The Megyn Kelly Show - Chloé Valdary on Redemption, Race, and Combating The Outrage Mob | Ep. 15
Episode Date: October 26, 2020Megyn Kelly is joined by Chloé Valdary, creator of the "Theory of Enchantment," to discuss redemption, faith and spirituality, resilience, combating the outrage mob, race, racism and our current cul...tural moment, technology and more.Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms:Twitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShowFind out more information at:https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow
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Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, your home for open, honest, and provocative conversations.
Hey everyone, I'm Megyn Kelly. Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show. Today we have Chloe Valdory.
This is a young woman who has looked at the state of race relations in this country and decided to do something about it.
She is the anti-Robin DiAngelo. She is the anti-Robin D'Angelo. She is a woman
of color. She is a writer. She is a public speaker. And she created the theory of enchantment.
This is the thing you need to offer to your company when they try to cram critical race
theory down your throat. It is something that is uplifting. It is forgiving. It is kind. It is
loving. And
it does not assume the worst of humanity. She's got a lot of interesting thoughts on race,
on humanity, on our country and on where we go from here. And I know you're going to love her.
But before we get to Chloe, let's talk about coffee. And of course, we're talking Black
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of the coffee club. And now Chloe Valerie.
Chloe Valerie, thank you so much for being here. Thank you for having me, Megan. I know you're
young, especially to have accomplished all you've accomplished. How young are you? I'm 27 years old. You're just, you're a
babe. You have accomplished so much in your 27 years. You have such a deep and interesting way
of thinking about the world, humanity, race relations. And I want to tell you in the audience
that the reason I first noticed you was in a sea of vitriol on
Twitter in the midst of the riots this summer and the just acrimonious race relations we've been
seeing. There was one beacon of kindness, hope, positivity, love, and a different way of thinking.
And it was you, a black woman raised in New Orleans,
who was just sort of urging people to consider coming at it all from a different way.
And I would later learn this is all part of what you teach and travel and talk about,
which is the Chloe Valdery theory of enchantment. Can you just give us a line or two on what that is?
Yeah, absolutely. So, you know, theory of enchantment is my startup and I use it to teach
compassionate anti-racism to companies primarily, but also to individuals. And it's based upon
social emotional learning, developmental psychology, and this idea that you can't
really develop healthy relationships with others unless
you first develop a healthy relationship with yourself. And so it's a 25 lesson course,
teaching people how to do, how to do just that, how to deal with the human condition,
how to make peace with themselves, how to develop a sense of inner contentment and wholeness
so that they can then go out in the world and really spread that love and spread that light to others. As I see it, and I haven't taken the course, but as I read about it, to me,
it seems like the opposite of Robin DiAngelo's white fragility. Like I see her as out there
saying, you know, you're all biased, racist, and any denial of that just proves my theory.
And you're just the title compassionate
anti-racism. It's not like you don't admit there's racism in the world, but you, nor do you demonize
entire groups of people, or even if you see a racist act, demonize the individual, you have a
much more holistic and I would say forgiving approach to this problem. Do I have it right?
Yeah, I think that's right. I mean, we try to, you know, pursue this concept of agape love,
which Dr. King famously pursued in a lot of his work. And we're definitely very, I think,
antithetical to the philosophy of Robin DiAngelo, because as you said, we don't believe in dehumanizing even the offender. And
in fact, we believe that a lot of racism comes from this sort of function of overcompensation
for insecurity. And so if you make people feel more insecure, you're actually creating the
conditions that make racism and other forms of extremism more likely. So we don't take that
route of, you know, dehumanizing people based upon their skin color or assuming we know where they
come from because of their skin color or socioeconomic status or what have you. We really
believe in elevating everyone and elevating the human condition and giving people the tools to,
again, make peace with themselves and have
that inner sense of contentment so that they don't feel insecure and then go out and overcompensate
for that insecurity in problematic ways. It's funny because I look at some of these
young kids, let's say, you know, college age kids who get in trouble for saying something
perceived as racist. And in society, too, it's not just the young kids,
but the reaction these days is almost universally,
you're bad, you're a racist, you're awful.
And I always think to myself,
who exactly do they think that's going to convert
out of their racism?
Yeah, I mean, we definitely believe in the philosophy
of restorative justice in theory of enchantment, and we teach different elements of that, which, of course, is very relevant to criminal justice reform.
And we believe in this idea of the interdependence of all human beings.
And so, yeah, we try to create, again, the conditions that make forgiveness ripe and forgiveness more likely.
