The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Maisie Williams: The Painful Past Of A Game Of Thrones Star
Episode Date: September 26, 2022Maisie Williams is one of the biggest actors in the world today. One of the breakout stars of Game of Thrones, Maisie hasn’t known a normal life since she was 11 years old when she was cast in the b...iggest tv show in the world. In this pathfinding and boundary-breaking conversation, Maisie reveals for the first time just how hard her start in life was. Even close to home, she had to overcome those who didn’t believe in her, and has had to battle through mental health issues ever since. Few journeys we’ve seen of people being able to define and find meaning in their own life despite those who doubt them are as inspiring as the one we’ve seen with Maisie. We are so proud of Maisie for bringing courage and honesty to the table today. It’s nothing less than the norm for her, because she’s shown courage and honesty all her life. Follow Maisie: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/maisie_williams/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/Maisie_Williams Maisie recommends this website if you need to talk to someone, it has got her through some of her worst days: https://www.7cups.com/ 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 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.
They were asking the right questions.
We can stop as much as you want, by the way.
We don't have to carry on.
Daisy Williams is back!
Game of Thrones is the biggest show on television.
Game of Thrones flipped my whole world on its head.
I sometimes worry that I'm, like, alienated
because it all happened when I was so young
and, like, literally from the age of 12,
I've been, like like set for life. I had a traumatic relationship with my dad and ever since
I can remember like I've really struggled sleeping. It had like met its like peak and I was at school
I was taken by a teacher to the staff room she was saying like what's happened? I think a lot of the traumatic things that were happening,
I didn't realise that they were wrong.
I would look around at other kids and be like, where does the joy,
when does that come for me?
When you were 22, you talked about issues with substance abuse.
Yeah, I just had that sense of impending doom
and I didn't know how to make it go away.
I'm going to come and give you a hug.
Without further ado,'m stephen butler and this is the diary of a ceo i hope nobody's listening but if you are then please keep this to yourself
so take me back somerset what do i need to understand who you are now what do i need to
know about that part of your life um well i as like a young child before the age of like eight
um had quite a traumatic like relationship with my dad and I don't really want to go into it too much
because it affects my siblings and my whole family um but like that really consumed a lot of my
childhood um ever since I can remember like I've really struggled sleeping and I think a lot of the
traumatic things that were happening I didn't realize that they were wrong but I knew that like I would look around at other kids and be like why
why like why don't they seem to understand this like pain or dread or fear like
like you know where does the joy like when does that come for me like I you know, where does the joy, like, when does that come for me?
Like, you know, I kind of always felt like I felt things very deeply in comparison to other people.
And so when that sort of period of my life ended, I imagined that, like, you know, everything is just like up from here.
Like, everything's perfect now.
All those things that
I was concerned about were actually wrong and like now I'm sort of free um yeah and then you
know at different stages in life you realize that there's never like an end destination for that
freedom um and it's yeah it kind of comes from within I guess like when are you going to
let yourself be free from from the pain but yeah that really consumed a lot of my childhood
that was sort of like what I was identified as you know what I identified myself as for
a long time and then you know everything changed and I sort of became this like
you know character who uh who wouldn't let anything bad happen to her or anyone around her and
yeah I guess like maybe there is some sort of like connection between those two things
your mother left your father yeah before I was born actually well no i guess she escaped when i was about four months
old so it was you know bad before that and then uh yeah have you spoken about this before no
i don't know i i like you i don't know. I like you. I don't know. I feel like this is an, um,
it's something that I've been like learning a lot about recently and I feel like I can speak
about it now. Yeah. Um, does it, has it taken you time to like, to, can I ask the question about,
have you spoken about it before? Because, um, I think at like 25 years old there was like really foundational
things I learned about myself that that I only learn I mean you know sometimes you read something
or you hear something and you go fuck that explains this thing so my question there is just
like did it take you time to connect those dots yeah definitely I think that people sort of talk
about like rewiring people on your podcast actually speak
about rewiring your brain but that first in order to do that you have to recognize when
your your brain is doing a pattern that you want to rewire and quite often like it's already
triggered so many things and like you're in a bad mood and you have no idea why and it's hard to kind of like trace back from that point so like that awareness um and like finding that kind of for me had to come first like when it really
started to I don't know when I really started to understand it it was like capturing those
minutes where I was like why does that make me feel really uncertain or angry or like make me
want to like shout at someone like what what is that and then you can start to go like
no it's okay and work your way back you know so you were seeing like social triggers or
situations where you were you know I saw you I saw you said when you spoke to
Lewis Howes you said I've always been quite an anxious person yeah and I really reflect on that
because I you know I'm not an expert in anxiety I've been anxious myself I've been an anxious
person at times myself but um I I've always wondered for many years if we're we're born that way or if if we're predisposed
or if something happens and then we become anxious have you thinking about how you saw
sort of social triggers have you connected any dots regarding being an anxious person as you
call it to those early years as you've grown up now um yeah I guess I think like a lot of that anxiety as I started to sort of recognize
it came from like not really being myself and like then feeling anxious about the way that
you're being perceived or whatever but knowing that you're not really being honest and
that will of course make you very anxious because if you have no idea who you're projecting then you
really have no idea how other people are going to hear it because you don't even know how you mean
it and you know that sort of like facade of like I don't know whoever you know whoever I thought was like capable of like getting through
interviews or social like settings or whatever um and I think that like struggle with identity
and like the big questions of like who am I I think that everyone struggles with that. But I think that like, you know, there's a period of your childhood
where, you know, certain situations can really stunt,
like, or just alter forever, like who you are going to become.
And that's not to say that you can't also just like become a very peaceful
and, you know, content and fulfilled person. But like that sort of basic instinct of like,
what do I, what brings me joy? You know, you've kind ofguessed that a lot as a kid and you're not known you know whether to
trust what you really think or feel or you know whatever sort of like mental manipulation um
and that can yeah really have like lasting effects so yeah kind of like discovering that
and being like yes I struggle with you know my identity and knowing who I am so that brings
me anxiety because I don't know who to be in a social situation um but then also sort of going
back back back far enough that you're like oh I don't know if that person really exists anymore
and that's okay because I can find you know something um yeah you know find like a good version of myself
um but yeah I don't know how do you what do you think about that um about which part well I guess
um like it feels like a lot of people are trying to retreat to like being a child and like the
things that brought you joy and like who you are at your core and who you are when no one's looking
and um uh but you know can can that that part of you be so damaged from a very a young age that
that you could be searching for something that um um, you know, is just for you to
make up. It's a really interesting question. I've never even pondered before. Um, I was thinking
about, in fact, Lewis Howes. And I think shortly after you had a conversation with him, it would
have been, cause I know the timeline, he, I think he opened up for the first time it's so
funny because when I re-watched your conversation with Lewis you start sharing things that were
difficult in your early years you don't share anything like this with him and then he says to
you he's quite stoic and he goes yeah I went through things like that as well you're aware
of what he yeah yeah I am now so he went through um pretty you know horrific child abuse at a young
age from I believe a babysitter if I'm correct that was looking after him that had sexually
abused him and he talks my reference is only him talking about how he feels he has to go back and
like forgive himself the child that he was and heal himself heal the child yeah yeah so
he has i don't know if you know but he has his face at that age on his wallpaper of his phone
and with his therapist he's worked through healing that young version of himself and then moving on
to the next to the teenage years and so do i do i do i know if we can um if that child that we're seeking
still exists in there i mean my very naive assumption would be that they do yeah um are
they are they still going to be childlike i don't know yeah there's something
quite naive about being childlike which maybe wisdom makes irreversible but
when you when you talk about joy you talk about struggling to feel joy at a young age
what what is that how do i how do i how do i understand those words um i think like you know when you watch um kids play um and like there's struggles and there's tiffs and
there's like whatever but there's like just like complete inhibition right and it's just like running or it's like going on the slide or
it's like i felt like i would often stop in a situation like that i'd be doing something and
then i would just stop and be like something awful is gonna happen and just like i couldn't continue continue do you want tissue?
maybe
Jack could you grab a tissue please
we can stop as much as you want by the way
we don't have to carry on
it's a great thing with podcasting
just keep them on the desk if you want
yeah
maybe I'll hide them around the other side
i could put them just like here cool is that that's off camera yeah it's all good
um yeah i would just um
had that sense of impending doom and i didn't know how to make it go away um
and i had like
great memories I don't even know it's hard to remember a lot of them
a lot of those times that I felt very free I was actually on my own um
but I would never have like thought I was like an introverted person like I always would have
thought that I was quite extroverted because I perform a lot for people you know but yeah I
yeah I struggled I yeah I struggled with that when I was a kid and just thought like
how do I stop feeling like this and just feel like everything's okay, you know?
