the gold dust mythology, you know, the
fairy tales. So Joan was, I'm sure, acutely aware of that.
I mean, one of her famous early essays
is Notes from a Native Daughter.
And then when I was digging around
in her grandparents' papers at the Center
for Secondment of History,
white supremacy is just embedded
in their statements of purpose.
I found this whole passage about,
we have to keep the Asians out of California.
So, I think, but Joan never explicitly addressed that,
even though she had to have known it
and other people addressed it, Lewis McCatham's
addressed it in his writing about the native sons and daughters of the Golden West.
You know, and I mean, she also ended up leaving California by that time also and ending spending
the last decades of her life in New York. Like as much as she's identified, you know,
in Machiko Kakatani, California, belongs to Joan Didion,
she did, like you say, feel it was so important
as a young woman to get away.
She came to New York first out of college
and then spent her last days, her last decades
on her own in New York City.
spent her last days or last decades on her own in New York City. motivational, occupational, and financial. You can listen to Audible on your daily walks. You can listen to my audiobooks on your daily walks. And still, this is the key. I have a whole chapter on walking, on walking meditations, on getting outside. And it's one of the things I do when I'm
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originals. Listen now on Audible. I'm Afua Hirsh. I'm Peter Francopane. And in our podcast, Legacy,
we explore the lives of some of the biggest characters in history. This season, we delve
into the life of Mikhail Gorbachev. This season has everything.
It's got political ideology. It's got nuclear armageddon. It's got love story. It's got
betrayal. It's got economic collapse.
One ingredient that you left out, legacy. Was he someone who helped make the world a better
place, saved us all from all of those terrible things, or was he the man who created the problems
and the challenges of many parts of the world today?
Those questions about how to think about Gorbachev,
you know, was he unwitting character in history,
or was he one who helped forge and frame the world?
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There is a real life binary in how his legacy is perceived.
In the West, he's considered a hero.
And in Russia, it's a bit of a different picture.
So join us on legacy for Mikhail Gorbachev.
Yeah, I mean, you're seeing at large how as certain people try to challenge certain ideas
in American history,
just the profound backlash that that generates
because nobody wants to feel like their childhood was a lie
that the people they looked up to
were not fully who they thought they were.
Or that maybe they weren't the good guys
that they thought they were.
And that requires to be able to hold two contradictory thoughts
in your mind at the same time that I love my grandmother,
I love my grandfather,
but they believed certain abhorrent things
or their generation was complicit in horrible things happening
or that inherently their success came at the expense
of other people's success
or that they had opportunities
that simultaneously other groups were deprived of.
That's really unpleasant and scary.
And usually the people who are in positions of influence
are on the older side of things, right?
Who heads up the historical commissions?
Who heads up the school boards, et cetera?
So you're asking or you are forcing people
to re-examine things that they wanna leave locked away
or that they wanna have only fond thoughts about.
Right, and that's one of the things
that is really important to Joan's narrative
that I think a lot of people have missed
is that she did have that self-recognize.
And, you know, a time before it was, you know, popular, right?
And that that was really core,
but it did take her decades.
And, you know, there's, you know, I mean,
and certainly, you know,
there are things she wrote that are up for criticism.
And she, you know, she definitely, you know.
Yeah, what's that line about how she wishes she could vote for criticism. And she definitely, you know.
Yeah, what's that line about how she wishes
she could vote for Barry Goldwater again?
Yeah, yeah.
You can trust that with the essay she wrote
about her understanding of the police in her life.
And you're like, wow, like were these two simultaneous views
or was she compartmentalizing?
But she clearly was like all people wrestling with it.
And she got there on some things
and didn't get there on others.
Right, right.
Yeah, so that was the police article
was something I found that I've never seen anybody talk about
that was published in the Saturday evening post
in the late 60s, I think 68, 69,
where she's like, you know, why I've come to hate cops.
