The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Lilly Singh: My Deepest Insecurities Led To My Greatest Achievements
Episode Date: April 21, 2022Lilly Singh is one of the biggest influencers on the planet who was the first woman of colour to have a syndicated talk show on network television, but after it was abruptly cancelled she’s had to s...tart from scratch on what she wants to do and where she’s going. With over 14 million youtube subscribers and over 11 million instagram followers, the world has always had a keen interest in Lilly’s story. She’s an incredible person who builds from her strong foundation of values, and has had to think increasingly more about what exactly those values are. This is also the first instalment of The Diary of a CEO: USA, as I caught up with Lilly in California. Over the coming weeks and months, you will get to see some incredible conversations with guests the likes of which we’ve never seen before. Bringing more value, more incredible stories, and more world-beating expertise. Get ready, because this is going to be an unbelievable journey. Follow Lilly: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/lilly YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfm4y4rHF5HGrSr-qbvOwOg Lilly’s book - https://www.amazon.com/Be-Triangle-Being-Getting-Shape Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
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Quick one. Just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly. First people I want
to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show. Never in my wildest dreams is all I can
say. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen and that it would
expand all over the world as it has done. And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things. So thank you to Jack
and the team for building out the new American studio. And thirdly to to Amazon Music, who when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States, and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. I wanted to be powerful
and have influence because I wanted to prove people wrong.
You can't surf the internet for very long without stumbling upon Lilly Singh.
Lilly Singh!
Lilly Singh!
I was born into the reality of being a disappointment right away.
There were rules about being a woman.
My mom did not grow up with queer culture.
So for me to expect her to operate from a place of my lived experience,
how is that math ever going to add up? Welcome to the first episode of A Little Late with Lilly Singh.
You got given a late night show. When I said that, you said, I'm so sorry. Tell me why you said that.
Because I don't think the thing was good. The community that I did this show for is pissed at
me because I nervously made a joke out of context and that
broke my heart every day. Did you have anxiety at the time? I developed it during season one of the
show. Is the struggle worth it? For me, yes it is. I believe in what I believe so much more than the
hurt that I feel. So without further ado, I'm Stephen Bartlett and this is the Diary of a CEO
USA edition. I hope nobody's listening, but if you are, then please keep this to yourself.
Lily, thank you for being here. It's a real honour.
And we've got a mutual friend in Jay Shelley who's really spoken so incredibly highly of you.
And then when I got a chance to delve into your story I became pretty fascinated by many things. I want to start
because I always I always believe that the foundation of everybody that I sit here with
and also myself having studied some childhood psychology is their childhood so I guess the
question I had for you is when you think about 10 year old Lily and the lessons she had learned by that age
about the world and life,
what were those lessons and where did she learn them from?
The lessons at the age of 10,
I don't think were necessarily beneficial ones.
I was born into the reality
of being a disappointment right away,
being the second daughter in an Indian family.
I was told in my adult life that my grandparents, great-grandparents in India didn't find out about
my birth for about two weeks because they had said, if it's not a son, it's not worth calling
home about. So that really colored in a lot of my childhood because whether it was ridiculous
things like, oh, you know, girls aren't supposed to talk that much.
Ridiculous things like girls aren't supposed to whistle.
Whatever girls weren't supposed to do was very apparent to me from a really young age.
So the lessons I was taught that there were rules about being a woman.
There was expectations about being a woman.
And I had to fit that mold if I wanted to be not even accepted, but if want to make people proud I think more than anything I think I never felt like I wasn't accepted but if I wanted to be extraordinary
in the eyes of people that were disappointed in me I had to fit the mold and so a lot of my
upbringing was a little bit of this uh simultaneous I need to fit the mold but then this rebellious
side of me being like but I don't want to and kind of negotiating that balance. What you said about your grandparents
wanting a boy and generally in Indian culture there being a desire to have a boy how did that
impact you? I read that you were a tomboy growing up. Yes yes yes yes I was obsessed with Dwayne
the Rock Johnson I loved wrestling I wore baggy clothes I rebelled in every such way because of this
expectation that was set upon me. I think in my adult life, I have learned, and I don't think I
knew this growing up. I don't think I even knew this years ago. I think this is a quite recent
revelation. That experience has put a very heavy chip on my shoulder that I carry in my adult life.
And I think for a lot of my life, I was scared to admit that, or I was embarrassed to admit that
because no one wants to admit that they have this chip on their shoulder.
But now I fully embrace it.
And that chip on the shoulder is for most of my life, I always felt like I had to prove myself in every instance.
No matter what it was, whether it was school grades, whether it was my dancing ability, whether it was how I could speak up at a family party. No, but in every instant, I always felt like I had to prove myself worthy because I was born into this reality where being a girl is lesser in Indian culture.
And that has followed me into my adult life. And if you look at the pattern of everything I've done
in my career, I've only now connected the dots that the common thread between all of that is
proving myself. And so even when I started making YouTube videos in 2010, a lot of people asked me,
why did you do that? And I can give you the answer that I think people want to hear, which was I want to create a path and no one else is doing what I was doing. And sure, that's all true to some extent. But the real reason was I wanted to be powerful and have influence because I wanted to prove people wrong. I think that has always been that chip on my shoulder. I wanted to prove that being a girl was worthy of celebration. And so that has been a thing that has followed me. So, so
that is truly the chip on my shoulder that now I'm just fully transparent about.
When I think about my own insecurities and the things I pursued at like 18 years old,
they were all the opposite of the thing that invalidated me when I was a kid. So when I was
a kid, only black kid in an all-white school,
parents with a broke family in a perfect white picket,
you know, neighborhood.
And so my pursuit in life was like,
if I had the things that I'd missed as a child,
if I had money and if I was, I don't know, famous or whatever,
then it would be filling some kind of childhood void.
I wonder when you said then,
I wanted to be powerful and have influence.
Is that because you didn't when you were younger as well is that part of it I think it's more so that the people
who are the most powerful in my upbringing were men they were the men in my family the men at a
family party that were in the corner they got to control the conversation what they said goes
men notoriously in Indian culture are the decision makers, the powerful people.
And I know one thing that the men in it, and I don't want to paint all Indian culture men,
but I'm just saying as a kid, it was evident to me that the uncles made the decisions. They got to decide what was acceptable and not acceptable. And so I knew one thing that the men would
understand was power, money, and influence. And so I think I strived for a career
that would give me those things so I could kind of prove a point to them. Being like, you may not
understand my value in any other way aside from money, power, and influence. And to some extent,
I was not wrong. I've done a lot of cool things in my life, but the things that really made my dad
and my uncles go wide-eyed were things like the Forbes list, were things like, oh, she's in a headline.
She has her own show.
Those are the things that they understand to be of value.
And I'm not saying that's right or wrong, and I'm not trying to dissect if it's right or wrong.
I just knew they would understand that.
And so for me to have an impact, of course, I want to help people.
Of course, I want to pave the path.
That's all true.
But those are not the things that the people that had power as a kid
for me would understand. They understand power, money, and influence. So I would be lying to say
that that wasn't a driving factor. And you, so you moved to LA, your YouTube career starts really
gaining traction. You said a second ago that you pursued YouTube because of your very honest power
and influence, right? But when you start on YouTube, there's no guarantee of power and influence,
right? I know your first video did like 70 views or something crazy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So when you started YouTube, a very strange thing to be doing back then,
recording yourself, especially doing like funny stuff in your room or whatever.
Yeah, for sure.
What were you thinking?
Yeah, I was thinking a few things.
One was that I was always a very creative kid.
I was the kid that wanted to be the center of the dance circle at a family party. I watched Ace of Cakes. I wanted to bake cakes. I wanted to be creative
through any means necessary. But I think I was convinced that creativity was a phase,
that it's something you do as a pastime, as a kid. Your career shouldn't be creative. You let
go of that. You get a real job, et cetera, et cetera. When I was in university and I discovered YouTube, it was a glimpse of,
I could be creative as an adult. I could express myself in a way that's like on my own terms.
There is no gatekeeper. There's no rules. This was something that I got to make the rules about.
I got to decide. I built a little community of people that also were in a little bit of a dark place. So I got this sense of connection that I wasn't getting in real life.
And the real, real talk of it is
that I'm an obsessive person.
Once I started making YouTube videos,
I was obsessed with it.
I was obsessed with learning how to do it well,
exploring how else I could be creative,
learning how to get more views,
learning how to market myself.
I, with everything I do,
I'm a very all or nothing person,
which has been a great pro, but also very detrimental in my life.
This type of obsessive personality.
Especially if you become obsessed about something that isn't fully aligned, right?
Which is possible, right?
Because there can be two conflicting forces.
The force can be, I want to be really successful.
And then the other force can be saying, well, this isn't my purpose.
And they can surely come into conflict. It's also very problematic when you're obsessive over something
that is governed by numbers that is a very dangerous combination when you're obsessive
and your success is measured by views and subscribers and stats that is a bad recipe
right there because i would actually be this and this was 2010 before YouTube had a,
had very complex analytics. Now you can see, and now you can, you can know how many people
with dogs on their laps are watching your videos. Like it's intense how many analytics you can get.
Now, back in the day, that wasn't the case. So I would actually have my own spreadsheets,
like a crazy person just on my wall every day tracking, okay, how many views this video did
this, this many subscribers, this people like an obsessive degree. And I don't regret that because it got me great success, but I've had to
slowly unlearn a little bit of that to not go completely crazy in my adult life.
Before that YouTube phase with the spreadsheets and stuff like that,
did people consider you to be a lazy person? Did they like count you out?
One thing I can say is I've been called a lot of things in my life. I have never been called lazy.
So when you were, cause that, that phase before the YouTube and the spreadsheets, right?
What were you doing with your life in your life at that phase?