But at that age, I'm guessing you didn't know why you felt like that.
So knowing how to go about healing from it is an impossible task, right?
Yeah.
Because that's the point about you can't solve for something that you're not aware of.
Yeah.
Going like nothing's wrong.
Like nothing is wrong.
Everything's the way that it's supposed to be but it wasn't but I did I just would tell myself that like what is wrong
with you like whereas was there an age when you found found out because but I kind of asked this
question earlier but was there an eight was there a moment where you found out what was wrong yeah
when I was about eight, I...
It's quite like a complex string of events that happened.
But basically, it had met its peak.
And I was at school.
And I guess I was...
Well, I mean, obviously, I was really struggling um and I don't
really know what happened but I was taken by a teacher to the staff room and um she was saying
like what's wrong you know like what's happened have you are you hungry or she said I don't know
yeah are you hungry I said yeah she said did you eat
breakfast and I said no and she said oh why not and I said we just didn't have any breakfast and
you know and then she says well you know do you normally have breakfast and he's not really
and so you know the sort of they were asking the right questions It's okay, take your time.
I'm gonna come and give you a hug.
I feel really compelled to give you a hug.
Okay.
You okay? Yeah. Yeah. you okay yeah
no i i do think it's important because
i had so many people who loved and cared about me so much
but i'd never been asked the right questions where I could really say what was wrong.
And my mum came to school and picked me up.
And my siblings were also at secondary school at the time.
And some of them were with mum and one was was not and they were with dad still and yeah and it was the first time that like it was all of the doors were sort of open and all of these
things that we were experiencing were like out on the table and it was really really hard because I still wanted to fight
and say no like these things aren't bad like you're trying to take me away from my dad and
that's wrong you know like um because I was like indoctrinated in a way like you know um i think that's why i'm
obsessed with cults because i'm like i get it i get it i was in a child cult against my mother
um yeah so i really was sort of fighting it for the beginning. But basically, like, my whole world, like, flipped on its head.
And even though all these things that I was feeling,
I thought, oh, my God, I'm so glad I don't have to see my dad anymore.
It still was, like, against everything that I had ever knew to be true, you know?
I don't know if I'm being too cryptic no I don't think I am I don't think you are you can be as cryptic as you want to be um yeah I get I understand what
you're saying and that's the that's all that I need to get the context um and you can just talk
as come whatever you about whatever you want to talk about in terms of what makes you comfortable
I don't know where I don't know where your line is yeah so you just you need that um
when I watch cult documentaries there's a lot of um manipulation that goes on
in these documentaries there's a lot of fear that causes silence um and that's usually why people find it that's often why people find it difficult
to leave those situations and then when they do have these like i always observe this like
conflicting array of emotions like they have this love for this person but at the same time
as you've you've described it once out of that situation they're somewhat probably you know
a spirit spiritually free and happy to be gone so that
that conflict of emotions always fascinated me how two truths can almost exist in the same place
you can feel you know so um liberated and free and at the same time just like that impending doom is kind of still there where yeah it's like all your
problems don't just sort of like go away you know um yeah you still like care a lot about
that person or you still sort of understand you know the pain or whatever that led to those very very poor decisions
as you sit here today at 25 years old how do you feel about your father um
well to be honest with you i've been thinking about this a lot um and
like I've been trying to do this thing where I stop taking things personally and like not just
like you know when someone's had a bad day and they like push in front of you in the queue, but like the big things in life.
Like, what if I said that it was not like it wasn't because of me that that happened?
Like, if I wasn't there, it would have been something, someone else. Like, it's not, yeah, it wasn't like,
because there's something wrong with me
that like these bad things happened when I was a child.
Is that a thought you had?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I felt like there was something inherently wrong with
me or us because like we did lots of things wrong all the time which is like why you know
you you know you'd be mistreated or whatever because you're like oh like we really need to
be better at this because we keep doing things wrong
and we keep getting in trouble type thing um but then I was like well you know like and especially
well because it was someone you know a parent and I felt like oh they're supposed to like like you
and so you know but then I was like,
well, what if like, there's just like no connection
between like me being, you know, his daughter
and like, it could have been like literally anyone
like experiencing that pain
and it would like still be the same.
And then I just kind of could separate myself
from it a little bit.
And I could start to sort of reflect on him as a person
and be like, what happens that you get so stuck in your mind
that you can just like, you know, permanently like mistreat people?
You know, what?
Children.
Children. Children.
Like your own children.
But, you know,
taking that step back
and seeing it like more objectively
kind of like makes me quite interested in the guy.
I don't know him at all.
And I'm like, what happened to you when you were a kid
like who were your parents is this something that you were always like when you were a kid
did you like pull the legs off bugs or like you know did this did you learn this like you know
these are all the questions that I would ask yeah yeah and so that's kind of
like how I feel about him now where I'm just like what if like he would make a fascinating documentary
and it's like nice to to like you know not feel the the personal pain of that anymore and actually
just think like you know I don't know if any of the answers to that will like help me in my journey.
But it is sort of like a nicer way to think of him than, you know, as like someone who
doesn't love me or like me or like whatever.
You know, you talked about that feeling that you were to blame for
outcomes in your life that might, especially as early as that weren't you weren't
to blame for um were there symptoms of that as you grew up this kind of the feeling that you know
um when things happen it was because you did something wrong or you were you were to blame
for things did you feel that as an adult in your teenage years at all yeah definitely I think that
like I really um wanted to control a lot of things
that you just can't control because like if I don't then if I'm not worrying or thinking about
this or like wanting to control this then like it's all going to fall down and like then I'll
blame myself and it'll be like a you know something that I could have done better or should have done differently um
yeah I feel like
I guess it was more just like trying to control like the uncontrollable and that then leading to
like another way that I could like beat myself down you know it's interesting because I've seen so many other interviews you've done
and without knowing that early context a lot of those a lot of the things I was hearing didn't
make sense yeah yeah not that it you know it makes sense as maybe an interesting use of words but
um it always felt like there was a part of your story
that was untold.
Yeah.
You know, I think when I was like 12
and I'd done a bit of Game of Thrones
and was doing interviews then,
like the first interviews that I'd ever done,
I remember people sort of being like but you're so
young like how do you pretend like how do you show this pain like you've just seen like the death of
your father or like how do you know that like how do you act that sort of like fury and
it's just like in my head was like that's a really stupid question because
I've known how that feels but like you know I it's like I don't know it's something nice to
just like leave in the past I guess but it's it's hugely influenced like everything that I do as an actor like I get to access all of that confusion and pain
in my job and I get to like really feel it in like every fiber of my being but there's no like
consequence and there's no like you're not really shouting at anyone or hurting someone or it's like it's all pretend. But like the emotion is is real.
And like just being able to like let that out is something that I didn't do for a long time.
And so it's like it's just all sort of came to the surface.
And I guess like holding, you know, the early part of my story like to myself is also just because I haven't really understood it
the way that I have now and I'm not sure I'll understand it you know far better in the future
but I feel um I feel like now there's like some sort of closure to it where the journey
might help other people whereas before it was just like
pain pain pain pain pain pain pain and no like conclusion right right no like okay we're through
the other side yeah it was just like other problems that come from like the same problem
problem problem yeah um but yeah i mean it's like you know
going into that audition to play aria stark i was sort of surrounded by girls that like
were joyous and like were free and like like they're kids they were kids who were happy and um you know
had you know had whatever they had um and I thought wow I really um you know here we go again
like gonna be a disappointment but you know for that moment, actually, that was what they needed.