And she talks about police harassment of, you know, why I've come to hate cops. And she talks about police harassment of, you know,
students in Mexicans in Los Angeles and-
In Hawaii?
And why does she-
No, in Hawaii.
In Hawaii.
Yes, yes, in Hawaii.
About the cops hassling these two kids on the street in Hawaii
and that same cop energy, you know,
and there weren't cell phone cameras,
but a crowd was milling about watching what happened.
She watched the cops just sort of do what cops
still do to this day that we're still wrestling with
as a society.
And some people are pushing back against
and some people are like back the blue, you know?
Like that exactly what she's talking about almost 50 years ago
is still happening right now.
People are still dealing with the cognitive dissonance of it.
Yeah, and I do think that, you know,
that essay has never been anthologized,
it's never been talked about.
Like, you know, there has been a careful curation
of Joan's image.
I think, you know, that she was, I'm sure, complicit in,
but that I think those who are republishing
her works now are continuing.
But, you know, but it's also, I read that piece and I'm like,
okay, now, you know, fast forward to 1991,
the Central Park Five case, the trial of the young
Black and brown boys,
because they were not of age for the, you know,
butte assault of a jogger that her,
she wrote about for the New York Review of Books,
you know, in this incredible attack on systemic racism
in the court system, in the police,
and in the media, that now we realize
was completely ahead of its time.
But it took decades for that case to,
for someone else to come forward
and admit that they had done the assault
and for those youths to be exonerated.
Well, yeah, you get these little,
that process too of leaving where you are from
and getting a new worldview.
It's not this epiphany where you suddenly get it, right?
It's this slow process.
Like I was just thinking about this one the other day.
It doesn't really have anything to do with what I'm talking about.
But I was in the Boy Scouts as a kid in Sacramento.
And I remember I'd heard on the news
or something about how they wouldn't allow gay people in the Boy Scouts. And I remember I'd heard on the news there was something about how they wouldn't allow
gay people in the Boy Scouts.
And I asked my dad about it.
And I was like, Dan, why don't they allow
like gay scout leaders?
I saw it on the news, I read an article,
and he tells me this thing about how,
well, you know, they're concerned that gay people,
maybe they're actually attracted to boys,
and it's just not safe.
You know, he gives me the explanation at the time,
the sort of send, not the extreme exaggerated
sort of bigoted view, but just the sort of status quo,
most of the people, I mean, this is a state
that in 2008, bands gave marriage, right?
So just the normal view, I would say,
of poorly informed people at that time of a stereotype,
not even a stereotype, of a,
what would you say?
Anyways, a false view of a minority
that they don't understand.
Right.
And then I remember, so I remember, okay,
that's what it is, I listen to my parents.
And then I go to college and I'm writing
for the college newspaper at Riverside.
And this Eagle Scout is giving a talk
and he's the Eagle Scout that they wouldn't allow
become a scout leader that I'd heard about on the news
as a kid.
So all these years later, he's there.
Wow.
And he's giving this talk.
And I go, wait, this isn't like a pedophile.
This is like a kid and he's telling his story.
And all I could flash back to was like,
wait, this is not what my parents told me.
It's more complicated than this, right?
Joe Nidion saying, I get from my parents
the sense of what cops are.
And then I witness on the street what cops can do.
Right.
And it doesn't add up.
Right.
And then your mind just starts working on this problem, right?
Right.
And you're, you start to question it.
You've got this little peak behind the curtain
or the, you know, the mask is slipped just a little bit.
Right.
And then, you know, lo and behold,
actually the whole time,
there's a massive pedophilia scandal brewing
inside the Boy Scouts of America
that has nothing to do with gay people
and kids actually were vulnerable and exposed
this whole time because as it happens
that most accusations are confessions, right?
And so like I think about my evolution
from the things my parents told me
and they're relatively conservative beliefs to where I am now. I think about my evolution from the things my parents told me
and they're relatively conservative beliefs
to where I am now.
It's this process of, it's not quite adding up
and you have to come up with a new paradigm,
a new way of organizing the information
that you see in the world,
your values, your sense of other people.