So I was applying to grad school. I had just finished graduating and I was applying to grad
school. And let me, let me put an asterisk to my last comment. I'm sure my parents could call me lazy from time to time. It wasn't lazy as much
as it was, my heart is not in this thing. So I do not, I do not think it is worthy for me to put my
energy into it. That's what I was getting at. Yes. Which is how someone can go from being perceived
by their parents or in my case by school as being
I got kicked out of school for the same thing and then just years later they can see that I'm
obsessed when something is in line with something has caught me like a fish on a hook right exactly
for better or for worse maybe it's caught one of my insecurities and dragged me off into the future
whatever but I just thought that was interesting that like maybe in that phase of your life
others would look at you and go oh she's lost because you're correct well the moment I walked into my parents room and I said I want to make YouTube
videos um what I actually was doing five minutes before that is I was right trying to write an
essay to get into grad school and it was bad and I was like I'm not this makes no sense I don't
even care about the outcome of this I closed my laptop right then and there and I said if I don't
care about this I'm not gonna do well in this and so I really had to shift my focus somewhere else
and that literally five minutes later I went to my parents room and I said I can't care about this, I'm not going to do well in this. And so I really had to shift my focus somewhere else. And that literally five months later, I went to my parents' room and I
said, I can't do this. I want to try making videos on the internet. And they were like,
say what now? This was in 2010. And they gave me the best advice ever and the best blessing ever,
which was you have a year. So they also gave me a bit of a ticking time bomb. They said,
you have a year to try whatever you want to try. Whatever this YouTube thing is, you have a year.
And if it doesn't work out, you will go to grad school
and you will do exactly what you were doing five minutes ago. And so I also had a bit of a
time period that I had to figure things out in, which was a huge blessing because it made me
every moment for that year work on making this pop off.
When you had that conversation with your parents, how were you on youtube if at all not that big not that big at all i think i had like my views were in the thousands probably
um and this was 2010 like i said so i vividly remember when i hit 1000 subscribers now your
cat can meow and you will have like 10 000 subscribers but this was a a lot of hustle to get to even a thousand I know this
because I made a a Justin Bieber never say never parody when I had a thousand subscribers I was like I made it baby
when you reflect now on the role that your parents were playing in your life like even then like
having to go to them and them like granting you this year it all sounds incredibly like imprisoned you know what I mean yes I think for
lots for a lot of my teenage years my young adult years I probably viewed it like that I no longer
do I've done a lot of work to try to figure out and respect my parents context which has really
really helped me in their circumstances and really put value to it not just dismiss it so I actually
think a lot of what they did,
although at the moment didn't seem right.
And even now, a little questionable sometimes,
it actually really helped me.
Like this one year, if they were so liberal to me
and let me do whatever,
I might've not worked as hard in that one year,
to be honest, you know?
And if they did not teach me the value
of a lot of the things that they value,
I probably wouldn't be the person I am today.
So I actually don't hold that against them at all. It's really interesting. Mo Gowda,
a guy that came on this podcast said that when he used to work at Google, when they interviewed
people and said, would you erase the most traumatic or difficult moments of your life?
Knowing that it would erase all the lessons it taught you as well and everything that came with
it, would people do it? 99% of people said they wouldn't. And there's an interesting thing about
how we look back on our trauma we because we also don't
know the other outcome because it's interesting it's and I agree when people ask me in interviews
what would you say to your younger self and what would you change I always say I wouldn't change
anything because even those like horrible decisions those questionable moments they have all resulted
in something really really great that's the exchange of the universe and that's just how
things work magically um And it's interesting how
knowing that right now I can sit here and tell you that I would not change anything about my past,
any trauma, any pain, even knowing that I will still sit here today and think that the pain I'm
experiencing today is intolerable and not acknowledge that 10 years from now, I will
probably say the same thing about the pain I'm experiencing today.
Something to always keep in mind.
We have this way of humans,
as humans of thinking that whatever pain we're experiencing right now
is for sure definitely the worst pain
and it cannot get worse.
It always does.
And we always think that it's still the worst pain.
When you were a kid, you thought,
I remember when I was a kid,
my mom, I said, I couldn't get this shirt.
It said Backstreet Girls on it.
And I remember thinking, this is the worst day of my life and my life is never going to get worse than this. I remember when I was a kid, my mom, I said, I couldn't get this shirt. It said Backstreet Girls on it. And I remember thinking this is the worst day of my life. And my wife is never going to get
worse than this. I remember thinking that I'm going to run away. My mom hates me. She won't
let me be a Backstreet Girl. How dare her? And then years, years later, something else happened.
I thought that was the worst. And we keep doing that as humans, don't we? We keep thinking that
whatever this is today, this is the worst. That perspective, completely true. Completely true.
Been through it myself a million times. I always say, you know, this is the worst. That perspective, completely true. Completely true. Been through it myself a million times.
I always say, you know, this is,
the current crisis always feels like the fatal one
until hindsight tells you that the current one is the fatal.
Right.
But what does, even knowing that,
it still doesn't seem, in my case,
to stop the current crisis feeling fatal.
It helps a little bit, takes the edge off.
But when we're in the heart of the storm
for whatever reason what else helps you to gain perspective on the situation I mean like really
I don't mean like the advice that we give in our books and stuff I mean what actually helps
what actually helps me when I'm going through pain and I can't see myself coming out the other side
is truly I'm a very logical person in the sense that I always think about things
through to the best of my ability, facts or like diagrams.
I just have this brain that likes processing things.
And so I think about, okay,
what is my success rate of getting through things?
It's actually a hundred percent right now. I sit here at a hundred. We all sit here, everyone watching, actually It's actually a hundred percent right now. I sit here
at a hundred, but we all sit here, everyone watching, actually you sit at a hundred percent
right now, no matter what. Yeah. A hundred percent is where you sit at. So I think about things through
that lens, but I also think about just, is the struggle worth it? And for me, yes, it is. I
believe in what I believe so much more than I, the hurt that I feel. And that's the balance I think we need to keep in check is, is it worth it? Is your struggle worth it?. I believe in what I believe so much more than the hurt that I feel. And that's the
balance I think we need to keep in check is, is it worth it? Is your struggle worth it? And I think
you really need to do the work to make that answer yes. And I didn't always operate from a yes,
but I think now I do. I believe I found my purpose. And I know Jay talks about this a lot,
but finding your purpose and what your purpose is on this planet helps you get to that yes.
So for me, I think my my
struggles are worth it I think the pain is worth it to get out on the end you became a hugely I'm
going to loop back to that sort of topic in a section but to give the listeners a context you
became a hugely hugely successful social media star creator whatever you want to call it um
built one of the biggest youtube channels still to this
day some millions and millions of subscribers that is a that makes you in the 0.0 whatever
percent anomalies in the world so i i hear the obsessive thing you said about the spreadsheets
i guess that i thought for her to get there she must be pretty obsessive i walked in here and
you were like oh she has google doc written all over her well you're like there's like but we all I think at times in our lives probably look back and think I was also probably toxic
obsessive you know because the things that I was you know especially when you're in the numbers
business right and the metrics business so what else about you when you think about that phase of
your life from 2000 and you know maybe 13 when you hit a million subs to where you hit 14 point whatever seven million subs
what was it about lily outside of the obsessive part that made you such an anomaly through that
phase of like career success on youtube this has required a lot of reflection because um
i was trying to think recently what my purpose is,
going back to our previous conversation, what is my purpose?
Because I thought my purpose was specific projects I would work on,
specific things in the industry, and I kept thinking, that's too small.
That's such an in-the-moment purpose.
What is your greater purpose?
So I had to go look back through my life recently and be like,
what is the common thread here?
And the common thread between everything,
especially during this time period you're talking about,
can be summarized in one word, and that is disruptor.
I think my purpose is to disrupt.
And I think I've done it continuously in my life,
from being a tomboy as a kid,
to being outspoken in a room full of uncles,
to getting into the entertainment industry,
not through an agent, not through moving to LA,
but through YouTube, where there are no gatekeepers,
from the first late night host, wherever that historic moment was, I continuously feel the need
to disrupt, not because I'm actively trying to disrupt, because it is just who I am as a person.
And I know this even on the personal side. The first openly queer person to host a late night
show, the first woman of color, I've just been associated with so many firsts and I used to hate it. I remember thinking and telling my therapist,
I don't want to be the first. I don't want to be the first anymore. I hate being the first. I don't
want the pressure of all this. I just want to do what I love doing. And my therapist joked and said,
yeah, you need to pick a cause. You got a lot of things going. You have to pick an issue.
But I have since embraced that instead of looking at it as a thing that I hate about myself and I
want to change about myself and that causes me stress. I have now accepted that it is my purpose
to disrupt. It is just how I am built. I am built to break systems and molds. Again, not because I
am actively trying to stir the pot, but because it is just how my brain and my being operates.
I have to break molds.
So when you asked me that question between that time period, what was it about Lily?
It's that Lily always would ask the question of how else can this be done?
And why isn't this being done this way?
And maybe there's a different way of doing it.
And when she gets told that this is the way things usually are done, I just simply do not accept that.
Everyone on my team knows that's the worst thing you can say to Lily. This is how things are traditionally done. I just do not accept that I everyone on my team knows that's the worst thing you can say this is how things are traditionally done I just don't accept that
with anything clearly you're someone who's built a lot of evidence that the look you just gave me
is the look my parents give me just like no yeah do you know there was so much going on in my head
and then I was thinking about different ways to take that and different feelings I got from that
one of them honestly was like especially hearing the obsessive thing listen when I ask these questions I'm not because I think
because I relate to so much of what you're saying yeah I'm asking the questions to to pick dig deeper
not because I know I love it I love it but it's just the look is like my parents looking at me
like yeah great she likes to disrupt yeah because my brain went my brain went oh my she's so even
when you were delivering it
so passionate that I felt I was like she must have that's exhausting to be obsessed it's
exhausting on the other hand I was thinking why is your brain wired to disrupt things like why so
I understand the from an innovation perspective it's going to be fruitful you're going to create
new things but why is that your predisposition is it going back to your childhood and saying
I think so I have asked that question to myself as well why is that no matter and this is where
it can be to a detriment sometimes because sometimes I'll take simple simple tasks that are
don't need that much effort but I will make it so I'm disrupting even those small small things
maybe there's a different way to throw a party maybe there's a different way to have a friendship
maybe there's a different way to decorate my house and every aspect I have to disrupt and And it is exhausting. It's absolutely exhausting. And I've tried to figure out why,
what is it in me? I'm still trying to figure it out, but I think from my work thus far,
I have determined that it's just that from the moment I was born, I was already a disruption.