And so that was sort of like a moment in my life where I was like, huh, maybe this thing isn't all bad. that I find unnatural or just different to other kids.
Here we go again, I'm going to be a disappointment.
Yeah.
What do you mean by that?
So when you got the role,
you presumed that you were going to let people down?
Yeah.
Yeah.
No. Just going into the room I meant like okay oh no I'm not going to be what they're
looking for but I I did end up being what they were looking for but like you know I just um
presumed the worst a little bit yeah yeah yeah of course um yeah I don't know like did you did you like always feel ever feel like disappointing
yeah yeah of course yeah there's been moments in my life where I've definitely feel like I've
let myself down and other people down and it's not a good feeling to to sit with but I think I've tried to channel it into um into making myself I actually went for an audition at
14 years old to do the junior apprentice you know the apprentice the tv show so they launched the
junior apprentice and I went for the first audition got through to the final 20 and then I got long
story but I got this email from the BBC saying that someone had leaked to the press that I was going on the show. So they said, this has jeopardized
your chances of going on the show. And I don't come from a family where we had much. So going
back to Plymouth and telling everyone, you know, like all my friends were like, oh, he's going to
London and going back and saying like, they've just called me and told me I'm not on the show
was, was devastating for a long time. Lots of of tears I felt like a disappointment at that phase of my life um and several times subsequently but um I think I've always been somewhat optimistic going
into situations I generally feel like I've got nothing to lose um and I think maybe that's a
bit of a privilege to be honest I think mindset privilege is a real
thing just like perspective privilege something we don't talk about enough and um had I been in
an early situation where someone was continually um telling me the things that I was were doing
were wrong or not good enough or whatever I can quite easily see how I would anticipate
that feedback going into anything where
feedback was going to be given and it's actually pretty remarkable I mean you know because those
early experiences you would assume would smash someone's like self-esteem pretty severely
and and make them kind of retreat into safe places one of the safest places is where we
don't get feedback and someone doesn't shout at us or you know but that's that first this was your first audition right game of thrones yeah well one of
i i had an audition before that which i also was very excited about and then didn't get so that
was like my first like okay you know professional rejection but you were still putting yourself out
there in situations where you could be rejected yeah definitely and I think it was because I the only time that I really felt that joy that I saw in other people was when I was like dancing
or performing and there was this feeling that I would get that I was like this is like I feel like
human you know um and so I was like I've just got to do anything I can to like do
this forever and so from a very young age I was like I want to go to stage school and I want to
yeah I'm happy to leave everything and go and do that and um yeah so I really, every opportunity was like, yeah, I guess that little part that you said, like, I've got nothing to lose. It was like, yeah, on the other side of this could be absolutely everything. So I'll just say it sounds more impressive I read this book called the body holds the score I don't know if you've ever heard of it and one of the most fascinating things about
it is it talks about how acting and moving the body and like yoga have been proven to be the
best forms of um uh antidepressant like without you know taking SSRIs or anything they've been
proven to and I remember thinking acting is a great antidepressant
how is that possible but what you're saying now rings true it talks about how it kind of
disassociates from identity when we act um and so what you're saying now seems to validate what I
read I'd love to read that because that's like exactly what I instinctively like discovered. Like it just happened.
And I thought,
ah,
like this is what I'm supposed to do.
Have you ever figured out why,
why acting was a,
cause I say the word escapism,
but why it was so liberating for you?
Is it because,
is it escapism?
Is it because it disassociates you from your own identity?
Is it because you can create this new there's like two parts of it it was like how I felt
like within my body like everything floated away and like the way that it felt to move my body or
the way that it felt to like contort my voice or like whatever.
It just like that feeling when you're like can't stop laughing.
It was just like incredible.
And then there was the way that it made other people feel.
And I guess like with acting, with dancing,
it was very much about the way that it felt and not necessarily the way that it looked
or like how other people would experience it.
But with acting, it's like you get that sort of two-way thing.
And I also saw the joy that it would bring other people.
And like, I guess like you don't,
you're like not disappointing.
You're like making someone laugh
or you're making someone happy or you're like,
and that was like you know fun and new
I was gonna say Game of Thrones was a smash hit but it feels like a slight understatement
I feel like smash hit is that's yeah yeah it's huge the fame piece I've had a smidge of fame like seven people know who I am
and sometimes it can be a little bit difficult so I can't even you know I can't even imagine
especially with the sort of confounding factors of your age just trying to figure out who you are
becoming famous for being a character on a huge show yeah um being in your sort of adolescent
years all of these things all at the same time when you look back and you know and you remember
you saying about how people were like forecasting your downfall because of all those factors yeah
yeah yeah actually the strangest thing about it the hardest thing I think was like needing to articulate
who I was and what I loved and the things that I didn't like and what I had an opinion on
and what like you know um yeah that I remember at the time being like oh
gosh I really don't know anything about anything I really need to know these things I need to you
know but then like you know years later you go like oh I said that my favorite film was this
and like that's not true and it's like you don't need to know any of that stuff no like it's all um it's all just like a journey right it's all like there's
never like an end um what advice would you give that person 13 year old amazing to be honest with
you like i wish that i'd have just um like trolled it all a bit more and like whatever I like instead of really digging
deep and going oh what is the real just like whatever you feel that day that's okay and it
can change the next day because that is just like life you don't have to be beholden to anything
that you've said or done you can let it all go and like rip up the rule book because I hated London moved back to Manchester went to New York and you know actually
I'm gonna go back to London like this is what I'm gonna do now and it's not gonna be like something
that you're like oh I wish I hadn't done this like you're like no this is this is what I want now
and that's like that's just sort of the way it is so I kind of wish that I'd have just like
you know not just like tortured myself to know like what is the real answer to these like silly fun questions um and then been like oh no i've
like portrayed myself all wrong this is not who i am because it's just it's like it's like water
would you would you change the timing of the events that happened in your life if you could?
Like acting when I was super young?
The only thing I really feel, like, we didn't have a lot growing up,
but, like, I've never...
You grew up in a council house?
Mm-hmm.
And, like, you know,
always had, like, an awareness of how hard my mum worked,
like, raising us, giving us everything that, you know,
she did, putting food on the table, you know.
But, like, I never...
I remember, like, when I was sort of, like, 18
and a lot of my friends started going to uni getting jobs whatever I remember like there was I was like I've I never even though I know what that struggle was
like growing up like I've never like struggled to get a job or um struggle to make rent or
anything like that and I think not that I would change that, of course, like I'm so fortunate, but I guess like I never want to, I never want to lose sight of like the perspective of like just how believe that I like would understand what it's like to you know to struggle
to make rent and want to be a creative person and not know whether to get like a sensible job or to
like because I don't know what that struggle is like at all um so yeah I didn't know that like I
I sometimes worry that I'm like alienated in in some ways because it will happen when I was so
young and like literally
from the age of 12 I've been like set for life and that's like very different to how I was like
before that age is there a mixture of emotion surrounding that like being set for life at 12
um as you grow up now I've sat here with a couple of guests who come from like a council
a council estate or grew up in in very difficult situations and they often express this kind of I remember Jack mate doing it expressed this kind of almost guilt's a bit of
an interesting word but like why did I like I remember Jack saying to me I can make thousands
and thousands of pounds from just making YouTube videos and I watched my dad not make the same
amount of money in like a year or whatever and I could just make it from one YouTube video
and he would go back and feel he'd meet someone I remember him saying he met someone in a pub that was like a cancer doctor and he's making more than them just sat at home
he anyone who expresses this kind of like I don't know guilt or injustice have you ever felt that
definitely like um just yeah real like the guilt around like allowing yourself to have nice things or do nice things because you're like able to
like I felt like when I was a kid everything stopped happening and all my problems were
going to go away and then like all my problems didn't go away and then I was set for life when
I was 12 and I thought all my problems are going to go away and I was like well this doesn't it's not like that unless all of my friends
and family are that way too because like how are we all supposed to like be okay if the only one
person is okay and you know you give people what you can but you don't see the the pain take that take the pain
away for another person doesn't take the pain away for yourself like and then you realize that
like actually life is something else entirely and like the biggest money to live and like support their family but being able
to do those things isn't in it like the only thing that like makes you happy like when you take that
problem away there's sometimes still a very hard discussion
that you have to have with yourself
where it's like, yeah, like a fundamental chat
where you have to tell yourself that,
well, I don't know, there's a lot of things.