And yeah, you get the sense that she got a pretty regressive
sense of the world from her parents and their legacy.
And then as she goes out and explores and writes
and comes up close in person with all different kinds
of people, it's not sufficient.
And she has to reimagine what the world is
and what right and wrong are and what America is.
And that's the evolution that you see reflected
in the writing.
And that's what we have to undergo as people also,
I feel like.
Yeah, yeah, I say in the book that,
she constantly refused satisfaction.
She wasn't going to just be happy
with her understanding of the world.
And that's the throwing yourself into the convulsions
of the world.
And I like what you said before about,
and it's not just intellectually
that she was also out there,
witnessing these things,
whether it's H Ashbury or cops are
asking students hippies on the street in Hawaii.
She was going to go to Vietnam.
Right.
She wanted to go to Vietnam famously,
that, you know, she got hired by Life Magazine
to write a column.
And she's like, I think it was 1971.
And she's like, great.
What's the most important thing going on in the world?
I need to go write about Vietnam.
And her editors like, no, no, no, we have the boys taking care of that.
You write something else.
And so, you know, she goes to Hawaii and, you know,
writes to her famous opening line.
I'm sitting in the Royal Hawaiian Hotel.
Yeah, in Luu of filing for a divorce.
And I tell you this in order to tell you exactly who I am and why I am and where I am,
which is brilliant, key to what was important about her journalism, the journalism of the time,
that foregrounding of personal point of view,
the overthrowing of objectivity
is the old standard of journalism.
This is who I am.
And it's again that thing like,
we tell ourselves stories in order to live.
And she's saying, and we have to be aware,
we have to constantly be aware of the choices we've made
in making those narratives and what we're leaving out.
And so she's saying there, this is my story,
this is what I've decided to say.
And you can understand me and decide whether you trust me and want to read me
and believe what I'm gonna tell you.
In Meditations, Mark Zerouza says,
we have to strip things of the legend that encrust them.
And there's marketing, there's hype,
there's narrative, there's racism, there's nationalism.
There's all these forces acting on our stories
or our sense of the world.
And it requires a certain clarity and confidence
and like restraint, I think also
to kind of put each one up for the test and go,
well, is this true?
Is this fully true?
You know, and yeah, she's not just,
Joan Didi doesn't just go,
hey, what myths about California aren't true?
Or how is America not the shining city on the hill
the way that we want it to be?
But she also goes and goes,
hey, what is this like this sort of,
what are the hippies talking about?
And is it as wonderful as they think it is?
Or is it actually darker and more disturbed
and depraved than they want to admit?
So she's a sort of equal opportunity stripper of,
an equal opportunity remover of legends and myths
and sort of disabuser of self-serving impressions.
Yeah, absolutely. And you can see it like when she's writing a disabuser of self-serving impressions.
Yeah, absolutely. And you can see it like when she's writing about,
you know, the doors in the 60s
and you know, sitting in on the recording session and,
you know-
And they're arguing over their lunch order and stuff.
Yeah, and it's just, you know,
and Jim Morrison's like not there for the longest time.
And it's just, you know, mind numbingly dead, like there's nothing happening.
And, you know, she, you know, the last line is like,
I decided not to see it through.
Like she's just like, forget it.
Like I'm not gonna be part of this weird
rock and roll hype machine that actually just seems
kind of lame and completely narcissistic.
She's writing about Jim Morrison, like lighting the match and holding it to his crotch.
And then decades later, she's covering political campaigns and conventions for the New York
Review of Books, and she's talking about the extreme disconnect between the political discourse
from everybody, from both parties, from the pundits as well from the media and that becomes political fictions,
which the title of the essay says it itself in the book,
which also wins the Goldsmith Prize for investigative reporting.
What she learned covering the counterculture of the 1960s,
she decades later applies to the establishment,
the government.
Yeah.
How does she bear it all though?