I was already that. And I think that's just me stepping into my power, fully embracing that's
who I am and being like, fine, I'm not going to reject that. I am going to fully embrace that's just me stepping into my power, fully embracing that's who I am and being like, fine, I'm not going to reject that. I am going to fully embrace that's my purpose in life.
Because another thing is, you know, when you ask me about the chip on my shoulder,
the part of the story I didn't say is that I actually did come out the other end. So in my
adult life, when I announced my first world tour, after becoming a YouTube success, I very purposely
announced it in India. I was like, I want to announce the tour in India. I announced my first world tour after becoming a YouTube success, I very purposely announced it in India.
I was like, I want to announce the tour in India.
I want the first stops to be in India.
I know that's where my great grandparents are.
I know that's where my parents are from.
I know it'll mean the most.
It'll have the biggest impact.
So after I announced that tour,
I went and did the eight hour drive
to visit my grandfather
for the first time in my adult life.
I had never met him as an adult before.
And this was the grandfather where,
and I hold nothing against him because again, I respect people's circumstances, but he was the
one that didn't want to hear about a daughter who didn't believe a daughter in the family would be
worthwhile. He was standing outside of his house and greeted me with a flower garland. And he said
the words to me, this is like an 80 year old Indian man said
the words to me, I was wrong. You have made this family more proud than anyone else could have ever
done. And he showed me all these newspaper clippings he had saved with me. So that moment
for me also validated what disruption can do. It can make progress. Progress comes from disruption
and breaking systems. And so I think that for me was a very,
and I remember it so vividly
because it did leave such an impact on me.
But that for me was like,
look, this is what disruption can do.
This is what the uncomfortable process results in.
And am I right in therefore concluding
that the fuel of the disruption
was that chip on your shoulder?
And it creates almost a bit of an injustice
and a sense of anger in people
that I've seen so many times in myself
and thinking about my friend Umar,
who comes from a somewhat similar background,
an Indian guy, went on to create a billion dollar company.
He grew up with this internal,
just almost frustration, anger,
this sense of trying to correct an injustice
and that manifests as this chip on its shoulder.
And I guess life, if you start with that predisposition and you go through life with that idea of like disrupting
the status quo you will win and that will reinforce that yes so now imagine when i work with you if i
came up with a conventional idea you know from 33 years of experience that the rewards are on the
other side of the disruptive you know what we call
first principle thinking when you go to the extra effort of thinking about something from fresh
right and that's um it's that i also will be really honest i thought that that moment of
uh my grandfather knows now he knows what's up he knows my name would eliminate the chip on my
shoulder it didn't i don't think it will ever actually go away why um I'm still trying to figure that out I think it's because that same chip is
still reinforced in so many other places in the world it's still that I'm was the only female
late night host and so when I was at that seat in that table surrounded by men that chip was just
reinforced it's like a new trauma exactly so i think it keeps getting reinforced it was never just about my grandfather it was just about the system but that is also i
will just say i have to get really honest and say that mixed with ego once you get a bit of success
i think jay-z says success is the most addictive drug it is once you disrupt and it comes out the
other end and you see how amazing it is you're like i just keep doing this i keep doing this
i need to keep disrupting i need to that's been something I've had to really meditate on in my adult life is that when does
that stop when does that desire to just more more more more disrupt disrupt when when when when
does that stop yeah that can be the real enemy of happiness right absolutely yes happiness is
often right here but we can't see it because we're still trying to chase it that way. We're still trying to, it's always the, it's in the future mentality. You know, happiness will come,
success will come. These things will come. Maybe it's like right now. Right.
Even saying that there is not enough.
It's not.
Yeah. Cause I say that to a lot of people, but still struggle with it myself.
You have to do a lot of work. It's a lot of work. It's not just words, it's a lot of work
in how you assign value to yourself, how you assign value to other things. For most of my life, I have hustled. So I built an
entire brand out of hustling. Anyone that knows anything about me, it's a hustle harder, hustle,
she wrote How to Be a Boss, her first book. Now, over the past two years, I've done the work to
not hustle less. I still work very, very hard, but it's what does all this stuff actually mean?
What is the value you tie to this stuff? Is what you thought it was going to be? I think you can only learn that once you get there and you get it and you're like, oh, it's what does all this stuff actually mean what is the value you tie to this stuff is what you thought it was going to be i think you can only learn that once you get there and
you get it and you're like oh it's not giving me the feeling i thought it was going to give me
and it probably never will because of this value we've assigned to all this stuff
have you gotten to the point where you you know that you are enough
who this is turning into therapy what did you think it was going to be? Damn. I'm going to cancel my therapy appointment.
Save myself $300.
We charge.
Oh, nice, nice.
I am just now actively right now in the process of believing that through writing my latest book.
My latest book was a lot about that.
It was about am I enough right now?
Because I think I'll be honest.
It's a buzzword. Oh, you are enough. Like for example, kids are
born these days and we, in the first words, we tell them, are you enough? You're enough. You're
great just the way you are. I think we need to find the balance of hard work and spirituality
of business and spirituality. There's an intersection of these things where yes,
I think now I'm a full, complete human being. Does that mean I don't have goals and aspirations
that I want things? I still have all of those things,
but I'm at the point right now where those things,
whether I have them or don't have them,
will not impact the way I define myself.
See, a lot of my life, I've defined myself
as YouTube sensation, late night host,
actress who has this role.
I am doing the work to realize
that I'm actually a
complete human being that has value aside from that. And those things are just cool things and
experiences I get to do. And I can strive to be great at them. I can perfect my craft, but I'm not
lesser if I don't have those things. And I'm not more if I do have those things. This is an active
thing I'm working on. And when you get to that place, if we are lucky enough in our lives to
get to the place where we realize we're enough, that's, you know, I had this really interesting conflict in my life,
which I'm sure that listeners have heard about before, where when someone said to me one day,
maybe seven years ago, they said, you need to realize that you're already enough. I remember
thinking, what a load of bullshit. I'm not going to get out of bed if I have that viewpoint. I don't
need to strive for anything. Bullshit. Get out my office. Right. And then upon reflecting on that,
writing my book, whatever, I realized that my thought that
knowing you're enough inhibits ambition
is actually false.
What it does,
knowing you're enough kills fake ambition.
The minute I knew I started to get closer
to realizing that I was enough,
my ambitions were all things that I actually wanted,
that were actually in line with my...
So it's this weird paradox
of when you know you're enough,
it doesn't inhibit ambition.
It's the foundation of real ambition.
It gives you a lot of clarity, I think, and you're enough it doesn't inhibit ambition it's the foundation of real ambition correct it gives you a lot of clarity I think and you're absolutely correct because
when you don't feel like you're enough everything feels important everything feels like something
you have to obtain everything feels like a challenge you know when I didn't feel like I
was enough and I felt like I am the late night host I am this actor I I am my job this is what
defines me if anyone asks me who I was I would never answer as I'm a patient. I am my job. This is what defines me. If anyone asks me who I was,
I would never answer as,
I'm a patient friend.
I'm a nice, I would be like,
I'm in this show.
I mean, that's how I would,
or I would define myself by my struggles,
which is another whole thing.
Not by ever my potential.
I would never say,
I'm someone who's going to change the world because of X, Y, Z.
I would say,
I'm someone who had a really tough childhood.
We either define ourselves by our struggles
or by these other external validations and accolades
that we think are important.
When I did that, I would care so much.
For me, what was so important was
I need to prove this troll wrong on the internet.
I need to, that's my priority.
I need to prove this troll wrong.
I need to get this rating.
I need to do.
And then the second I was like, you know what?
My purpose is to disrupt.
I know what my values, I'm a complete person already.
Suddenly that stuff became way less important to me.
Suddenly I was like, oh, actually my priority is going to be,
I want to tell stories that I think are really meaningful.
I'm not saying that it has to be a box office breaker
in that I'm saying I just want to tell stories that are important.
Things become a little more clear when you accept, you make space for priorities to become clear
when you stop pretending that all this other stuff is important. So I totally agree. That is something
I struggled with where I thought, and I think that was my resistance against it. When people would
tell me you're enough. And when they just tell kids that are like, no, that kid's going to grow
up and they're not going to, they're not going to become anything. If you just tell them they're
enough. Again, I still think that there's going to grow up and they're not going to become anything if you just tell them they're enough.
Again, I still think that there's an intersection between hustling and spirituality.
I don't think we have to pick one or the other.
I really don't.
I think there's a way for both of those things to coexist.
But it has become apparent to me that being mindful,
feeling like you're enough,
it actually allows you to hustle with more clarity.
You know, when people are saying,
oh, she needs to get this rating and you're thinking, well, I'm going to prove them wrong
and whatever. And you're getting dragged by external, you know, measurements or validation.
And then you get to the point where you say, do you know what? I actually just want to tell stories.
People reach that crossroads a lot in their life where they've kind of like built an identity,
in your case, tens of millions of followers by doing something. And then, you know, in other
people's cases, it could be they're working in as a something. And then, you know, in other people's cases,
it could be they're working as a lawyer.
And then they catch sight of what their purpose might be.
And at that crossroads, life says to you,
if you go down that route,
you're going to lose a lot of this stuff that you've built.
I know it's not aligned with you,
but you're going to lose friends, a network, an identity.