I don't want to take away from the fact that
like having money enables you to like
even be able to comprehend or like.
Another set of problems.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like I know that that in itself is like an incredibly privileged position to be in.
But like money won't take the pain away.
It will take like the stacking bills or, you know um or the fear of like losing a house
you know um it doesn't undo trauma you can't you can't buy you know uh trauma away yeah yeah yeah
even if you can keep the heat on and the electricity and feed yourself there's still
there's still for many people another level of trauma which um money can't seem to solve for directly um the the post game of you know i i remember saying he was
one of the guys from one direction liam pain and um he talked about how post one direction
you he has this identity which is he's a part of a boy band and then leaving that
it can be quite
troublesome psychologically who and I think he talked about the same thing which is like who am
I where do I belong how do I then go and I didn't like find out who that person is and start creating
for that and not just being this this character this you know member of a boy band that I've
that the world knows before did you ever feel that post um game of thrones yeah in a way but i but i felt like i had got to a
point already within being in the show that i was like oh i feel like i'm like cosplaying as this
like person i've created and i don't think that this really is who i am so sort of leaving the
show meant i could leave that as well.
You know, I kind of like wanted to like say the right thing and do the right thing and like act like I had everything figured out and like be a good role model. And, you know, which is all very good things to want.
But it's like it wasn't like very authentic.
It was like just like trying to be liked I guess right and then you're
like oh I actually you know I don't want to do things that make people like happy because like
I want to do things that make me happy and like I want to you know represent myself the way that
makes me feel most comfortable um and not like just the way that's most like palatable or like
whatever and so I'd already got to the point where I was like,
oh, this isn't really me.
And I'm like desperate for something to just like drastically change
so as I can like cut from that.
And that's sort of what happened when the show ended.
Then also sort of sped up by the pandemic
and being like in like solitary.
So I was kind of like very ready for that and it wasn't like
oh who am I I was kind of like oh who could I be you know 21 22 years old
how are those years for you so this is like around the time the show is concluding
yeah included when you're 22 yes when it came out yeah um I just didn't really go out a lot and I
I just felt quite
I just I don't know it was just like the it was like the most successful it was ever going to be
and it was like most people would like recognize you on the street and and like I just got so like rehearsed at like oh thank you that's so nice
and I just like everything I said and felt and did it was just like oh none of this is it's like
um I just I felt like very going through the motions of life where it was like yeah acting again yeah yeah yeah um it wasn't the like the hardest like most
awful and traumatic like oh it was like terrible it wasn't it was fine but I just like I knew that
something better was coming at that age though 20 years old how do you feel about yourself
oh I didn't really have a very like good opinion of like myself and my self image.
It's, I forget that.
I really didn't like myself that much.
I don't know. was like awful and disgusting and like an attractive and unkind and like just like
not a good person and like unlikable I just told myself that like every single day and so
in ways I sort of became like that because um you just like beat yourself into like a mess you know mind is quite
powerful in that way yeah really powerful fern talks to me about this a lot i know you you did
her podcast right yeah yeah i listened to her chatting about this on your podcast yeah yeah
do you know the origin of those of those of that self-story like where
where it originates from obviously you have a a thread that most people don't have which is the
world is giving feedback on you every day now because you're in the press and you're a young
woman and we know that that can be a pretty vicious thing but do you know the origin of those
self-stories I feel like I've I felt self-conscious like even before all of that so it definitely
before like fame and so it definitely was enhanced by that but I think it came a lot earlier um
and I'm actually still trying to figure this out like at the moment with my therapist
we're trying to really trace that back and a lot lot of this like has come, a lot of the discovery has
come through meditation. I've been doing a lot of transcendental meditation and like there's
something about going into that state that like brings up like a little ticket and I go,
ah, like that's, but, but I haven't quite figured out the answer to this one yet or where it like
initially stems from. Um, but I've definitely felt like embarrassed of
myself or ashamed or like you know thought oh like I'd be playing at a kid's house and thinking like
their parent thinks that I'm like awful I'm like the child that all parents don't want their kids
to hang out with like I've just felt this way about myself and I was like you know I wasn't
trying to get them to do like naughty things or anything I just was like a kid that was just like
but I thought you know I'm in I'm like like I'd go to someone's house and I'd like my shoes and
like maybe they're not in the right place and I haven't put my bag in there and this parent is
gonna like not like me or like whatever i i've like felt that like
like self-awareness to that degree where i've like critiqued and like beat myself up like since i was
very very small yeah i don't really know i don't know where it comes from yet i'll let you know
well the question i naturally ask is when when was the first time
someone told you those I mean even the example of like oh god have I put my shoes in the wrong place
what you know what happens if they're in in the wrong place and what's the consequence of my
shoes being in the wrong place because me growing up if my shoes were in the wrong place there's not really a consequence for that no you know yeah i don't know well i have some theories on it
um but i don't know it can it doesn't concern just me so i don't know. It doesn't concern just me.
Sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just like I think that I've like,
I've witnessed
like people just feeling like
just them existing in one spot
is like them just taking up too much room in this world. And I think that
I've like just taken on a piece of that, um, where like just living and breathing,
like you're too much and like you're irritating. So,
but it's not true. And if anyone ever feels like that, it's not true and if anyone ever feels like that it's not true because we can know these things are objectively not true but it just this is the thing that
really fascinates me is like how can we have how can we in one on one hand know that something is
not true yes and seemingly we're not able to completely eradicate that story because you know i i used to think
definitely used to believe before doing this podcast that these stories we believe this
evidence we have whether it's wrong true or false about ourselves i used to believe that there was
some way of just like erasing it and you just you do this you do this you tap your head you wiggle
your stomach like that and then it's gone go to therapy twice you do this spin around and it's gone but no matter like i don't think i've
ever met a guest on this podcast that has gone through some kind of traumatic early experience
in their life and has ever erased it ever people will say they've you know they've built
new evidence which counteracts it so that the new evidence makes the decisions in their life
but it's still there and traumatic events can make it flare up i'm one of like i consider myself to
be one of those people where i've got to be very aware of of my my triggers because you know they
might take over the control room once in a while and start calling the shots so I I feel like um I feel like just like experiencing it all in the moment
is interesting and like not sort of like predicting that there's like an end to it. But you go like, huh, I have been in this situation
before. And like last time, I wasn't aware of these triggers. And now I see exactly what's
what wants to happen. And I'm not going to do it. And like, there's the piece of your brain that's
like actively making those decisions and going. But then there's the like I don't know consciousness or like you
know the spirit that then observes it and goes huh like what happens next like you're playing a
board game right and like something happens and then like you're sort of above it and you go
where will this go next and and and every time that your brain doesn't manage to do that,
it's not like going straight back to that place, that point,
even though like that's the way your body's reacting.
It's like you're still at this point in the journey of life.
And this is how you're experiencing it in this moment.
And like, it's not like, oh, you failed at like healing because like there's no end to it it's just
you know in this moment what can you what can you can what can you learn your brain has gone back
there even though like previously you've managed to avoid this or you've managed to sort of like
avoid a trigger or like you know rewire something but it hasn't this time so it's like what can we
learn from looking at it this time?
How do I see it differently to a time
when I would have like done this before?
And it just, it keeps going.
Like every minute is like an opportunity
to like see where it will go next.
And it will never be erased because like it's a vital part of who you
are and like without it like you're you would be an entirely different person it's like what is
that film um eternal sunshine of the spotless mind he like gets his relationship removed from
his brain basically wait yeah i don't know if you see
i haven't known but yeah i've heard about this thing called the eraser test which they do on
people which sounds exactly the same yeah um it it's important it's it gives you it is it gives
you you know all of the tools to make decisions in your life um if i could give you an eraser would you use it not a single piece
why
because I feel, I think that there's a point in everyone's life where they experience firsthand that life is extremely unfair.