Like I think what's so haunting about Blue Nights
and a year of magical thing is just this sort of
back to back blows.
I mean, she loses her husband and her daughter
and in short order.
And how does she get out of bed in the morning?
Yeah, right.
Well, she doesn't, right?
I mean, the geomagical thinking,
she chronicles how she basically can't function
for really like nine months after his death
that she just doesn't know what to do with herself and she
can't put his shoes away and the dictionary is still open to the page he left it on,
which you know she's so good at those telling details, right?
And she sort of dedicates herself to trying to understand
what mourning and grieving is and to reading about it.
And in doing so, she does eventually come to terms with it
and then what she does is she sits down at her typewriter
and what she hadn't been able to do.
And she types. And then three months,
she writes the year of magical thinking.
Yeah.
At the same time, of course,
that Quintana is also in and out of hospitals,
comas, rehab, and then winds up dying
after Joan has finished
the year of magical thinking. Right.
Yeah, she thinks this book is the chronicle
of the worst year of her life.
And it's like life is like, wait, there's more coming.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, I can remember when the book came out
and reading the New York Times' interview
with her, and they were like, why after you finished the book, Quintana died, did you
think about going back and updating it?
And she was like, no, it's finished.
It was finished, which is interesting.
Of course, then she does go back several years later
to write about Quintana specifically.
Although she is writes a lot about Quintana
in your magical thinking too.
There's that old story about how you're not supposed
to count someone happy until you know how it ends.
You know, like you compare yourself to someone,
you look at someone's story and you think,
they're so blessed, they get all the breaks.
Right.
And then, but you don't know how it ends.
And there's something haunting about Joan Didion's story
and that, yeah, she's born to this wealthy family.
You know, she gets a job right.
Basically the only adversity she goes through
for the good chunk of her life is that
she didn't get into Stanford when she wanted to, right?
And then, you know, and as tough and sexist
as the media world was at that time,
she's like the one they allow through, you know,
she gets the great jobs, her books are a huge success,
and you know, she lives in a mansion in Malibu,
she lives in a multi-million dollar apartment
in New York City, I mean, you would,
there were, I imagine, many, many people
who didn't like Joan Didion
because she was so lucky and so successful
and that her life was a dream.
Right, right.
And neither she nor they understand
what is sort of waiting in the wings.
And that's what she so hauntingly writes about
in that scene in Blue Nights about how,
at this church in New York City, everyone thinks
it's amazing and it's always gonna be like this.
And none of them know that as she says,
you don't have a choice, good or bad.
You don't get a choice. Life deals you things.
And then she gets those two back to back blows.
Right, right.
I will say that on the surface,
her life looked great and sure, you know, it was.
And, you know, she got to live in beautiful places
and had certainly a lot of privilege.
You know, but she did from a very early age deal
with her father's alcoholism and mental illness.
You know, he was hospitalized when she was in college
and mental institute and, you know, they were displaced
when she was young because of the war.
And that was when she started getting migraines,
which she wrote a lot about.
And obviously she wrote a lot about having,
what we now call mental health issues,
which I think is part of why people really relate to her
today because we're all going through that now
when we talk about it pretty openly
and she did that decades ago, right?
And she was also going through gynecological issues
and apparently wasn't able to have a child.
I mean, she's never really says exactly why this happened,
but based on my research,
I'm sure it must have been gynecological reasons.
And then so they adopt Quintana.
But as she describes them, Blue Nights, it was difficult.
It was difficult to have an adopted child and to be two writers.
And they adopted Quintana just as Joan's career particularly was taking off.
And the marriage, they were not going well. They were in the Royal Hawaiian Hotel in
Lua Fela Divorce. They did not Fela Divorce, but they were apart for times. John was living in Vegas and she was in Malibu. And, you know, Quintana
had mental health issues as well, right, throughout her life.
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["The World's Best Seller"]
Well, maybe that's a good way to think about it, right?
Because people think maybe how would I deal
with something like that, right?