But also, we don't
believe in call-out culture. We believe in calling-in culture. So yeah, I think also you
have to remember that, unfortunately, there's a lot of incentive just from the perspective of
being on social media platforms where our attention as an audience is actually the product. And there's a lot of incentive to create content that will drive outrage. And I think that that seeps into the
culture where we're constantly being outraged. And so we have to step back and ask, you know,
what our goals are, what our what our objectives are in terms of creating the conditions for human
flourishing and work toward that, as opposed to just nobody wants that don't you think i look around i'm like i don't think that's people's goal human
flourishment flourishing i think it's like they enjoy being outraged a lot a lot of folks
and when these incidents come up what they want to do is walk away with a scalp you know and it
somehow you know it makes them feel good yeah but my sense is that it's not a, it's probably not a long-term
thing. You know, it's like a dopamine rush. And, um, obviously one of the things that connects us
all as human beings is that we all have the same software in our heads, AKA our brains. And
we are dealing with, um, a sophisticated piece of software in the sense that, um, we have a,
we have the limbic system, right, which is responsible for fast
thinking. And then we have the prefrontal cortex, which is more prone to slow thinking,
to more rational thinking. But unfortunately, again, I think, especially now that we're
constantly on social media all the time, we are incentivized from a media perspective to be
outraged. And so I think it's important to get more voices out there that are speaking about slowing down
and, again, encouraging people to think about what their objectives are
as opposed to just sort of like acting like a pinball machine
and just going from different outraged piece of content to the next.
Yeah, we have been programmed, programmed to do that.
When I, when I was looking at the theory of enchantment, one of the things you talked about
in your materials is how you want to give people the tools for resiliency. And that spoke to me
because I really, whenever somebody asks me, how do you, how did you get to be this way? How did
you get to be so strong? You know, something like that like that. I say, a lot of bad stuff happened to me and I dealt with it and moved forward. I wasn't protected
from really anything. Bad things happened. I dealt with them and here I am. That's really
the sum of it, which is one of the reasons I don't believe in safe spaces. But today,
if you talk about, certainly as a white person, if you talk about resiliency to a black person talking about racism, they're going to take that as proof, further proof of your racism.
Right. Like, don't don't tell me I need to be resilient.
You don't understand what I've been through.
You don't know what it's like to deal with, you know, what many perceive as systemically racist country. And so I wonder if, if you ever get that as a
black woman talking about this theory and talking about resiliency, does, does anyone look at you
and say, that's just based on such fundamentally flawed assumptions about what black people are
capable of in this country? Um, you know, not really. And, and I, you know, we teach a lot of James Baldwin in the actual
training. And he famously said, you know, you, sometimes you can get caught in this trap where
you think that you're the only person who's experienced suffering, and then you sort of read
and you learn and you live throughout the world. And you learn that, you know, suffering is a part
of the human condition. And other other people experience suffering as well.
And I also think that resiliency is actually a feature of the African-American tradition.
Again, we reinforce it by having our students learn from folks like James Baldwin and Dr. Maya Angelou and Martin Luther King Jr. So I think it's very difficult for people
to, to make that challenge just because we're coming, we're coming in a very like educational
and integrated way. How do we get, because when I hear you talking about that, I completely agree
just on a human level. I've talked about this when it comes to sexism many times that it, it,
it's not that you don't experience it. You, you may very well, I've experienced it, but I just
refuse to stay mired in it.
And I refuse to allow it to give me a negative world outlook or to make me believe for one
second that I'm not capable of anything I want to do.
And when I read your materials, that's that's how I hear you speaking about people of color.
And I but I I wonder because now you see anger in the wake of George Floyd and other cases that the media has played over and
over and over as though it's representative of what's happening day to day on the streets of
America. I see anger. I see, you know, when you see some of these riots, just uncontrollable rage.
And I think it's going another way, you know, even reading books like White Fragility and reading Ibram X. Kendry, how do you how to be an anti-racist? It's not based in we're strong, we're resilient, we can work together, we're all human. You know, it's it's coming from a very different place. Can you speak to that sort of anger and how you see the way forward to get folks out of that?
Yeah, I mean, listen, I would be remiss if I sort of downplayed the challenge that we have to convince people or encourage people to, I think, overcome that rage that you describe,
or move from rage to reconciliation. And it is, you know, Theory of Enchantment is
certainly positioned as the alternative to Ibram Kendi and Robin DiAngelo's model for that reason.