And it can happen at any point.
And it's unavoidable, I think.
Well, I don't know.
This maybe isn't, you know, for a few years I think. Well, I don't know. This maybe isn't...
In a few years, I might have a different answer to this question.
But the things I experienced when I was a child,
no person should ever experience at any point in their life.
But it's taught me so much.
And I feel this like
complex like complex, like,
like, um, deep, like these complex, deep emotions, um,
that are ultimately what I use every single day as an actor.
And, um, I can, I can, I can recall those things and I'm I don't know I'm grateful for that I'm grateful to understand the deepest pain and fear and also like the most liberating joy and freedom and like maybe you don't have to go through those awful
awful things to feel that but I did and you know this spectrum of emotions that are like within me
I feel like incredibly fortunate for because I think that that is something that's different about me
so you you go through that phase after being 20 you go through quite um significant what's the
word self-disparaging self-hate um as I've heard you describe it you find it hard to to think or
say nice things about yourself. Have you overcome that?
Because when you did that interview with Lewis,
you were talking as if it was in the past.
Yeah, I desperately wanted it to be.
And I still do.
I think that I've got like a lot better at it.
But, you know, whenever,
whenever, you know, I sort of fall back into pain or whatever,
it always comes back to like this fundamental feeling that like, I'm just not worth like
any of it like I'm just like not worthy of like you know and that's like
it's like it's it's hard to combat that when you're like whoa but I'm really really talking
to myself differently and I'm really trying to like put up boundaries and I'm trying to really respect myself
and like do, you know,
treat myself with some respect.
And then you just like still get to this point
where you're like, ah.
So that's like difficult.
And like, that is something that I struggle with.
And I have like, you know,
periods of a long time where that doesn't happen.
And then, you know, periods where it comes back again.
But yeah, just like keep combating it and telling myself that it's not true.
And that I am like, I'm worthy of everything in life of of whatever I want from life has has um has anything helped
truly not like you know we say oh it is helped uh here's five tips to help you
bullshit bullshit we write in our books and stuff but has anything truly helped to advance that feeling of worthiness? Yeah, I, meditation and spirituality,
which are two things I didn't have a relationship with for my whole life
up until 2021.
So, yeah.
Five minutes ago.
Five minutes ago.
Yeah, so just last year um everything everything really changed after that point i you did mushrooms didn't you no it was it was literally just
transcendental meditation um uh and and then like a couple of like very like surreal life-changing spiritual
experiences just like in day-to-day life like not high or anything um that I just like couldn't
ignore and I felt like oh I'm like I'm not alone like you know like there's something else um even on like the hardest days
like there's something here that's like gonna be there like gonna you know take care of me
um yeah and so that's like easier to then just like keep going you know when you were 22 you
talked about um previously having issues with substance abuse uh yeah well yeah did you talk
about that or have i just inferred that from you use the word substance and i mean i i feel like i spoke about this a little bit on lewis yeah yeah but like i don't want to undermine it but i guess
who might say like what normal teenagers do and what normal teenagers don't do um but like you
know i like party like took a lot of party drugs and like partied when i was like a
teenager um and i was in the position where like i could buy more but i didn't really do that
you know to a terrible degree we all partied i yeah yeah and but but it was like definitely
something that i was like I need to stop doing
this if I want to like feel happiness um because that's a slippery slope especially things like
very accessible things like alcohol even yeah you know I've had people very close to me that have
have become alcoholics because of you know trauma they've been through and stuff like that and
do you do you drink now what's your relationship like with alcohol and stuff no not really I mean I I don't I'm not like sober um but I don't I don't
really drink like in the house or like on a weeknight type thing it's usually like with
dinner or like you know a gig or with friends or yeah but yeah a lot of that is like quite um was quite a welcome like
release I guess it wasn't like something that I you were so busy as well struggled with if you're
filming like 250 filming days per season or per year or something yeah I mean the whole production
oh the whole production okay but yeah yeah exactly it was it was it was like hot it was you know very busy schedule a lot
of sleep needed to do to get through it we before we started recording we talked a bit about ruben
yeah your voice changed when i mentioned ruben yeah yeah and you're you're wearing a shirt that he a t-shirt that he designed yes created yeah
inspired by these artists called jean-claude and cristo it's dope husband and wife who
wrapped a bunch of iconic landmarks and buildings in fabric so cool yeah it's quite cool it's very
me so um when i'm not wearing all black to try and be
uh stoic and ominous in this podcast um what is how is how is how has it been going through
trying to figure out romantic love that's a that was a very difficult thing for me as i talked
about earlier but how has it been for you what's that journey been like um I think that I I definitely like resonated when you spoke about um
like rejecting a lot of like relationships friendships or whatever because it's like
cringe or like not real or like whatever I I feel like I definitely spent a lot of time doing that and I never really confronted the part of myself that I know it was like desperate to love and be loved.
But I didn't really know how I didn't really know what that looked like or whatever.
I don't really know how deep to go with this I never like had relationships where I was like mistreated um but that was mostly because like
my trauma response was like whenever there was like any hint of like,
I don't know, conflict, I was like, I'm out.
Like, no, I don't, I seen this one before
and I'm not gonna be hoodwinked by this.
But like the truth is, is like,
they were just like nice people and I just ran away.
Like, you know, and cut off, like, whatever emotions were there.
I'm just like, Marie, sorry, like, it's not really going to work type thing.
And then, you know, confronted with someone like Ruben who...
Confronted.
He's like, stop. stop um i think that i've i met someone who um whenever i would start doing that and start going
like oh they he like saw it within me and was like you see what you're doing like you're
you're like trying to sabotage yourself again and like you can do that like I'm not going to stop
you yeah it was the first time that like someone was patient enough you know even though you're
really trying to push them away to be like that's fine like I'm not trying to like tell you not to
but like just observe what is happening right now and like you can sleep on it fine like you can sleep on it for a month if you want to fine like whatever
and it was the first time that yeah I I realized this pattern that I hadn't been able to capture
like catch before and um yeah it's been incredible it's been like four years now and we live together and
um I've like never never knew that like peace and joy and like happiness and like
like coexisting with another person could like be this way I never saw this in my life and like it's just all new and like
yeah all beautiful so interesting how sometimes it takes a certain person to like get over that wall
you know and it's funny because I feel the exact same way we try and stop people getting over the
wall because it feels like self-defense it's ultimately self-sabotage but we we try and
prevent them climbing the wall but then if that person can get in they can go about writing a new
set of evidence you know we talked about evidence if that wall is essentially evidence it's like
it's it's a it's a shield built on faulty evidence from a from another experience if they get over it
they can help us go on the journey of making new evidence but it's very difficult to get over it, they can help us go on the journey of making new evidence. But it's very difficult to get over.
And then eventually something they do can just get inside that last line of defense.
And it's good when they do, right?
Because you can learn how wrong you were about so many things you believed. And then you go like, wow, every single thing that I've defined myself as, it can all be different.
And that's real freedom, I think. yeah just one of those little pieces where yeah everything you thought you knew about the world
just like changes you can then be like what else am I wrong about or like what else
not like even right or wrong it's like what other ways can I like experience this like what other how else can um
yeah like what new sort of like possibilities are there for like who I am and what I'm gonna do
who are you and what are you gonna do
um I am a, I'm to like, I want to like, I want other people to feel happy.
Like I want to, I can't like bring, like make people happy, but like I want to, can't like bring like make people happy but like i want to cons i like am considerate
of like people around me and like how they might be feeling or whatever why is that difficult to say
i don't know
i don't know i if i had to like really think about it maybe it's like
like um if I if I if that's like really who I am at my core which like I I really feel like I'm
speaking from the heart there's pain there because why was I made to like feel like I was such a monster, you know?
Yeah, it's painful because I think like if I take away all of the things that I project and like,
oh, like I'm someone who like speaks their mind and like, I don't care what you think.