Like this sort of hammer blows of this terrible,
the worst thing that could happen to a person.
And the answer, I think the Stokes would say,
this is just great passage in meditations
or Marx Realist is going, you know, how do I know,
like how I'm gonna deal with tomorrow?
And it's with the same weapons that you met today with. Right. How do I know like how I'm gonna deal with tomorrow?
And it's with the same weapons that you met today with.
And I think his point was that you've been tested
and challenged in ways that maybe felt small to you,
but are actually are preparing you for what can happen.
So yeah, sure, Joan Didion is privileged
and a bunch of things, she gets a bunch of wonderful breaks.
But yeah, she has this sort of rough childhood.
She has a hysterectomy.
She doesn't get into the college that she wanted,
which, you know, like if it's devastating to you
at the time, it's devastating to you at the time, right?
But what this is doing,
these are things that are making you stronger
and more resilient if you let them.
Like you're developing a sense of your capacities
and what you're capable of and you're learning lessons.
And then that's what you draw on
when things really get bad.
You're able to go, well, how have I handled things
in the past and how will I,
that's how I'll have to handle this in the future.
And so we, I think we all have those things in our life
that we can draw on and use.
And so yeah, you don't have to be this person who,
you know, I had my army amputated
or I was, you know, I escaped genocide.
And that's how I know I can handle.
Like we all have things that are shaping and informing us.
And if we let them make us more resilient and stronger
when we need them.
Yeah. And it's, and your medical thinking is in many ways,
I think a meditation on sort of a self-chiding
of that she was not prepared enough.
Yes.
Right, that a lot of it, she's like,
there were all these signs.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, her husband had had many heart procedures,
right, and he had not been,
he'd been out of sorts for months.
And, you know, and then, you know, Quintana also,
okay, who, you know, since when is a marriage actually,
you know, it's out of a screwball comedy.
No, marriage is not actually the happy ending, right?
Yeah.
It's just the beginning.
You know what I thought was really sort of moving
and eye-opening is she says,
so he basically falls dead at the table.
It could have been this table, I don't know.
Right.
He falls dead at the table.
She could have been, wow.
Yeah, and she rushes to the fridge
and there's a list of phone numbers,
like emergency numbers on the fridge,
which she said, I wrote in case somebody had a problem
in the building, right?
Like she knew emergencies could happen,
but she had zero conception that emergencies
or tragedy could befall her.
As like all of us, she got comfortable and felt immune
and just did it, magical thinking is also not wanting Like all of us, she got comfortable and felt immune
and just did it. Magical thinking is also not wanting to think about stuff
happening to you.
You can imagine it happening to your neighbor.
You can imagine it happening historically,
but then you hear a friend gets a cancer diagnosis
and you're there for them,
but you don't wanna go,
but that's gonna happen to me.
And that's, I think, what she's chiding herself
about not having been prepared for.
She just, I think, very reasonably got comfortable
and you don't wanna invite unpleasantness into your life.
Right, and I do think that,
I mean, I think that there had been a lot of struggle
for them for years, particularly with Quintana.
And with their own careers and figuring out
where they were gonna live,
and they really were in a great position
at that time.
They were both extremely accomplished.
They'd be like, they were the king and queen of,
they had been the king and queen of LA literary scene.
And then they also became it in New York,
which is, you know, even more whatever,
it's center of publishing.
And, you know, and yeah, Quintana seemed happy.
And then that-
There's this illusion of stability that we all have.
Right.
Like I heard someone once say it's like wood chips or trash.
Things accumulating on the surface of the ocean.
It looks like you could step on it.
Like it looks strong, but you would fall in immediately.
There's this kind of illusion of stability. And obviously the pandemic was a big reminder
for all of us of like, you think,
like I had all these plans.
I was opening, we closed on and we're opening the bookstore
or starting the construction on the bookstore
in January and February of 2020.
So you have this plant, you're like, can I afford it?
Here's what it should look like.