Don't go down that road, right right and you face that so clearly in your
life that crossroads and even leaving youtube you know when you have 14 million you have your
damn mind yeah but yeah totally but tell me so like at that crossroads in life what advice would
you give to people when in your case you're one of the ones that really had you know i don't want to say a lot to lose because that's a presumption right so it's like
the public would think that you had a lot to lose by taking a different route right you're
absolutely correct I think one of the reasons I for so long kept holding on to the strings of
YouTube to be like no I want to do other stuff but I'm still going to do this I want to do other
stuff but I'm still going to make these videos I'm still going to dress up as my parents was that it
was that I didn't want to lose this traction I want to do that stuff, but I'm still going to make these videos. I'm still going to dress up as my parents. Was that. It was that I didn't want to lose this traction I had,
this audience I had,
this instant gratification I had
of having this massive audience at my fingertips.
I also, to be honest,
I was scared of this term relevancy.
I think relevancy is used as currency these days.
Like you're not relevant,
so you're worth less now.
And we have this way to measure people
based on relevancy.
This can be summarized in one easy sentence,
which is you cannot expect to grow and also stay the same.
It just cannot happen.
You have to make room for growth.
And so in order for me to fulfill my ambitions
of I want to do stuff with movies and TVs,
and I want to just do all this other stuff
that is me growing in my craft. I cannot stay the same. I can't, you have to make space for that.
You know, I also always think about if I have, again, going, me going back to diagrams and the
way my brain thinks, if I have a hundred percent energy at the start of a day, I can only spend a
hundred percent energy. No more energy is coming. You have a hundred. So where are you going to put
that energy? It can be to put that energy it can be to
old habits it can be to holding on to the relevancy but then that limits how much energy
is left for growth so it really is just a decision you have to make of making room for growth and
when you did make that decision back in 2019 to was it 2019 you left youtube i still look
yeah but yeah I think around
2009 to where I stopped consistently uploading videos yes so um when I read about why you left
YouTube there was clearly some symptoms of life saying to you you're fucking up here in some way
what were those symptoms I think doing things because you feel like you have to doing things
because you feel like you owe people doing things that you're not really passionate about and feeling like you don't, you haven't given yourself permission to grow.
And how did it emotionally feel?
Stagnant. I felt like I was trapped. I felt like I owed people this version of myself that was stuck in space and that was not allowed to grow. I felt not creative. I felt not free. And I felt like even though what I loved about YouTube was
freedom, I can post whatever I want, whenever I want, there's no gatekeepers. I felt trapped in
that system. It became the exact opposite of what I loved about YouTube, which was you have to serve
every Monday and Thursday. You have to post a video, you have to appease these fans.
It has to be like this, it has to be this long.
You have to appease the algorithm.
It became the exact same thing I never wanted in the first place,
which is to be trapped in something like that.
And so it just, it stopped feeling right to me.
It stopped feeling like a place that I could grow and learn and thrive.
The Lily that I would see on camera at that point
in the lead up to you deciding to depart
versus the Lily that would be there right after you stopped recording.
Tell me the difference between those two people.
Yeah, she's just as weird in both instances.
I can tell you that.
She's just as weird.
She's just as quirky.
But one of them was definitely a bit more performative.
Pretending to be a little bit more passionate than she was.
Pretending not to be tired and exhausted.
And pretending to be excited about what she was doing.
I think after I turned off the camera, I was like, Oh God, I got to edit this thing.
I got to do this thing. And I got to go through these. There was no growth. It was just such a
repetitive pattern. And as a creative, I didn't want that. That's if I wanted that, I would have
just done the grad school thing. Right. And then obviously you get this big opportunity, which is
well written about, and I've watched the episodes.
I've watched season one and season two.
I'm so sorry.
No, no.
Why did you say I'm so sorry?
So first of all, the context for people that don't know.
So you got given a late night show.
You were the first woman of color to be led.
In over 30 years, yep.
In over 30 years to be led into that boys club.
Yep.
On a major network.
When I said that, you said, I'm so sorry. Tell me why you said that.
Because I don't think the thing was good and I'm not necessarily proud of it. You know,
when I got the show, again, me being the disruptor, the whole first season, the advertising was,
we're going to break the mold. We're knocking down the doors of late night. We're going to
do things differently. And then I proceeded to do things pretty much exactly how they've always been done. Why?
Because for the first time in my life, I was in a situation where I could not call the shots.
I couldn't make the decisions. I didn't have the resources to do things differently. The system is
not built to do. The issue is the system is not built to do things differently. It's hard to do
things differently when you're told, okay, so the episode has to be exactly 22 minutes and 23 seconds. It
has to be that amount of time. It cannot be a second over. It cannot be under. The acts have
to be broken down like this because our commercials have to go in these time things. So you had a joke
that went there. It can't go in anymore. You have to do it like this. Oh, you're following Jimmy and
Seth and the audience is kind of used to their formats. You can do things differently, but it has to start with a monologue.
So you have to come out, you have to hit the mark, you have to do the monologue.
So many times when I did that monologue, which was the worst part of the show, it was like a 10 minute monologue of mediocre jokes because I had a tiny writer's room and very few resources.
This is to no discredit to the writers.
I just had such few writers that were too overworked. There were episodes where I would miss the mark and I would
mess up and it was the best part of the show. And I would have to do it again to get it right.
And I would always think, why can't we just put the mess up on air? The best part of the show,
even beyond that, was before we were even rolling, I would go out and I would warm up the audience
and I would just riff with them and talk some jokes. And it would be so just natural and funny. And you would never see that
in the show. Why? We didn't have enough cameras to shoot the audience. So we couldn't put it in
the show. So the system was not built for breaking the mold. At that time, did your gut tell you something was wrong? Absolutely. From day one, I thought
this is going to be very hard. It's gonna be very hard to make something that I'm proud of here.
And what I hated about it was the proudness and the pride was of something superficial. I was
proud of the headline. I was proud of the historic nature of it. I was proud that I got to make
history, but none of the work could back it up.
And that broke my heart every day
to know that I'm just riding this headline
and I'm not going to be able to deliver on this.
There was episodes, I vividly remember this.
There was several episodes where I would be with my,
we didn't even have a showrunner.
It was my head of development for my production company
who acted as the showrunner for the show.
And I would be walking
and the show would be starting in five minutes and we would be going over the monologue. And I looked at her one
and I said, this is not funny and this is not good. And I don't want to go out there and I don't
want to have to pretend it is. And she looked at me and she said, it's a quantity game. It's not a
quality game. And that broke my heart because Late night is a quantity game it's i shot 96
episodes in three months and i don't want to come across if i'm complaining and all this but i'm
trying to highlight that it was very difficult for me to go into the system being the control
freak i am being the disruptor and just try everything to disrupt it and it's just too
rock solid to be disrupted i ask these questions in part because
I've just joined a show called Dragon's Den, which is like Shark Tank. So five of us at the
investor walks in. And since then I've been offered a lot more shows, right? And I mean,
you've been there, right? Loads of, loads of briefs coming in for shows, big promises, whatever.
And some of them are really tempting because it's like, oh, you're going to be on Netflix.
But then my gut says to me, that's a shit show though.
That is a piece of shit show.
So I'm asking from a perspective of advice,
when you find yourself in the shadow of a great temptation,
I'm, you know, Steve Butler might be the first,
whatever, whatever, whatever.
But I look at what's going on,
the system in which I'd be operating as you did.
What advice would you give to me based
on the lesson you've learned in hindsight? I will answer this question by telling you exactly that,
the lesson I learned, which is it wasn't until the show finished that I really had to reflect
on that experience and be like, what am I going to do differently? You see, when I was offered the
show, the first time it was brought to me, I actually said, no, people don't know this. I said,
no. And it disappeared for like a month and it came back to me again. And I thought,
okay, the universe is sending this back to me again. Let me, let me evaluate this. The reason
I said no first was because I never grew up with the dream of being a late night host. I know some
people have that experience where they're like, I grew up with late night television, watched every
night. I don't think my mom could tell you what Jimmy's last name is.
Like, they never watched late night.
I never grew up with that experience.
So it wasn't my desire.
It wasn't my passion to be a host.
So that's why I said no.
But when it came back around and it was explained to me the historic nature of this, three things came into play.
One, my sense of responsibility and duty.
And two, my ego.
Those things together, I was like, I want to be part of this historic moment.
That would be really cool.
Also, I have a responsibility for this
because what if I say no and it goes to someone else
and then this history is never even made
and we never even got this shot.
So all of these reasons that I thought
were so valuable and valid is why I said yes.
I was naive to think that that would be enough
to get me through those long shoot days.
It wasn't because I would come home
at the end of 96 episodes in three months broken. And I would think that was not fun.
And I didn't enjoy that. And I have no memory or no positive thought to even show for that hard
work. I learned the value of having fun and doing things you're passionate about. I believe more than anything else,
those are the things that actually contribute to longevity. More than anything else, even money.
Ask any person with a lot of money. You'll go tired of money. You'll go tired of buying things.