But I like take all of that away and I'm like who am I really and I actually just like you know like someone who's quite sensitive
and like wants to make you know want wants to be considerate of the people around them
like why why do you just like keep putting things in front of you that are going to stop you from just like being that when who you truly are isn't a bad thing?
Like, those aren't bad qualities to have as a person.
So why, like, why, you know, why am I so ashamed of that?
Or like, whatever, you know?
Like, why?
Yeah.
Why am I tripping myself up to like not be that maybe because like once that
wasn't good enough right and I'm telling myself like you know that's not good enough yeah
it seems like it makes sense as an explanation
yeah I was thinking as you're saying I was thinking well you know if you've if at one point you had to be someone else or you had to be you had to meet expectations in order to be told that you
were good enough expectations that were unmeetable you might spend your life dancing from one
expectation to another just trying to please the world's expectations and I know you know now
because I've heard you talk about it that expectations are really trying to meet social expectations anyway really are the slippery slope isn't quite the word but
but it is quite I think slippery slope is maybe a good phrase to use because it's all down from
there isn't it once you start playing that game it's this self-destructive spiral down to
a place that's hard to climb out of
like maybe I don't value just like
like just kindness and consider like uh consideration in other people
i'm just spitballing on this by the way yes what makes you think you don't value other people well
just because i i have this other sort of theory that i've been like
stewing for a while where it's like you you hate them like you you despise the most like what you are or like you're you're the you reject the most like
who you are inside that would make sense if who you were was rejected right if you were told that
who you were is not a good person and that is a belief that you have then if you see that in
other people you think well that's not a good person because yeah yeah wait can you see that again sometimes it takes me
i'm just a bit boiling as well but um you said that you kindness was a quality that you um in
other people either didn't you thought you weren't didn't like yeah maybe it's something i don't
like value enough i don't like if i don't think it's I'm what like well you were told not to value it
right directions in a sense because you were that and it was negatively reinforced yeah
yeah I'm just guessing but yeah I guess we both are yeah what what is success to you
if you are if you know if you look back
in 10 years from now and say I was successful over those last 10 years what would that be
well there's like a lot of like tangible things that I want to do with my career
um no no no right okay so yeah just like exactly yeah but like I mean I guess success would be like understand like
knowing in my soul that like I just I deserve any of any of those things or like like just uh
um feeling adequate what is success well I've I've already said that I don't feel like it's
a destination right it's like a happening every second
it's not like it can't look I can't stand on the other side of success and look back and be like
well look at that moment it's like what you look back on it's every like every time
you're at a crossroads or a decision and like how what did you choose to do that's all you can
control it's like what's happening right now like are you going to choose this path or this path
like are you going to behave one way or another way are you going to do the things that you
don't like about yourself and continue to do them or are you going to do the things that you don't like about yourself and
continue to do them or are you going to like do it differently and you're going to like talk about
yourself in a different way like and that's like it's every second and and there's no other side
to it um I don't know maybe enlightenment if you if you believe that um but it's about the the journey with you you're 35 years old
you sat here again yeah and you go those last 10 years yeah they were a good 10 years yeah
which I'm sure you will say but if we're sat here you're 35 years old I'm like I'm dead by then I'm like 75 or something I've just turned 30 and I'm like loving a crisis
I'll be 40 so um I love all my 40 year old listeners thank you I can't subscribe um but
you're 35 um I'm sat here and I'm 40 we're looking back on the last 10 years and we're going yeah
that was really really a great 10 years what would have had to have have happened in your estimation for
that to be true um I guess like um like control oh no control that sounds like like I um I guess it would be like looking back at all of the moments and
you know seeing seeing the the conscious decisions that were made rather than just like
acting on impulse right I guess success would be like that was a point that was really challenging
and like I feel really proud that I didn't slip back into that old habit or I didn't like, you know, I didn't like just go completely selfish and think like, oh, my problems are the worst in the world.
Like I just had a bit of perspective and I like pick myself up and I kept going like I guess that's like I would look back on those moments and feel like those decisions
like would define those 10 years and I'd be like proud like proud of of that um yeah do you have
do you have a do you have a sense of mission about you at all mission definitely I mean
the the freedom and like the joy that I feel through performing.
And I'm like, it's changed my life.
Right. And like we're at a place where, you know, there's a lot of people who want to like, you know, make art, creative people who want to sustain a lifestyle of like making art and like I want to build companies or like
you know work with people and like kind of continue the ethos of like
you know pushing creative people to be able to sort of like sustain a life of like
you know creative work because I'm
like in a very fortunate position where I do what I love and what I do also brings me money and
the way that the work makes me feel is like the best thing ever and like that those like three things I think are like a foundational piece of
like being a like a human and like it's like should not be as hard as it is for like people
to be in that position and um I when I when I'm around like down about like the world and like like whether it's the government the
environment or like like anything um I like kind of wonder I'm like what if like more people could
do what they love for a living like would we actually be in like just in a better place like
not that those things like influence any of these like poor decisions but
like I see like so much there's a lot of pain like like there's a lot of pain
in the world and like life causes people a lot of pain and I and I um
yeah I just I feel um for like you, art and like expression through art and like
channeling, like creativity. I wonder if that would contribute to making the world a better
place. I would want for that to contribute to making the world a better place.
You're a very different person to the person I watched in all of the previous interviews yeah well I didn't I'm still the same person but I definitely have a different perspective
when I watched um because you did a few interviews about three four years ago
and in those interviews um just like I don't know what it was you were very very high energy do you know what i mean like very very high energy um you seem to yeah exactly
very that yeah yeah you seem to just be very um considered and uh bit more calm now then oh now now yeah yeah I think that that's like
exactly how I feel and like it's so like it's so exhausting like performing in that way it's not fulfilling it's not real it was like I guess I was that way as like an escape from
from the the like the quiet like I didn't know what was going a scary even though like on the other side of like
self-discovery or like trauma healing like on the other side of it is like the answer to all
of your problems like it's it's terrifying it's terrifying to look inside you because
you've always told yourself that like you're not good enough and and like it's terrifying to look inside you because you've always told yourself that like you're not good
enough and like it's terrifying because you're worried you're going to look inside and be like
oh all of those things were true but no it's it's terrifying to be like wait maybe like I am actually
worth like worthy of like a good life like and maybe I'm like stopping myself from doing
that like that's a crime that's not like and I think I mean it's like I've said this a lot but
it is a journey but I think it's it's it's like a scary thing to start buying off and then once you start buying off then you start
to realize like how selfish that you've been and you don't like yourself for like a number of
reasons but then you start to it's like not other reasons to dislike yourself but it's like
you just I don't know I feel like I I, like there's, you have one life
and like, and I've been spending all of this time,
like stopping myself from doing it.
And like, that's awful of myself to do that,
but it's also to do that to yourself.
It's also just like a waste of all of that.
And there's like that other perspective um
yeah
but yeah just like stopping and having that
having that sort of um conversation I guess like with myself has like it's changed everything
it's changed like and it's been so
much better now so much better and it's less tiring so many people don't don't want to go near that
onion yeah you know they don't want to they don't want to go near it and it's funny because I I I
you know sometimes with my own naivety or my own mindset privilege, or because I'm someone
that loves introspection, I'm like, go on, peel it back, go on, peel it. Why won't you peel it
back? Go on, let's go to therapy. Let's fucking talk about it. You know, I must be a pretty
difficult friend to have if you don't want to peel back layers. Because I only want to peel
back. I don't want small talk. But I sometimes encounter people that don't want to peel back
the layers. And it's frustrating because you see the consequences of unpeeled back layers
everywhere in their behavior and you think well you just need to peel back the layers and you'll
find the source once you know what the source is then you can go about solving against it or
understanding it um but yeah I don't know what to say to people when they don't they don't
I guess it's none of my
business and everyone in their own time some people maybe will never start the journey of
understanding themselves and healing and peeling back layers yeah sometimes people who you love
and are very very close to and like you'll never be able to control that or, or like force them to, or do it for them.
Was there a catalyst or something that helped you to take that step and, and start wanting to peel back layers and understand?
Was there anything that, or was it just the pain of staying the same was greater than the pain of making a change?