Here's how I imagined it going. And you have this sort of, you have this plant, you're like, can I afford it? Here's what it should look like.
Here's how I imagined it going.
And you have this sort of,
you have this somewhat expanded notion
of what you're willing to consider, what could go wrong.
Hey, it could take a little bit longer than we thought.
It could cost a little bit more than we thought.
But you don't consider the world could collapse.
Right, right.
There's these things that you just don't want to think about
as you're making plans because it feels like to open
that is to, you know, open something
that can never be closed, right?
We're still excited about this idea
of pre-Meditational Malorum or like a pre-
you have to think about it.
He says, Exile, Seneca says,eneca says exile war, torture, shipwreck.
He says, all the terms of the human lot
should be before our eyes.
And as it happens, pretty much all these things happen
to him at one time, not immediately, not tomorrow,
but over the course of a life.
Like if you live a long time, if you're lucky,
a lot of bad stuff will happen to you.
That's just probability.
You know what I mean?
If you make it into your 80s,
you're gonna experience some real shit.
Right, right.
And she does.
So are we not allowed to rest on our laurels ever?
I mean, I think it's a balance, right?
It's the tension between considering all the possibilities
and not being tortured by anxiety and uncertainty
and all the things, like how do you not be caught off guard
and at the same time, not cripple yourself
with all that is possible.
That's the real tension
that we have to figure out how to strike.
Right, it's when you were talking about the COVID
and pandemic and I always think back to,
I had just moved to Miami and my husband and I went
to the beach and we're in the ocean
and I'd just gotten this great job at the Miami Herald
and his daughters were with us and it just seemed gotten this great job at the Miami Herald, and his daughters were with us,
and it just seemed like this beautiful moment,
and then we go back to the house,
and it was September 11th, 2001.
You know, we get a phone call and turn on the news,
and you know, and it's like, yeah.
But-
And change like that.
But I'm also glad that I had that, you know,
those 15 minutes of being, you know,
at peace that I could say maybe,
like maybe we'll get back to that someday.
Well, it's this tension between being proactive
and prepared and also present.
Right.
So Seneca, it's funny,
because Seneca is talking about how you should
consider all this stuff.
But then he also says, he who suffers before it is necessary
suffers more than it's necessary.
He says, the problem is we often suffer more
in our imagination than in reality.
So like that's the tricky part about even being a parent
is like you have to think about things happening
to your kids.
And if all you're doing is thinking about the things
that can happen to your kids, you're not being there doing is thinking about the things that can happen to your kids,
you're not being there for your kids
in the moment where everything is fine.
Right.
And so to be able to do both things simultaneously
is really the thing.
Right.
That's something I was so haunted by in Blue Nights.
And you talk about it in your book too,
but you know, people will go,
but you have your memories, right?
Right. And you have these mementos.
And she was fine, Joan did,
he was finding that she would go through the photo album.
What she wasn't thinking about is, oh, so amazing.
We went to Disneyland, it was so amazing.
We went to Hawaii, all these things.
She was saying, all I can think about
is how I wasn't present then.
Right, right.
That she had it, but she wasn't there for it.
And the hauntingness of, yeah, you'll always have memories
and no one can take the memories away.
But as you reflect on this moment,
will the memory be that I experienced the thing
or will you be kicking yourself
because you didn't experience the thing? Because
you were worried about X, Y, or Z. You were trying to do two things at the same time. You
were tired, whatever. And so that's something that I think keeps me up. It's just like,
am I actually being here for these moments, ordinary and extraordinary?
Right. Right, right.
And I mean, it's the lament of the working parent.
Yes.
Right, and I think this is one of the big questions
about Joan Didion was, was she a good mom?
Everybody asked me that, was she a good mom?
And I kind of hate that question because it's really not fair.
They don't ask it of the male writers quite so often.
Yeah, exactly.
That's what I say in the book.
They don't ask John Gregory Dunn whether he was a good dad.
Nobody ever says that, right?