You will never grow tired of having fun and being passionate about something. And so since I wrapped
that show, any project that comes to my desk now,
my agents will be on the phone and we'll talk about the money for a while. We'll talk about the schedule for a while. And then I'll dedicate an amount of time. I'll say, okay, now we're going
to talk about if I'm going to have fun. And if these people are actually nice to work with,
and do I even care about this? Do I care about this? And what is this? Do I even care about the
message here? What this is saying? And if if my answers are no my definition of success right now is that I will not say yes to it I have to have fun right now where I am or
I'm not successful so that's my advice to you is don't undervalue fun and passion because those
you will never go tired of those things it makes it even more difficult in that situation where
you're coming home after filming those not because by the way which is a ridiculous number of anything to film that's this is to do the math
for everyone that's two to three episodes a day and and traditionally late night house do one a day
so you're coming home exhausted after doing something that you didn't find fun right and then
the exacerbating factor of all of that which i i reflect on and i say to myself steve would you
been able to deal with this part as well is the show was by some people well received but by others heavily
criticized specifically the community which is the YouTube community you'd come from people made
very hurtful very shallow criticism sometimes your personal criticisms about you in the show
yeah unless you're the superwoman which is the pseudonym
I think you used to go under that has got to doing something you don't enjoy that is not aligned with
you and then being criticized for it it's like the holy trinity of a bad place to be right 100%
even you saying this has given me a fourth pimple on my cheek and I'm sweating because it does it
does evoke an emotional response out of me and it's not just the YouTube community it was the you saying this has given me a fourth pimple on my cheek and I'm sweating because it does it does
evoke an emotional response out of me and it's not just the YouTube community it was the South
Asian community that I got critics from it was a queer community that criticized every and every
community there was people not all but there were some people that were criticizing me that's a
really hard pill to swallow when I just finished telling you that part of the reason I said yes to
this show was to help pave a path. I felt a responsibility to communities. The tough part about being a minority anything is that so many people
are counting on you to reflect their experience. The best you can do is reflect your own. The best
I could have ever done is talk about my experience and my lived circumstances. That's never going to
satisfy over a billion South Asian people,
queer people, women.
That's half of the population right there.
There's no way.
And that's a hard pill to swallow
to know that you can go out there,
try your best.
And still, because you're the only one,
people are going to criticize you.
I think that is not discussed enough
about why it's so hard to break through.
It's because so many people
are counting on you and it's an unrealistic to break through. It's because so many people are counting on you
and it's an unrealistic expectation. I also had to, and this is way easier said than done,
and I'm still working on it. I had to learn not, and I mean this with love, but I mean this very
bluntly, not to take advice from people, giving it from inside their comfort zone.
The amount of people, especially on YouTube, that would criticize
the jokes on my show, the delivery on my show, the sound quality of my show without ever,
never having stepped foot into a late night studio. As a logical person, I have to shut that down
because that's the equivalent of me watching basketball and being like, you missed that three point shot. Oh my God, I could never make that shot. So I really had to
retrain my brain to take away value from certain people and add value. If Jimmy Fallon wanted to
give me critique on my show, I would have been all ears and taken notes and been like, thank you so
much. But if some person on the internet has never done this, I simply cannot take their critique seriously.
And I know some people hear that and they think that's a really perhaps snobby way of looking at
things, but not really. No, practically speaking, you cannot take advice from people who are doing
it from inside their comfort zone because they actually don't know what they're talking about.
In that period, and especially in this sort of the cloud of that criticism,
was there a particular day where you go, that was my hardest day? Emotionally, how I felt, where it all just got, because I've had those moments in my life where all the factors just line up far way tougher than the second. The second, I tried to make it more fun.
I put more of my team into the staff.
But the first season was really tough.
This was the 96 episodes in three months I talk of.
This was, we didn't even have a showrunner.
We had half a dozen writers, which is half of what usually late night shows have.
I was just worked to such an extreme.
Like my from morning to night was just at that studio. I was a writer. I was trying to produce. I was trying to host. I was just in such
a bad state. And one of the tasks that was on my plate because of me, I said I had to do this was
I had to watch every single episode before it would air. So at the end of a shoot day at like
10 PM, I would sit alone in
that studio and I'd watch the episode to be like, is this good? And then one of the EPs said,
you don't need to do this. We can watch the show for you. Take this off your plate. And after much
convincing, I was like, you know what? Today I'm so tired. I'm not going to watch this episode.
This episode was my interview with Jessica Alba.
And even though it was not the first episode to air,
it was the first one we shot because we shot out of order.
It was the very first episode we shot.
I'm obviously so nervous.
I'm so new to this.
I'm trying to be funny.
Jessica Alba had made a comment about her kids
and how they tied towels on their head and with chirpy twists.
And in an effort to try to be funny and try to sound personable and make her kids and how they tied towels on their head with turby twists. And in an effort to try to be
funny and try to sound personable and make her kids not embarrassed, I said, oh, I have lots of
friends that tie turbans. And in my head, when I said it, I was like, it's the coolest thing ever.
There's nothing to be embarrassed about. Like I'm so familiar. Of course, not hearing the sentence
of towels on heads and turbans in the same sentence and how that could be really problematic
historically.
That was the one and only episode I did not watch before it aired.
The one out of 96 episodes.
And the very next day,
I was getting dragged on Twitter.
The sick community was so upset at me.
I apologized profusely.
And I remember that day,
I was just the lowest I've ever been
where I thought the community that I did this show for
is pissed at me
because I nervously made a joke out of context.
I didn't watch that one episode,
so I beat myself up about that,
and then I watched every single episode after that again
and tortured myself all over again,
but that was really tough for me
to feel like I let so many people down, to feel that I didn't get the benefit of the doubt of just being a human being that was nervous tough for me to to to feel like I let so many people down to feel that I
didn't get the benefit of the doubt of just being a human being that was nervous and misspoke
and to also have this idea validated in my brain that oh if you don't do 300 if you don't watch
every episode if you don't do every job it's going to come back to bite you so that was a very
unhealthy moment for me um and that was a really tough day. If I was a fly on the wall that day, in your room, in your bedroom, what would I have seen?
A lot of crying. I think I cried like in my green room that day. I remember my friend actually came
to visit me because he was like, oh, I know you're in bad state. I didn't even realize he was there.
I was just staring into space the whole day. Just, I just felt like crap the whole day for
weeks. I still do. Talking about it, I still feel like crap. Did day for weeks I still do talking about it I still feel like crap
did you have anxiety at the time I developed it during season one of the show for sure I never
was an anxious person um I think 2019 this show maybe even leading up to the show I definitely
developed anxiety for sure where I would like be in my green room, not being able to control my body's responses,
not being able to control my thoughts.
Like that definitely was something that developed
during that first season of Late Night.
And then the second season, you enjoyed it much more.
I enjoyed it much more because I was able to make some changes.
I thought we're not going to shoot in a studio.
We're going to shoot in a house.
I'm not going to do a monologue.
I'm going to do a rant. These things alleviated some
of the pressure from me. Did I still think it was the most amazing thing we ever made? No,
I thought it was better. But the thing is people had already made up their mind after the first
season. After that first season, because it wasn't instantly, which is another tough thing about
any new voice trying to do anything. if you don't impress people right away they're
giving up on you like the second season of the show I truly believe if that was the first season
of the show people would have been like oh she actually broke the mold she's doing something
different but you can't get there you got to go through the process trial and error you got to
every show in history has taken many seasons to find its voice and find its footing but it's the
when you are a minority you're just not given the benefit of the doubt you know there's something
that i really take away from this as well which kind of goes back to the first question i asked
on the topic which is um that even in the face of like temptation i need to make sure that i hold
on to my values my professional you know my personal values and, you know, people offering me a Netflix
show, whatever, if it compromises my like creative and personal values, then I have to say no,
regardless of temptation until they are going to allow me to do it in line with who, who I am,
like the creativity that you have that made you successful. May I offer you a devil's advocate
perspective here? Because I've also had this conversation in my brain lots and lots of times.
I wish that, I'm going to speak from the South Asian experience specifically as well, because that's my lived experience.
But I wish we could hold out for when we're allowed to do things exactly how we want to for them to get done.
I truly believe if we were to all do that, nothing would get made.
And I think that everything is progress. And so I think it's balancing the line of like,
I want to be true to my passion, my vision, but there is a little bit of compromise I have found
has to happen. And as painful as it is, that's why I don't regret the late night show. I think
that compromise had to happen because when you, when I'm in rooms right now, it was my production company and I'm having meetings with Netflix and the Hulus and all these people, the room of people giving me notes do not look like me.
They still do not.
So the option I have is to mold the show into a way that is slightly palatable for them.
So it gets made so that another show like this could potentially get made.
And I use Never Have I Ever as an example.
The historic show on Netflix was number one in 30 countries.
Because of that show, other shows like that will get greenlit.
Other South Asian stories will get greenlit because of that show.
So that show has proved to be a great path paver for sure.
Do I believe in my heart that that's the exact show
the creators wanted
to make and that they didn't have to? No, I think they had to understand that progress
has to be made. So often when I'm in these rooms, I get irked and I think you're not
understanding the cultural nuance. I don't want to cave on this. I don't want to explain to you
what Diwali is. I don't want to have to phrase this like this I have to ask myself the question is it better to hold my ground and have the show not be made or is it better to get it made
70% of the way I want it to be made so that the next iteration of the show can be 80%
and then 90% and then 100 that is the reality of minority storytelling right now and I wish it
wasn't but that's what it is so it it's negotiating that reality a little bit as well.
And that's not just a minority storytelling thing.
That's like, I was thinking about various facets of life
and business and negotiation
when there are multiple factors at play.
There are stakeholders who have a say,
there are investors,
there is a timeline that constrains you.
There's a limitation on resources, as you described.
All of these factors cause an unavoidable compromise where you have to go you know but I guess it's that balancing act of like
what are my non-negotiables then what am I completely not willing to negotiate on um after
the second season of the call you get a call saying that the show is not going to be continued
tell me about that day so I'm going to describe it as mutual. Although, yes, the network does control like what's what they're going to put money towards or not.
I was secretly hoping two things and they're both completely contradictory.
Half of me was like, I know this show is a win for the community.
It has to keep going. It has to keep going or else it's going to be a fail for the community.
So I wanted it to keep going. The second part of me was, I really hope this show
doesn't keep going because I'm going to literally collapse and die if this keeps going. And I always
judge things by what my gut reaction is to them. So when I got that call, my gut reaction was
actual relief. That's how I knew that it was the universe doing me a favor I would never do for
myself. Because if they let me, I would have tortured myself for 10 more seasons.
Honestly, I would have.
The universe gave me something I would have never got myself.
I got that call.
I felt a wave of relief knowing I would never have to torture myself in that exact situation again.
But it also, going back to what our purpose is and getting clarity,
it made things a lot more clear in my mind.