I've definitely always been searching
I think like okay I'd always been searching but I never I never knew like how to go deeper
how to like yeah okay and I think um um yeah ruben meditation therapy the pandemic like what because we were just at home every
single day like a lot of variables like stopped shifting so i could track my mood like more um accurately because like there wasn't a bunch of
different things happening each day but I could see like like I could see it so I guess like the
stillness you know um but like you have you have to you you have to you have to choose like what you want.
There's comfort sometimes within the pain
or within like the onion.
And like you have to choose whether, going there is going to be, like, the most painful thing you ever do,
but, like, have, you know, every possibility on the other side.
Or is it just, like, safer to, like, not and, like, get by and, like, it's okay?
Because I'm not hurting anyone and like I
hurt myself a little bit but like I can deal with it it's like that's the thing you and it's like
that's such a hard decision to make and there's never a right time and like it never like happens
as fast as you want it to happen and you just like have to choose like that ultimately is a
choice that only you can make and you can't make for other
people you can't like persuade them and you can't like you just have to choose and you have to do
that multiple times where you go I'm fixed now and then you're not and so you have to choose again
like am I going to get back on the horse or am I going to not and it yeah it's just
professionally then yeah oh your face lit up again
i'm like it's i i i it's very liberating to speak this freely um in with you in this private
setting but like understanding that it's going to be public because i i've never really done
that i don't think.
And I'm a bit scared, I have to be honest. Like, I'm quite, like, concerned a little bit.
It's, like, creeping in.
Yeah.
But I really hope that it, like, can help the people that it's, like, you know,
or I don't know what I hope, but, yeah, I hope it's okay.
What is the concern?
I don't know it's just like that uh like the media training part of you that's like don't say this or and also because like a lot
of things that i've discussed like they do concern other people and so you know there's that as well
um because it it just gets yeah i don't know but it's it's fine it's fine it's gonna be okay
i sound like i'm just trying to convince myself
were you were you um were you anxious about coming here today um uh yes Um, yes. But I had prepared. Well, no, I just had. I wanted.
Sometimes I'm anxious because I don't know where it's going to go.
And other times I'm,
I'm anxious because,
um,
I,
I like,
it's like,
are you gonna be open or not?
Or are you going to be honest or not?
I guess.
Yeah.
So that was sort of the anxious thing where it was like,
you know,
I went to morning yoga this morning and I was doing breathing exercises in the car
um because it's like it's very easy to slip back into the like
yeah it's like still a part of me it's still a very very prominent part of me
so yeah why did you want to do that today why did you why did you want to be um open today like there's a piece that's
like missing and like if I try and really talk about things honestly like I just know that there's
this like massive like hole that I'm like dancing around the edge of um and I don't think that it like yeah I don't think that that like helps anything so yeah yeah
I guess like what I what I wanted to speak about today and like we've got we have spoken about it
and it's like been a lot more emotional than I you know anticipated but it
always is right um but I I it's like you know like freedom of expression and like making art
really did change everything and like I want other people to feel that.
And like, I couldn't talk about that without like fully talking about
what it helped me escape from, I guess.
So, yeah.
It's funny with being an artist that we,
I used to think that our creating art was exclusive.
I said this in our show
that we did up and down the country.
I opened with this.
I say, once upon a time,
I used to think that art was exclusively reserved for people that were like artists if it's in your bio then you can
do it you can paint you can create you can make music you can dance but only if it's in your bio
and you've gone to like school for it yeah everyone else were all like other things artists over there
everyone else over here and um it was actually when i left my job as a CEO that I thought to myself at a
fundamental level if I remove all these labels that society has given me what am I and that's
when I discovered the art in me that had been suppressed because society says you're an artist
and I'm a CEO yeah but we're all artists and that realization has been so amazing for me and my mind
and my mental health and all those things do you think we're all artists i do and i think that you can there's a lot of words you can use
for that that might make you know people more comfortable with you know that as a label but
i think like fundamentally like since the beginning of time like humans have like made things and they've just like got increasingly like complex and like
they maybe have altered like the human state in like lots of ways and like you know the way we
think and the way we behave or whatever but like we've always made things like at our fundamental
level like we've used tools and we we make things and whether you like see your approach to life or like your mind is like more
like analytical or something like it's there's it's still like creation like you're still creating
things um and finding like what you create like very freely and like being able to do that as much as possible
is like an incredibly fulfilling thing and it doesn't have to be like painting or like these
very sort of rudimentary like clear sort of artists industries like I don't know like I've
listened to like some business podcasts and stuff and they talk about
like sort of like running a company yeah you can probably have more insights but like when people
are doing like what they're amazing at and like other people are doing things that they're amazing
at and like you don't get people to do things that like they're very slow at and like don't
understand or like don't like doing or like and that's like how you can like move very quickly amen and and so it's like but what about like the whole world like not that the
whole world is like a company or whatever but like what like what if we could all do what we're like
that comes effortlessly to us like
yeah and it's not just like a but like a bunch of people sitting around painting like
it's not that at all if you think about artists as like that very sort of like
but if people were like free to create and to like explore their mind and like
you know express through through through building through making the thing that um people sometimes struggle with
is they will say well I've got this job and I can't do that I'm a you know I gotta go to this
building site and I gotta you know I gotta do this thing and I've got I'm a cleaner so I gotta
do this or I've you know I work in a supermarket or um I'm a driver so I can't I can't be an artist
I can't create anything sorry Maisie yeah well and this is what I always want to be like incredibly,
I guess like from that person's perspective. Yeah.
I don't have a clue like what I'm talking about. Right. And it's like,
it's all like very nice like in theory but like get in the real
world and like I understand that perspective and that's why I think it's like a like
like a like a problem like that's rooted through like even the way that like children
are like educated like all the way through to like the way we see like our working lifespan
like but i believe i understand what you're saying you're saying wouldn't it be wonderful
if everybody could get to that place if that was even if it's a you know and I I personally think that um I
really would love you know if I could wave a wand and everyone listening to this could maybe take
one thing away from this from my my from how I've received it it's like we don't have to give up on
that dream of creating just because like I remember working in call centers I remember
doing all of those things but I would I would also prioritize as
much as I possibly could understanding the context I'm in and everyone's in a different context not
not one that I can speak to that um the way out of that for me was like owning my my own space of
creation even if that meant home and like playing a video game where I got to like build a virtual
world or in the case of me it was I was building this business called wallpark and it's actually more so now that I'm like learning to DJ and I'm like
doing these shows I'm writing these books that I'm like no matter how much I get caught up in
my identity of like building businesses whatever I should always reserve a split space for like
creating if possible and that is so good for the mind I hope everyone because I know everyone
listening to this there'll be a guy you know driving up in a lorry listening to this right now.
But he knows he loved playing the drums.
And at some point he told himself that, oh, I can't do that.
That's a silly thing. That's a distraction.
It's a waste of time. That's the worst one.
Yeah. I think like the snowball of like opportunities
that like, or possibilities that it opens up
when you just like, yeah, you don't tell yourself,
no, I can't do that anymore
because I don't have time or I don't have,
you know, it's like, yeah, I have to do this instead
or I have to do this instead.
Like switching like a little portion of your week over
to like freely creating um I I think it can bring incredible things for people
wasted time is a really interesting concept that I've I think in the last two weeks of doing this
podcast I've started to think a lot about it was actually last night someone said to me oh we should watch um what did they say prison break and i remember like my brain went that's a waste of time and then i corrected
myself to them and i didn't say it to them but i remember going do you know what nothing is really
a waste of time because if you think about the way creativity works and how we source inspiration
from so many random things nothing is and also if you just if it relaxing is not a waste of time
but i think we've been quite conditioned to see if it's not productive and resulting in some kind
of you know quantitative roi it's a waste of time what's your relationship with time and empty time
and space and well i mean it's it's changed a lot but I think like currently um I I don't like
I don't try and like control like time this is taking too long this isn't like
you know this needs to happen now or like oh I should be doing this but I haven't um
um I've spent like a lot of my time like I spent a lot of my time
uh like torturing myself over like whether I spent time in like the most like uh
like useful way or whatever um but now it all
I feel like
we even said something recently
because we've been talking about time a lot
and this discussion
is it linear
and this is kind of
quite
can be quite
hypothetical
or whatever, dense things like the history of the
universe and like what we all are and what it all means but he said something very interesting
recently where he was like I feel like what time can do is like arrange itself before you
and like he sort of talks about like his schedule like sometimes in a week like there's a million
meetings and they're all happening at the same time.