I mean, they were there together.
But I think clearly in Blue Nights,
she asks Quintana, do you think I was a good mom?
I mean, clearly, Joan, someone who, again,
her success started right when she adopted Quintana.
And to Quintana, had the notes that things that her mom said,
and one is like, go away, I'm working.
Oh yeah, Shush, mommy's working.
Shush, yeah, Shush, I'm working.
Which is interesting because it's also like
what her mom said to her,
I'm taking care of your brother, here's a notebook,
go write.
I also know that Joan and John doted on Quintana,
that they really, they took her everywhere.
They clearly loved her
very, very much. And, you know, actually Quintana was probably pretty spoiled in a lot of ways,
right? You know, you know, got in rest her soul. But yeah, I mean, as a working mom or a writing mom, that's that's that's that's struggle of, you know,
are we giving enough attention?
Like, and that's,
Lou Knight, Jones just full of those regrets of like,
did I not pay enough attention to the signs?
Did I not realize just how troubled she was?
When I think that's the haunting
nests of any sort of loss or grief is you go,
well, it's gone now. Did I appreciate it while I had it?
Did I prioritize the right things while I had it? And I think one of the reasons that it's good
to read a book like your magical thing or Blue Nights or to walk through a tomb,
walk through a graveyard and see the tombstones
of people who died sooner than they would have liked,
or you see those little graves for children.
Like what that hopefully does is give you a chance
to reflect on those things
when you can still do something about it.
Right.
Do you know what I mean?
Right.
Like how if your husband or your wife or your dad or your mom killed over dead at your
kitchen table and you're spending those next several months sorting through the wreckage
of that, you know, what would you wish you would do differently then?
Right. you wish you would do differently then, how do you walk yourself through that exercise now
and then hopefully make some of those changes now?
Like there's a stoic exercise where you're supposed to go,
think of yourself as dead,
you've lived your whole life, it's gone.
And now you've come back to life
and you get to live the rest of your life now.
And they says, live that properly.
And so there's something, I think,
to me the real service of those books
and the service of anyone,
you have a friend that gets cancer,
you have a friend who loses someone in a car accident
and you go, if that were me, what changes would I make?
Well, that is you.
You just have slightly more time
and how do you make some of those changes now?
when when it could
You know
Make a difference right right
Yeah, so it's so is
Magical thinking that that that you know, Jones says is what she did after John died, which is basically
You know thinking that he wasn't dead,
like convincing to herself that if, you know,
she left to shoes out, he would come back to, you know,
put them on, you know, and this is for someone who was,
you know, had a very orderly mind
and was a pretty rational thinker,
I would say over all, right?
And so this was cataclysmic for her
to go into this suspended reality.
So is it her sort of trying to,
that she hadn't done that?
She hadn't imagined what life would be like without John
or without her or without Quintana and her having to come to terms with that.
Yeah, maybe.
I mean, I don't think any of us do it enough.
Right.
We all take a certain stability for granted
because to contemplate the ephemerality
and the unpredictability of life, ironically,
that's what feels destabilizing.
Right, right.
Like, so we'll contemplate as she did,
well, I want these emergency numbers
in case somebody else in the building has a threat.
We can conceive of the fact
that bad things happen all the time.
They just don't happen to us.
Right, yeah, she was president of the co-op
of her building.
So that was probably part of her job as president of the co-op, her building. So that was probably part of her job
as president of the co-op, right?
She knows people's spouses, particularly people her age,
sometimes die, right?
And then they get rushed to the hospital.
You hear it, you know?
Anyone who lives anywhere, you're like,
oh, did you hear what happened down the street?
You wake up, there's all those sirens,
but it just, it doesn't happen to people like me.
It doesn't happen to me.
And it does, you know?
It does.
And are you living in a way that,
cause you can't eliminate it entirely,
but it eliminates or sort of minimizes
that potential for, you know, really kicking yourself
or really hating yourself or really, you know, how much did you leave on the table?