You know, I believe in reminding people of those who have come before us, those wise people who
have come before us, who have left us with words of wisdom to teach us how to deal with that rage and to transcend that rage.
And so I am very aware of, you know, sort of like the landscape of what's going on out there. And
this is, you know, a kind of fight that we have to wage, but I just intend to wage it with love
because I think that's the only way to really overcome some of this rage. You can't really fight rage by being vengeful or rageful yourself.
So I have to do all I can to model agape love, reconciliation on social media
and in the things that I do professionally.
And I also have to believe that that will be able to make a difference.
And I do believe that that will make a difference.
I think I've seen that begin and it's a, it's a marathon.
It's not a sprint. And I'm okay with that.
I think that this is a beautiful, dare I say it, a fight worth fighting.
And I'm really happy to be in the position that I am in to fight it.
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You have good role models. You mentioned Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who's,
I think it's sort of nuts how some people are like, don't talk about him. You know,
those days are over that, you know, we're beyond that. The current situation calls for something else. But he was, of course, all about nonviolence and even practiced, practiced he and other Black
people in the 1960s, not responding to violence violently. And morally, it gave them the upper
hand to win that fight. Right. And it's like, we don't seem to be taking the lessons from that,
or at least, I don't know, you know, when I see sort of BLM out in the streets, flipping people's dinner tables over and like
making them raise a fist and say what they want them to say, I think this is exactly the opposite
of people who used to, who knew they'd get beaten for eating at the white restaurant,
you know, counter, and were prepared to emerge with the moral high ground.
Well, I think what's a little bit challenging here is you have BLM, the organization,
which is a non centralized organization. And then the majority of people who identify with BLM,
who know nothing about the organization, which means that the movement itself can actually be co-opted. But
that's actually, I think it's an incredible opportunity because to the extent that it can
be co-opted for bad, it means it also can be co-opted for good. So that's one thing to consider.
But the other thing to consider with this is that I actually don't think most people are intimately
familiar with the writings and teachings of Dr. King. And so part of what we're trying to do with theory is really get our clients
and get the people that we service to actually seriously study their writings. What a lot of
people don't realize is that Dr. King and folks like John Lewis and individuals during the civil
rights movement practiced nonviolence because they believed that the oppressor quote unquote was also a victim of his own ways of thinking and so they believed
that the oppressor was also made in the image of god um and and this is something this is a very
this is a spiritual foundation that i think is missing and this is sort of a crisis of modernity
um in a sense but the spiritual foundation um is is missing from a lot of modernity in a sense, but the spiritual foundation is missing from a lot
of our conversations. And this is something we also hope to really bring back to the forefront
is like the conversation around spirituality and trying to root what we do in a more spiritually
grounded approach, as opposed to just like a more materialistic approach.
Well, I wanted to ask you about that because I know that I read what you've said about wokeness, you know, this wokeness craze. And you said one of the things you think is
driving it is there's sort of a lack of purpose going on for some folks now and that people,
while they may be materially enriched, maybe, maybe not these days, they're spiritually
impoverished. How is spiritual impoverishment leading to wokeness yeah so i
think that there's a great deal of alienation um that we're forced to contend with and i don't
think there's anyone i don't think anyone is is like at fault per se again i think it's a crisis
of modernity um timothy p carney wrote about this in his book Alienated America. And this is a challenge that has really affected everyone in the country from the left to the right.
And what's unfortunately going on, I think, is people on the reactionary right and people on the solutions that actually perpetuate alienation
even more in the name of trying to stop it.
And this includes otherizing people.
And this is something that we as human beings
have always done.
This is like the, we tend to think
in either or ways of thinking,
especially when we think our security or safety is under threat, whether
perceived or real. And so we're prone to start thinking in those very shortcut, reductive ways.