And it's like, like, are you going to go like, I need to change everything.
He was like, or do you just like let it be?
And then it magically kind of like this person needs to do something earlier and this person needs to do something like later.
So like these calls will move and we need to cancel because I got COVID. Like he was like, like if I like stress and try and manipulate my calendar to be like perfect.
One, that's really, really stressful.
And two, I don't do that.
And sometimes just like it most of the time just sort of falls into into place.
And so I've always thought that was really interesting so in those times
where I was like I I need to be doing this right now but like I can't do it I can't focus I can't
whatever I am like the space the the block of time where I'm supposed to do this is going to
find me that sounds like I'm like avoiding all responsibilities no it makes perfect sense to me
because we there's many ways I many ways I received that the first one was just like
okay I can't control the future anyway so there's so much anxiety surrounding trying to the second
thing is that like my priorities and what I care about will end up shaping this all anyway so like
if this ran over by a couple of minutes and I wanted it to run over
that's fine because I made the conscious decision that this was my priority versus I don't know
walking my dog or something and so my priorities my values will hopefully lead me and then there's
loads of things out of my control which is not for me to worry about anyway so the future should
be somewhat fluid and accepting that's not always an easy thing but it's probably a better way to
look at our time I want to enjoy the journey
so you're enjoying the journey right yeah more so now than ever yeah good yeah are you uh yeah
I'm enjoying the journey yeah yeah I am I just take every day I think I've just always just
taken every day as it comes and like some days I do really shit and that's okay.
But I can't do anything about it now.
So I just try and try my best to just,
as I said earlier,
like channel that into like learnings,
feedback.
Yeah.
Being better.
We have a closing tradition on this podcast,
which you might be aware of.
It's where the last guest writes a question for the next guest.
Oh,
cool. No, I have. Okay. I haven't seen this. So they don't know who they're writing it for. be aware of uh-huh um it's where the last guest writes a question for the next guest oh cool no i
have okay i haven't okay so they don't know who they're writing it for and you will never know
who asked it okay and i don't get to read it until now okay this person has a bit of a
interesting handwriting okay mine is worse i'll say say, but here we go. What's the last decision you made that went completely sideways?
Plus, what did you do to correct it?
Brackets, if you could correct it.
There's like a lot of different things I'm thinking of and i don't know like okay so i have been working in paris recently as you know um and i uh i was diagnosed like a year and a half ago with ADHD and I take medication every day.
And I like prescribed that in the UK
and I'm like working in France.
So I ran out
and like couldn't get any more in time to like go away.
I don't know if this is going to be like insightful.
No, it doesn't needs to be insightful at
all um to correct it i tried to get some sent over but that like wasn't working for lots of
different reasons um but i guess like the main thing that i did was like stop beating myself up
about like not like organizing it better so as I had it because I was already feeling like
terrible um but you know torturing yourself over this and telling yourself oh you could you could
have your medication right now if you'd have just or if you'd have just done this then you'd be fine
right now but instead you're gonna struggle like
instead of sort of going down that path i just was like it's done i can't change it like um i i can't
do this like oh like my my brain is like hitting a wall with like you know i don't know to-do list
or like whatever and i just have to ride it out.
What made you want to go and get checked for ADHD?
But then even that assumes you wanted to go get checked.
I've been speaking to a psychiatrist for like a long time. So he's known me for,
for quite a while.
And we've sort of like,
yeah,
between,
between him and like therapy that I do sort of more actively um
like more regularly yeah um and he suggested it yeah yeah and it made sense to you it did
like a lot of the things that I like noticed about myself um like I always remember my mom
being like yeah but you know I struggle
with this and I struggle with that too like you know and I think she raised me knowing all the
things that she knew about herself like in a very particular way and I got to do a lot of things
that came very naturally to me um uh and she was sort of forced to do things like she just you know
and so but it was like funny because he was sort of
telling me all these things I'm like yeah but my mum does that and he's good yeah it runs in the
family I'm like oh interesting so um yeah it was quite a it was quite a interesting thing just for
me and my mum to go through actually um yeah I like had more perspective on myself but also like
more perspective on on her too which was kind of cool what is your relationship with them i realize i've not mentioned her
yeah we haven't um my relationship with my mom is in a really really good place now um
now i mean she it's like it has been my whole life um she i mean she like kind of gave me the greatest gift of all and just like supported whatever it is
what I wanted to do um and it kind of led me to like the most extraordinary places and we did a
lot like together um and in more recent years I think I've like I've well you know grown up
but also sort of like you know been more more independent and like that is
like adjusted our relationship um as it does like you know very naturally um but it's just been like
interesting for the two of us to navigate that from from being like quite in ways codependent
you know like she traveled with me when I was like between the age of like like 12 to 16 17 and like those are usually the years when
everyone's like mom like you're not cool I don't like you and like me and my mom were like thick
as thieves and we just like traveled like traveled the world together like me and her um uh so we
were like very like very very close and like very like had a you know and we still are we still have all those
things but it was it's just been very interesting like you know growing up and and having uh
like having parts of my life that that are like just simply my own and like parts of my career
and struggles with my career that I get through on my own because like you know I that's okay I
can do that now and just like the way that that's been like strange for us both I think was there a point with your relationship with your mother where
you started having those difficult conversations about the things you were realizing about yourself
and your past and is there because I'm just I'm not that close to my parents I've just never had
I've never had those conversations yeah like we yeah we've definitely had like
those conversations um yeah it's like incredibly painful like it yeah I think
there's like so much pain you know that you have like in your own experience but like you know
it's yeah it's like
it's like very painful to think about like people that you love like being in pain as well or like
whatever so yeah
well Maisie um thank you thank you for uh thank you for coming here today and thank you for having
this conversation with me um I learn so much from you know everyone I speak to but um
it's interesting you're such I feel like I feel like you, I feel that you're such a good human being at your core and it almost,
um, uh, yeah, it's difficult for me. I feel like you're such a pure, good human being,
you know? And so I really like feel, I feel like every tear you've cried and I feel all of your,
all of your pain as well. Um, I've never actually got up and hugged someone during the conversation
but no you are you're such a beautiful pure human being and um I'm so deeply hoping that you um
you get comfortable with that truth too however long that takes for you because it is the truth
and um because that is the truth it means that you're so deserving of so much.
More so than I am.
You're definitely, no, you are,
because you are literally like a,
within there, you are a complete ray of joy
and sunshine and love and kindness
and all those things that I'm striving
to be even better at.
So thank you.
And, you know, thank you for your honesty
because it's unbelievably difficult and it's
easier not to be but you you won't even get to see all of the the people that it serves and helps in
so many profound ways so that's what i want to thank you for and your suit and it's just
tremendously inspiring we didn't even get to talk about how hard you've you've worked um
professionally we did a little bit off off air but um to achieve all the things you've achieved at such an
unbelievably young age but that inspires me and your openness and honesty inspires me your wisdom
inspires me and you know I'm so excited you're 25 and 5 which is unfair it's like crazy it's crazy
crazy that you've done so much and you're such a beautiful person at such a young age so thank you Maisie thank you thank you for having me um and thank you um thank you for this incredible
podcast I think um you as you have spoken about have a real range of guests but I think that you um you approach everyone on like
a very sincere and like um consistent level and I think that like you as a person are like
very real and that sort of brings out like a real openness in the people that you talk with. But you also like clarify at every sort of point,
any part that you don't understand,
which not only makes, it helps you understand,
but it brings like the audience in a way
that like a lot of other people don't,
whether because like they don't want to ask questions
because they don't want to look like they don't know or whatever like you you are like very authentic um and like
it's incredibly calming to be around um so thank you huge compliment thanks Maisie