And in that moment, I was able to see, oh, this has been a huge distraction
from what I actually care about
and I actually want to do.
This was an obligation.
This was something I thought I had to do.
This is not my passion.
It was never your passion.
Never once did I say I wanted to be a late night host.
I did say I wanted to act.
I did say I wanted to tell stories.
I wanted to produce.
All of those ambitions paused during the late night show.
I couldn't audition. I couldn't do anything else. I wanted to produce. All of those ambitions paused during the late night show. I couldn't audition.
I couldn't do anything else.
I literally sacrificed two years of my life
for something that I didn't even want to do.
That's a sad, sad thing.
That's a sad realization.
So I think I was rewarded with a lot of clarity in that moment.
But what did your ego say in that moment?
Oh, obviously my ego was bruised.
Of course my ego was bruised.
I didn't do good enough.
If I had done better, I've let people down. I should have gotten more seasons. This is a bad look. How do I
make myself seem like a winner? All of that stuff. Yeah. Very honest. Yeah. I would have
gone through the same thing. Yeah. I have things in my life at the moment where I'm in the exact
same position where I'm like, I don't know if I love doing this but if I was fired from doing it
or if they said they don't want to continue right I would be in the same conflict like I think there's
certain things in my life that aren't aligned with me completely but at the same time you kind of want
to make sure it's done on your own terms and that's the ego right no one wants to be rejected
no one wants to be cancelled no one wants to feel like they could not do something especially
publicly right it's not a private rejection.
It's a public, it's a very public type of rejection. So definitely my ego was bruised.
And I think more than anything, I learned from that experience that part of the problem
is that I easily put labels on myself. And I think we do this to ourselves and we do it with other people as well.
I just kept calling myself first late night host,
first this, first late night host has to do this
and I have to do this.
And that pressure, like I'm not just that.
I'm someone who tried really hard at this new thing
and had to learn a new,
like all that context is worthwhile context.
So now when I think about myself through that context,
I have more compassion for myself. And it pains me that other people also didn't give me that context, but I can control other now when I think about myself through that context, I have more compassion for myself.
And it pains me that other people
also didn't give me that context,
but I can control other people.
I can control myself.
I did that to myself.
As harsh as other people were to me,
I was way more harsh.
I had put way more pressure on myself.
And since that experience,
I have also learned to not label myself.
So I just got this new show,
this Muppet show
that I was like wanted so badly.
And I was like, oh my God, I have to get this.
I have to get this.
It's going to be a life-changing thing.
And the day I got it, I had to have a talk with myself to be like,
you are not now the lead of the Muppet show.
That's not now your label.
You will not now describe yourself as this thing
because then that's just going to be the late night host again.
It's going to be the YouTube sensation again.
You are Lily.
You are a complete human being. This is a cool thing you get to do. That's
one of your goals. Great. You get to do it. You get to experience it, but this is not now your
definition. I think part of that struggle with late night was it just became every part of who
I was. And so people weren't criticizing the show. They were criticizing me. They were criticizing
every part of me and who I was. And that's just a really unhealthy boundary. Amen. You know?
And people do that. I noticed I've done that more in my life when I didn't think I was enough. So
my identity or the label would make me make sense to the world. It would make me, you know,
put me in a community. I would become social media CEO. And then the problem is social media
CEO or any of these labels you described comes with a set of implicit instructions on how to
behave and how to be and how to act and that
can be really imprisoning generally I wrote this chapter in my book called resisting your labels
because of how imprisoning they've been in my whole life and also you know as we're going to
get on to with you now when I left my label so when I was no longer a social media CEO
I had a bit of an existential crisis and life goes well just go be another one again
because that's what you are and I think that's when people have these like midlife crises where
they realize they spent the last 10 years or whatever being the label and not
the person you leave um the late night show how was life like for the next year well the pandemic
exactly that was right around the time of the pandemic so I think that was a very strange time
because I couldn't bounce back into anything else really. Everything was shut
down and my plate was pretty empty because my gigs were canceled. My travels were canceled.
Projects were canceled. Everything was paused. So it was a very hard time to let go of something
that was keeping you busy. And that was how you defined yourself. Through the pandemic,
and I think a lot of people can agree with this, the biggest silver lining was the work I was
forced to do on myself.
And it was when I wrote this second book, Be a Triangle.
Because the thing about the pandemic was it wasn't just that I didn't know what to do with my time.
It was that it was the first time I was faced with the reality of me not believing I had any value because I didn't have work.
And that was a sad, scary realization for me. It was the first
time my schedule allowed me to sit there and be like, now I'm alone and I'm with my thoughts.
And I feel like I'm ceasing to exist as a person because I don't have a purpose and I don't have
value. And that's really sad because that means every time work goes away, I will feel this way.
And that's not what I want. That's not setting me up for success. That's not setting me up for a spiritually happy life.
And so I did the work to really dive deep into my soul
and be like, you're going to figure this out.
And what I came to the conclusion of is
that I don't have any original thoughts
when it comes to who I am as a person
and what I want out of life and what I value out of life.
Everything I've operated on has been what people have told me,
whether it's school, whether it's my parents, whether it's society.
I have never given thought into what it is I actually want.
I never thought that was an option.
It sounds ridiculous to say, but I guarantee you,
people that are listening to this will actually also think and be like,
wait, have I ever done that?
Have I ever stopped to be like, let me work on myself like a project
and let me actually think about life
as it's the greatest project I'm ever gonna work on.
And so I vowed during the pandemic
to create a strong foundation for my life.
Well, what does that mean?
Cause that's a fluff word and you know, I hate fluff words.
You have already expressed, I hate fluff words.
And so how I define a foundation is
I wanted to create a safe place in my mind
that I could return home to that was not
connected to anything external and not connected to what was happening in my life. Because my
biggest fear was that the pandemic would be over and then I would have work stuff happening again.
And then again, I would just teeter to happy, sad, success, failure, whatever was happening in my
life, I would change to my core. And I didn't like that. I wanted to create something that was true to me.
And no matter if I win 15 Oscars tomorrow
or I fail tomorrow,
that safe place in my mind would still exist.
And so that's what I did in this book.
I came up with four things
that I don't think will ever change in my life
to make up the foundation of that safe place in my mind.
And that's why you call it...
Well, good question.
He's like, so the illuminati no
be a triangle yeah yeah so when i discovered that a foundation is what i needed to create
i jumped onto google and i was just like how to build a strong foundation foundation and google
spit back the triangle because structurally speaking the triangle is the strongest shape
it has the strongest foundation out of any shape and then i started to think about triangles a lot
and i was like oh my my brain is very visual. Like I expressed and I think of
things in diagrams and I started to visualize a triangle. And I thought the shape is actually
really interesting because when you add to any other shape, you change the shape. It turns into
something else. You add to a square, it becomes a rectangle. You add to a circle, it becomes an
oval. You add to a triangle, it stays a a triangle it just becomes a bigger triangle and I thought that's really interesting I want to build my life like that
where no matter what happens what experiences come my way I'm still building on this foundation that
will not change because especially in this industry and all industries actually you could
really easily lose yourself but what's happening in your life but the goal is to create something
that doesn't allow that to happen and the triangle is the perfect shape for that. And what is the, what constitutes your foundation?
What are the ingredients of your foundation? If it was a recipe? Yeah. So I talk about four things
that make up the foundation of my triangle. I know the hardest part of this book was figuring
out what those four things are. And how I did it was I looked for several months, I looked at every
struggle and issue or conflict in my life. And I looked at it through I looked for several months. I looked at every struggle and issue or conflict in my life.
And I looked at it through the lens of four things.
That was one way I determined them.
The second way was what are four things that will never, ever change no matter what's happening in my life?
So I came up with four pillars, which are relationship to yourself, relationship to the universe, understanding distraction, and implementing design. I think no matter where you are in your life,
who you are, what job you have,
what country you live in, how old you are,
those four things are always true in your life.
And it is the lens to which you can look at everything
in your life through.
On the point of distraction,
which I was going to talk about,
because it was a big part of your book
and you referenced there that you'd never,
the pandemic was the only time in your life
where you'd really been forced to,
all the distraction fell away
and you were left with yourself. So many people that I know,
and I'm sure you can relate to this, fill their lives with distraction and noise and things and
busyness to avoid stillness, to avoid meditation or taking time for their own mind. You've picked
up meditation and breathwork and things like that. Can you speak to me a little bit about the impact
that's had on you, specifically breathwork, because I'm getting a little bit more into this at the moment when I
read that you'd started doing it I thought and I'm still let me preface by saying I'm still a
novice and there's much to learn I'm just starting my journey with really getting into meditation
and breathwork but I um over the past year started to have so this is from like a scientific point of view before I even
hit the spiritual point of view. I started to have panic attacks, which I thought I knew what they
were. I think most people who have not had a panic attack, they think it's the same as an anxiety
attack. They think it's like, oh, you're really stressed and you don't know how to deal with
what's happening in your life. That's what I thought a panic attack was until I had a panic
attack. And I'm like, oh, it's very different. The first time it happened, I dismissed it because I was like, I don't know what that was.
The second time it happened, I was like, this is a reoccurring thing. I was talking to my friend
and we were talking about something so unrelated. It was like, he was telling me a funny story about
work. And suddenly in my brain, I started to get outside my body. Like I was watching myself.
And I started to have these really strange thoughts. Like, I think I'm going to
take my head and slam it against the table for no apparent reason. And I'm not going to be able
to stop myself. And then I started spiraling up like, and then they have to call the ambulance
and I'm going to be bleeding and everyone's going to be. And then it's just like you progressively
are just spiraling to being sure that you're going to smack your head against the table
and nothing you say can change your mind. This is a minute of just completely irrational, dangerous thought. And then
suddenly I was like, oh wait, no, no, I can, I can stop myself from hitting my head on the table.
Of course I can stop myself. That is a panic attack. It's happened once before to me when
I was driving and I was like, I'm going to drive off this cliff and there's nothing I can do.