But the challenge here, I think, and this speaks to the spiritual issue, is to create solutions
that take away that sense of alienation, that bring back that sense of community,
again, that bring back that sense of reconciliation and the beloved community, as Dr. King spoke of. And this requires that we sort of rewire our brains and rewire how we choose to be in relationship with each other, which to me, again, begins with being in a healthy relationship with yourself. And this is even more of an issue because of COVID,
because we're, we're neurobiologically wired for connection and we're experiencing, you know,
long periods of isolation and disconnection. And so we have to work overtime to really
keep ourselves in check and make sure that we take the steps that we can take to foster
connection with one another and really try to avoid. I think everybody's been feeling that, you know, it's not even,
not even just the quarantine and the reduced socialization, but even when you are with
somebody, you've got the mask on, there's another layer between the two of you. There's just a,
it's just not as intimate as it used to be. And I, and I feel like, of course, thanks to the
iPhone and the tablets and all that, we're not as intimate as we used to be. And I feel like, of course, thanks to the iPhone and the tablets and
all that, we're not as intimate as we used to be. And there's just a, we were socially distanced
before we were socially distanced. And, you know, you can, you can feel us growing apart as a
society as opposed to, I mean, I was, I was looking at the latest Gallup poll and I realized this has
to do with a lot more than the iPhone, but it was saying that the people's views of race
relations right now in the country are lower than they've been in 20 years. That as recently as 2013,
more than 60%, 66% of Americans describe race relations as good, pretty good, pretty good,
somewhat good, very good. And today just 44% say that. So, I mean, what, what do you think factors into that?
I mean, I imagine a whole host of things factor in.
I actually think the iPhone does play a role because if,
if people are only,
if people are constantly exposed to videos of police brutality,
and this is the only thing that they're exposed to,
then perception is reality. And people will believe that that is the only thing that they're exposed to then perception is
reality uh and people will believe that that is the only thing that's going on um if that's the
only thing that they're exposed to so i do think the iphone plays a role um and again like the
outrage machine uh and that being connected to a sense of uh dopamine um plays a role uh as well
but also i think on the other hand,
like if you were to look at critical race theory,
which is becoming a bit of a prominent thing in certain institutions,
certainly in academia,
but slowly but surely creeping into the business world as well.
I think that that is also,
I would say that I would argue that that also suggests a decrease in good race relations,
actually. So I'm not that surprised that that poll reflects those numbers.
I was reading Jonathan Capehart in the Washington Post who had read White Fragility,
and he was talking about the tears he had in his, in his eyes at feeling recognized by Robin DiAngelo and, and lauding the moment that she, she was about to leave the room.
And I wrote down the quote, he wrote, she said to me, I'm going to look at you now and say,
on behalf of my people, I apologize. I want you to know that as long as I'm alive, I will work to
wake my people up to continue my own process and to see that we can recover. And at least when I
am at the end of my life, I can say I did what I could. Now, if I said that to my black friends,
Chloe, they would laugh me out of the room. Like what you're, I'm not your victim. Right. Like that's, that's what they would say
to me. So, but I do feel like being lectured that you're supposed to begin and end conversations
like that. And then having to sit down at your employer and be told that you just have to listen
to what a racist you are and how whiteness is equivalent with white supremacy and not say
anything. It makes the white people resentful. Well, it also makes, you know, some white people confused because I've,
I've heard from people who have said, you know,
I've read Robert D'Angelo and clearly this doesn't make any sense,
but I don't know what to do because this is popular, you know, it's in vogue.
So I'm a little confused. But yeah, I mean,
it's a very like narcissistic perspective that like my, my sense
of the richness of life should revolve around this person merely because of her pigmentation.
I should also say though, that I think this actually is a by-product of our hyper consumerist
society. I mean, Ibram Kendi and both Ibram Kendi and robert d'angelo i think actually see race as a form of capital
which is which is incredibly dehumanizing um to say the least and i think that that plays a role
in a lot of these conversations where we're seeing people uh not as individuals right but as but as
sort of like the quote-unquote races to which they belong. And also a lot of this is just, a lot of this is
painting a false reality. The fact of the matter is, as again, Albert Murray pointed out in On the
Americans, that America is a very mixed race country, right? There are actually very few
Black Americans in the country that are not also white and very few white Americans in the
country that are not also black. So there's a lot of confusion. There's a lot of conflating of race
with culture. There's a lot of confusion around what exactly, yes. And also there's just confusion
about misdefining terms as a thing. So, you know, I think we need to get, get back to a spiritual foundation. Um,
and again, really ask like,
what is the vision of the future we're trying to create? Um, and for me,
what do you think? Like when you, when you hear,
cause I hear people ask me this all the time. Yeah. What should I do?
When somebody,
when my employer comes to me and says I have to sit for one of these critical
race theory sessions where I'm going to be told my whiteness makes me a white supremacist.
What what should they do?
Well, that's a great question. I get a lot of emails, actually, of people reporting what's happening in their workplaces.
I would say try to see if you can engage your higher ups on bringing an alternative program.
I mean,
I obviously promote and would love for more people to bring theory of
enchantment into their workplace.