I guess it's minimizing how much you leave on the table.
Right, right.
And she talks about like, I mean, she had seen this happen
as you say with so many people she knew.
And there was a lot of tragedy in John's side,
the family with, you know.
And didn't her niece get murdered?
Yeah, his niece was murdered by her boyfriend,
a famous Hollywood trial.
And, you know, one of John's brothers committed suicide.
And so it wasn't that she, they didn't see this.
In her own family, you know, her parents lived
pretty long lives and her brother actually did,
her younger brother did die just shortly before she did,
which is this also weird thing
where she was just so alone at the end
in terms of family, which is just incredibly tragic.
Because as I said, family was just so, so, so important
to her, but she did have, obviously,
she did have her nieces and nephews
and her agent and her editor
and friends like Calvin Trillin around her.
Like she had those alternative families
or expanded families.
But there is this, one of the last chapters,
the second and last chapters is called Diner. Yeah. Because I, you know, went to this diner that she used
to go to and talk to the waiter and about, you know, how she used to go there with John
and Quintana. And then, you know, one day she showed up alone and then she showed up
alone from then on, right? Which is also Andrew Bird wrote a song called
Lone Diddian, which is also based on that same image. Like he knew someone who worked at the
diner and told him this story. So here's this woman who, I mean, you know, she married John in
1964 and they had, you know, obviously problems in their marriage, but they were completely
a partnership. They edited each other's work and wrote screenplays together and
they took Quintana with them everywhere for better or for worse. And then at the end,
she's alone in the diner, but she's also, again, like we said before,
it's very strong.
Yeah, yeah, there's two ways to look at that.
Joan Didion at the end of her life,
sitting alone in a diner.
And one is that it's sad and tragic.
And the other is that it's inspiring and strong
and just the sheer endurance of it.
And I think about her even, you know, those last years,
because she lives into the pandemic and she has to, is, you know,
she's just soldiering on. Right.
She just keeps on going. Right.
Right. So she was pretty, pretty ill those last few years and, you know, was not mobile.
And that's what I mean. I mean, she just, she kept waking up and, you know, didn't quit.
Yeah. And just like, there is this, like not every, not everyone's end is glamorous and exciting.
It's, can be this sort of slow deflating of a balloon, but she infuses that somehow with a kind of a dignity
and a strength in that kind of lower case stoicism
of like, this is what life is for me now.
And she just keeps going.
Right, refusing to give up,
she dies of Parkinson's and it's robbed her of something.
And you see that, you know, there's the documentary that Griffin Dunn, her nephew made about her,
which is, you know, I think a really important part of why she came back in the public consciousness.
And you can see in it that she has the start of Parkinson's. You know, she's very, very frail and her hands are shaking.
But she's also just really there
and has this little smile and this light in her eyes.
I'm so grateful to him for having captured her
in those last moments of her being able to do something I'm so grateful to him for having captured her
in those last moments of her being able to do something
like that.
Is there something haunting too about the fact
that it's like you can become incredibly successful
and powerful and rich and well respected and famous.
And a fashion icon in your 80s.
Yeah, and all these things, and also,
like you don't really own any of those things.
They can all sort of be taken from you.
And that like life is sort of equal opportunity
when it comes to cruelty and misfortune.
And you know what I mean?
Like none of those things shields her from the tragedies
that eventually
befall her through no fault of her own.
Do you know what I mean?
I'm sure it made it easier and so like,
it could have been worse, right?
She could have also been impoverished
or not had healthcare or whatever, right?
It could have been worse.
But like at the end of the day, we all,
I think it's the Epic care and so we all,
we all live in an unwalled city.
You know, we're all sort of vulnerable to these things happening.
Right, right.
Even if you're in a door man building on the upper east side.
Yeah.
Thanks so much for listening.
If you could rate this podcast and leave a review on iTunes,
that would mean so much to us and it would really help the show. We appreciate it. I'll
see you next episode.
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