That's going to stop me. I won't be able to control myself. It's going to happen. When that started
to happen, I talked to my therapist about it. And she explained to me that as someone who always
operates on 10, because I'm always just working really hard and I'm always thinking about the
next thing. I'm an all or nothing type person. I have an obsessive personality that some things
can trigger my nervous system, just go a little bit into overdrive. And that's the body's response.
It's going into overdrive.
Your nervous system doesn't know what to do.
Breathwork really helps with that.
It's just bringing your nervous system back down
to a state that's not an 11.
You're bringing it back down.
So from a scientific point of view,
breathwork has been my saving grace to just health.
Having said that, from spirituality,
it's just my belief of, you know,
I talk about these
pillars and I talk about a connection with yourself. Meditation is you making time for
the partnership with yourself. You know, I believe we're all in a relationship to ourself, whether we
want to acknowledge it or not. Most of us are bad partners to ourselves. We don't make time for
ourselves. We don't listen to ourselves. If anyone treated us how we treat ourselves, we would not be in a relationship
with that person, probably. So meditation is more than anything else. It's not about religion. It's
not about doing something so specifically. It's about making time to be in a relationship with
yourself. And that's something I really, really value. And I think that's a huge form of self
love. So from a spiritual point of view, also, meditation is my everything.
Some people are really avoidant of like that time
with themselves though I think it is because sometimes when I talk about meditation that a
common response I get is oh I'm not good at that that doesn't work for me and I ask why and they
say well I can't turn my brain off I have all these thoughts that go in my brain and then so
I'm not doing it right and my response to them is who says that's not right maybe what you need is
to hear those thoughts maybe you've not given your brain a chance to get those thoughts out. And what you need during meditation
is to hear those thoughts. Who says that's wrong? The only thing meditation, the only, I'd say there's
one rule of meditation is just spending time with yourself. Whether that's you hearing these thoughts
that are uncomfortable. It's not about problem solving. It's not about solving everything. It's
just about giving time to yourself, allowing yourself the space and energy to be like I care about myself I dedicated these 15-20 minutes to hearing myself
out that is the only only thing in the book as well I think chapter six you start you talked a
little bit about your difficulties with making friends as an adult yes uh yes so um one of the
things that I have come to terms with is that I, like I've been mentioning, I'm a very all or nothing type person across the board.
And it has been good in some instances because it has allowed me success in my career, but it's bad in some instances because when human things don't live up to my expectation, I write them off.
In situations where I don't have to, I'm throwing a party.
This party has to be the best.
Everyone that RSVP'd has to show up.
And so I'll throw this amazing party
that everyone has fun at.
But if one person didn't show up
that said they were going to show up,
in my brain, I go, well, it was nothing.
It wasn't good.
It wasn't exactly what I thought.
If it's all or nothing, there's no middle.
I have learned that that is not healthy and that
that's also hinders me because there will be no joy and there'll be no celebration. There'll be
no progress if you're all or nothing. I did that with friendships. I told this to Jay. Jay is my
friend in LA, but for a long time I struggled because my definition of friendship was all,
which meant you have to know me since I was a kid. You have to know me before I was famous.
You have to know me before all of these things. that's a true friend and so my definition of friendship was very rigid
and so when I met Jay later on in my life I struggled with that because I was like he's
such a good friend he's so supportive but ah he didn't know me like how my other friends know me
from back in Toronto so I don't really know if this is a real friend no you got to let go of
these definitions and these labels we put on things and and be a little more organic with things because that's where humans lie in that compromised
organic space when I heard the thing the analogy you gave about the party one person not showing
up and you being like well then it's not perfect yeah um that sounded probably like also the
underlying reason why you were so successful yeah that's what's what I'm saying. So that's why it's been so hard to challenge that belief
because it has served me so well.
So I think now what I'm learning is when that serves me
and when it doesn't.
That's actually been a lot of my work in this book.
It's not being mad at myself
for having certain thought patterns
and not trying to completely do a 180
and be like, now I'm not that person anymore.
It is learning which ideas serve me well
in certain circumstances and which ones do not.
It's unlearning this idea
that I have to be one thing all the time.
For example, speaking of labels,
I call myself a hustler.
I hustle really hard as I hold my whole brand.
And I found that on days when I was lazy
and I felt like just so tired,
there would be a lot of resistance in my brain
because I wasn't living up to my own label.
I was doing the opposite of this label I put on myself.
But I've learned you cannot be everything all the time.
We exist on various places, on various spectrums.
And so it's not about changing who you are as a person.
It's about learning what ideas serve you well
in certain circumstances and which ones do not.
And then on and off, on and off, on and off.
Have you got a lot of friends?
People might think I have a lot of friends.
I wouldn't say I have a lot of friends.
I think I have a good number of friends.
And it depends how I define friend.
People that I can call just to call
and ask how they are without an agenda for the phone call.
Like friends?
Five, four, five.
I think that's a good number. I'm not mad at that number yeah I mean it's a good number I think especially as we get older with me and Jay we're talking
about Jay Shetty by the way um me and Jay were talking about this the other day about how when
when you get older in life as well the amount of friends you have it becomes increasingly harder
you don't have the work thing you don't have the university school whatever so really it's more
about depth and quantity as opposed to what your producer it's also a little
bit about um at least in my experience watching the adults in my life as a kid they never prioritized
friendship and they never placed value in friendship and so I believe for a long time
that as you grow up you need to value the companion you have as a partner. And that takes the place
of friendship. And you don't have time for friendship because you have a job. I have
since unsubscribed to that idea. I never saw anyone value friendship. That doesn't mean I
can't value friendship as an adult. And I've actually learned this from Jay. Jay is very
good at maintaining friendships. Jay is the type of person that will message you with no agenda.
You're like, hey, just checking in, just saying hi. So I've started to reciprocate that to him
and call him and FaceTime him just to be what's up but that's something I had to actively learn
because growing up I don't think I could name one adult that was like I'm gonna go out with my
friends were you comfortable with friendship in both platonic and romantic were you comfortable
with it because I remember think because I grew up in a similar way I genuinely would cringe and
feel deeply uncomfortable when someone said the word best friend oh I don't use the term best friend even today even today
Steve is my best friend and my body oh my god I'm so glad you said this because everyone knows I do
not use unless we're talking about my dog who can do no wrong yeah I do not use the term best friend
because I do have this little bit of like cringeness where I'm like that means I rely on
you and work with the pet I don't know if I that. So there is a little bit of work to be done there still.
But yeah, that's interesting.
I thought that was only me.
No, yeah.
I think I've said this to a couple of guests
and you're the first one to buy it.
No, 100%, 100%.
People that are so like, oh, they're my best friend.
I'm like, oh, sounds dangerous.
But I've learned that with that
comes a commitment issue romantically.
So I also would run from any prospect
of sort of romantic commitment
because that also felt like a bird trapped in a cage.
It felt like prison to me.
So in the same way, that friendship was just like,
I think it's because my parents weren't affectionate.
They weren't affectionate at all, to be honest.
We didn't have that very close relationship
that a lot of my white friends did.
I don't even call my mum and dad, mum and dad.
I call them by their names.
I mean, you probably can't do that.
No, I could never do that.
I'd get slapped up in the face if I did that.
I think also what it is, is, you know,
I talk a lot in the book about unsubscribing to ideas
that do not serve us.
But I encourage people to look at everything
in their life as an idea.
A lot of things we think are fact
and are rules are just ideas.
They're still just ideas.
So what we even think a friendship's supposed to look like,
what we think a relationship
is supposed to look like,
how we think a romantic relationship
is supposed to be,
those are all just ideas.
And I think because I thought
there were facts,
like it has to look one way,
I resisted that a lot.
Just like I did with friendship,
I just told you.
With a romantic relationship,
I did the same thing.
That means that you have
to sacrifice a lot.
There's a lot of compromise.
You can design any relationship
the way you want
as long as two people
are on the same page. So I encourage everyone to think about that. I think what has
really helped me get over some of the anxiety with commitment and relationships is it doesn't have to
be this idea of what I think. It doesn't need to be this one way. I can design one that works for
me and someone else, as long as we're on the same page. I'm trying to figure out where to go with
this because I want to go down the relationship route, but I'm also going to, there's a point
you're talking about unsubscribing from ideas. One of the ideas you talk about unsubscribing I'm trying to figure out where to go with this because I want to go down the relationship route, but I'm also going to, there's a point,
you're talking about unsubscribing from ideas.
One of the ideas you talk about unsubscribing from in the book in chapter three is about the idea of success
and what that is and the definition of it.
If Lily at 60 years old told me she was successful,
what would that mean?
See, if you asked me this years ago,
I would have answered this question
in relation to accolades.
I would have said.
And numbers.
I would have said, oh, that means she's had made several movies that are box office hits.
Now my answer, and it's been a hard journey to get here, but genuinely my answer is that at 60 years old, I still fully understand and believe I'm a complete human being.
And everything that has happened is just extra cool stuff.
My goal is to never write another book.
Truly.
I know I said that after my first book and I'm saying it again right now.
My goal is that this book can be the blueprint for that safe place in my life forever.
That I never have to make another blueprint.
That is true. If I never write
another book again, that means that I was successful in this suite. So truly 60 years
from now, I want to know that I'm fully complete in anything that would have happened or didn't
happen was just life experiences, goals, cool stuff, but it's not, I'm not lesser or more
because of it. Relationships then romantic ones. Yes. Have you been at a difficult to date
difficult to find romantic love probably absolutely I'm sure all of my exes right
now we're like do you have to think about absolutely if I asked your exes why it was
you were you know in their point of view, why you were difficult. What would be the common response? The most common response?
That a few things. One would be that I have an inability to forgive. I do.
That I am very transparent about. This might scare people off, but as soon as I know I'm going to get into a relationship
with someone, I very honestly tell them.
I say, one of my weaknesses is that if you lie to me
or wrong me and betray my trust,
it is very difficult for me to trust you again.
Even if every part of me wants to, I will not be able to.
And I tell people this very, very honestly.
Where does that come from?
I'll tell you right now.
I didn't know. First, I thought it was like, oh, from my childhood, from this, but no, Where does that come from? I'll tell you right now. I didn't know.
First, I thought it was like, oh, from my childhood, from this.
But no, I think that's all a lie.
I think my inability to forgive people stems from my inability to forgive myself.
I think that because I expect perfection from myself and I for so long didn't give myself grace to be human, I didn't give people grace to be human either. And as I've
done the work to treat myself like more of a human and to have the inner dialogue of like,
it's okay. It's okay. You don't always have to be performing. You don't always have to be perfect.
You're allowed to be a human. You're allowed to be lazy. You're allowed to be flawed. The more
I've done that work, I have given people permission to do that as well in my relationships.
I've noticed since writing this book, one of the biggest changes I've seen in my relationships is that I can actually forgive people now. And I think it's because
I've learned to forgive myself. I've learned to embrace humans for being humans. And that
started with myself. So that is something an ex would definitely say. Also with the fact that I
have very high expectations. All of my exes will say I have absurdly high expectations.
Ouch.
Yeah.
That's a tough one.
The expectation one.
Are you in love now?
I'm in love with myself,
which is the most important love, I think.
And I think that's perhaps why I was never a good partner before.
I don't think I was ever unconditionally in love with myself my love for myself was always very conditional always based on my performance
always based on my ability to accomplish never just for like the things that were me
you know you know you had such a high standard for yourself you talked about that obsessiveness
and even that the party if one person's not there, it's not perfect.
Are you saying that that same level of expectation
would sometimes be mirrored onto the person?
You would expect them to be wildly ambitious?
Because I had this problem for sure.
I'm like, why aren't you changing the world?
Why aren't you an entrepreneur?
Some of my past relationships,
definitely it would irk me if I was working
and the person I was with was not.
And I don't even mean had a job.
I mean, if I'm working at two in the morning, you should be working at two in the morning.
We should both be equally as ambitious.
I know that sounds ridiculous and I'm admitting that I was wrong.
And that's not a good perspective to have.
But that's how I felt.
Like I want someone equally as ambitious.
Since then, what I have learned is that what I thought I wanted, if I was actually dating someone that was just like me, that would be horrific.
Me and Jay talk about this all the time.
Me and Jay talk about how both of us in some part of our life thought that we wanted to be with someone just like us.
Me and Jay are so similar.
We, in any time anyone is having a disagreement, we take the same side.
We always have the same perspective.
We're so similar.
And since meeting Jay, I've learned that, oh, if me and Jay were in a relationship, we take the same side. We always have the same perspective. We're so similar.
And since meeting Jay, I've learned that,
oh, if me and Jay were in a relationship,
we would kill each other.
We would actually hate each other because there's no balance there.
You need someone to balance you out
and bring something else to the table.
And I have fully acknowledged that now.
And I think I was a little delusional
in some of my past relationships thinking I wanted me,
but I don't. No, but none of it. You you want that but you would kill that person you're totally right you know my girlfriend now is very much in every way the opposite of me
and that is in fact as you've described that is actually the value of our relationship is one plus
one will equal three when we have different perspectives and healthy debates around things
like that right um I've never asked
anybody this question before but oh my god I love it hit me what is the the one question because I
when I saw that you'd done it you know you're on a book tour at the moment you've got a great book
that's that's just come out April 14th yeah and on that I was watching you do all of these interviews
and you're doing some great shows and things and I was thinking to myself having been in this process
over the last week where everyone's asking you questions what is the most uncomfortable question you think that I could ask you
that would make me feel uncomfortable yeah it can be a topic
or a question you kind of already asked it to be honest for me it's it I get very uncomfortable
when we talk about people critiquing things I worked very hard on because those are my
babies my projects are my babies and it to be just really blunt it hurts my feelings and I think I
thought for a long time I had to put on a facade that it doesn't hurt my feelings but it does
I think I am a sensitive artist in a lot of ways.
And so the question you asked about people criticizing the show, I think that is the most uncomfortable question you could probably ask.
Aside from that, another really uncomfortable question, I have been asked this though, is in the book, I talk about my experience coming out to my parents.
And that is really uncomfortable
because I'll just be really honest.
A lot of times when anyone tells a story
about their coming out experience,
people's instant reaction is,
you're right.
Everyone should have been very understanding.
You should have been cared for,
nurtured and accepted right away.
That is the default answer.
It was a very difficult thing for me to do,
to go against that. And in the book, talk about how I was wrong in that moment. Because I
didn't do that before. I came out to my parents. I was offended by their
lack of instant accommodation and celebration. They were very supportive.
They said everything that they knew how to say at that time,
but because it was not instant celebration,
I judged them harshly for that.
And that's a hard thing to admit
when you're the one coming out,
because by default, like I said,
everyone thinks you're right
and everyone thinks you should be celebrating,
accepted right away.
And to actually challenge that idea and say,
no, actually that's not where humans operate from,
this place of instant knowledge and accommodation.
It's actually a learning process
and we should meet in the middle
and we should be compassionate.
That's not a popular opinion, I don't think.
And so that was difficult for me to talk about.
It's definitely the most mature, useful position.
And you've expressed at the very start of this conversation
when you
highlighted your parents context in regards to the potentially the mistakes they made and the
lessons they taught you before the age of 10 and you talk about that in the book as well understanding
the having empathy for their context right and how that formed their reaction to that situation
i think is just the most amazing place to be in because then you you don't i mean the first thing
that comes to mind is you're not going to walk around with resentment that they weren't you know they weren't perfect as you might
see in like a fake movie or something but also i think you can have better communication when you
when you are able to lean into their world and understand them and and it tends to be the case
you'll know because i haven't my mom's from nigeria i was born in africa like in all facets
of like the the first generation,
second generation immigrant story,
you actually tend to both want the same thing.
So your parents want you to be-
But you have different ways of going about it.
Yeah, right?
Because as you say, like often,
they don't know about YouTube.
So doctor or lawyer was the path to the happy,
successful, secure life, right?
And I think immigrants, like I had to with my mom
when I said I'm starting a business,
I'm never speaking to you ever again. You didn speak for two years it's not just that I'm
gonna tell all your family not to speak to you so and it's having it took me a long time to get to
the place you got to yeah it took me long too I also for two years was like held against resentment
against my parents um and I created that drift and that was how I learned this lesson. And I think it's also because the world today, the internet today, social media today,
really, really encourages us to label situations, conversations, and things very easily.
Right, wrong, canceled.
You made a mistake.
You cannot redeem yourself.
You are now bad.
You are now good.
That is not how humans operate.
It is not a realistic lens through which you should view humans of expecting other people to operate
from our lived experiences. How is that possible? How is that remotely possible? My mom did not grow
up with Lady Gaga bops. She did not grow up with queer culture. So for me to expect her to operate
from a place of my lived experience, how is that math ever going to add up? It's never
going to. And I know online, we like to sit on our high horse and think it will, but it will never,
it will never add up. That's an unpopular opinion, I'm sure on Twitter, but that's okay. I will die
on this hill. No, I think it's popular. It's definitely a popular opinion here.
So when you look off into your future, you've got a lot going on, movies, Disney Plus, there's all these other things happening in your life now.
What is the next?
And I'm scared of us sort of falling into accolades
and numbers and accomplishments.
No, that's okay.
But what is the next thing?
There's a time and place for those conversations.
I'm happy.
The goals that I have for myself
are associated with elevating storytelling.
So I do definitely want to be on screen and behind the camera and produce
and write and star in stories that highly underrepresented voices. That is something
I'm really passionate about because I believe stories make the world go around. Stories are
how I understand myself and other people. And I think there's not every story has to be about
everyone, but there should be stories for everyone. And so I'm very passionate about that. So, and I just love being creative in that way.
So I think acting, producing,
I have a book club called Lily's Library
that's all about South Asian stories as well.
That's just something,
that's just what I'm most passionate about.
So I think most of my goals will align with that.
Lily, thank you for writing such a great book.
And I think there's going to be so many people
that are listening to this now
that have heard the context of the journey
that led up to you
creating this book
that might be having questions
about their own foundation.
And I also will say,
I don't know if you can see
if anyone's watching this,
it's a short read.
It's a short, concise,
and I guarantee you
you will hear my voice
reading it to you
because I've written it
in that way.
So how many pages is that?
I don't even know.
93.
There you go.
An hour. An hour read. No, it is.'t even know. 93. There you go. An hour.
An hour read.
No, it is.
It's really digestible.
It's the type of handbag book that you could travel with.
And really, if you're one of those people
that doesn't like tiny letters and thousands of pages,
this is definitely a book for you.
And it's written from such a place of,
as you've expressed today,
self-awareness, wisdom, and vulnerability.
And those are always the best books
because they are the truest and the most necessary.
Thank you.
So thank you for creating a wonderful book.
We do have a closing tradition on this podcast.
Let's do it.
Which is the previous guest
writes the question for the next guest.
Ooh, nice.
Okay.
How many times have you been properly in love?
I'm going to say perhaps including with myself three times.
And I'm not just thinking about love romantically.
I don't think love is just romantically.
I think one time romantically.
I think one time with myself.
And I think one time after writing this book,
truly, truly, truly, when I saw my mother for all the glory that she is, like, I have no problem
saying I'm in love with my mom and the person she is. I was going to answer with a higher number,
but for me, what translated, what I, the synonym I used for properly was how many times have I been in love where both people in the equation became better versions
of themselves and that's what eliminated a few of the a few of the numbers I think in every
scenario I'm talking about both people were better versions of themselves because of the love
it's a beautiful answer yeah once
romantically once romantically figure out which one of you it is baby you know you know who you
are thank you thank you thank you so much i appreciate this is such a joy thank you Thanks for watching!