So we have a lot of free resources on our website that people can send to
their higher ups to check out what we offer.
But also I think from what I've heard about what happens when these types of
other frameworks are brought in, it causes a lot of animosity. It causes a lot of rifts between coworkers. And quite frankly, it opens up the door for potential liability because it actually perpetuates workplace discrimination on some level. So I think like if there are any, you know, higher level executives listening to this,
like it's important to be aware of that, like and to make sure you're not bringing in a
program that is actually actively promoting workplace discrimination because you could
be you could be held liable for that.
Now, have you had any of the fallout that, you know, people like Glenn Lowry, Coleman
Hughes have had where as a result of your somewhat heterodox views
on these issues and how to go about improving race relations,
you're referred to as the C word, rhymes with boon.
Yeah.
Trying to think of a not awful way of communicating it.
I mean, have you had blowback for not sounding more like Kendi and less like Lowry?
No, I mean, I really think it depends on how you define blowback.
Are there like some people on my Twitter who might take offense and insult me?
Yes, but I don't really consider that blowback, you know, especially compared to what other
people who have come before us have gone through for standing up for what's right. Also, I'm aware of the fickle nature of social media.
And I have actively and I'm constantly trying to train myself not to respond to every little thing
that happens. I know that, you know, yeah, I know that if something goes viral today, it's not going
to be relevant tomorrow. So I'm less inclined to pay attention to those things anyway.
And I haven't really seen a lot of that as a response.
On the flip side, I'm going to guess that you in your 27 years have experienced racism.
I mean, this is sort of the blowback for not complaining more about racism, but I'm sure
you've experienced racism in your 27 years as well.
I mean, definitely.
What has that looked like and how have you avoided bitterness?
That's a, it's a good question. I mean, it's looked like the typical,
you know, sort of use of slurs and certainly the N wordword toward me toward my person and how do I avoid bitterness I think
I think this is why I believe so much in actually engaging with the texts of folks that have come
before us because they sort of gave us a roadmap of specifically how to deal with bitterness. I'm aware that bitterness
and rage actually corrupts the person who is sort of stuck in it. And I don't want to be that person.
I want to always try to transcend and always try to be, try to have that sense of wholeness,
because I'm aware of the cruel cycle that insecurity can really play in a person's life. Um, I'm really blessed.
Can I just ask you, can I ask you before, cause I, I completely agree with this attitude. Um,
and I do think, you know, even when you hold that poison inside of you, you're the first one to
suffer from it, whatever the reason is that you're being put down or attacked. But, and, and if you don't want to
talk about this, I understand, but did somebody actually look at you and say the N word to you?
I mean, you were actually called that by another human. Yeah, definitely.
And some like, what, what does it take to then not extrapolate? I assume it was a white person.
Yeah. Okay. So what does it take to not
extrapolate that to other white people? Right? Like this is what quote they think of me. This
is why there is a division between them and me is I feel like right now as a society, we're going
the other way. You know, I was always raised to think to be taught to be, I was told you don't
stereotype. You know, if you you see you see a black man
doing something illegal that doesn't mean anything about black people as a whole but I feel like
right now all the messaging is exactly the opposite right that your skin color determines everything
about you good and bad yeah yeah so I think I think that in that situation, I recognized that what was going on had nothing to do with me
and had everything to do with the person and what state of mind they were in. I think that we,
as human beings, are always experiencing movies in our heads and projecting certain things that
we're experiencing internally in the external world um and so this individual was projecting something
that had nothing to do with me and so that ability to to depersonalize it um i think is key if you're
not able to depersonalize it you won't if you're not able to think immediately to yourself and this
is something we train people to do in the theory of enchantment to think to yourself what intern
what internal mechanism
what internal emotions are going on with this within this person that's informing his behavior
and then work from there as opposed to saying to yourself oh you know he called me this and
you know like like and get a sense of you know my ego has been shattered because this person called me this.
Like, it has nothing to do with me.
It has absolutely nothing to do with me because I know I'm not that.
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Norton 360 with LifeLock at norton.com slash mk. Okay, and now we want to bring to you a feature
that we have here on the show called Real Talk. This is one where I just want to tell you about
something that happened in my life or something real that's going on that I think is worth sharing.
And today I want to tell you about a very special event that
I went to last weekend with my pal Janice Dean from Fox News. She's the meteorologist there.
So let me take you back 10 years ago when I was at Fox and we had, I think it was the death of
the Pope. And we used to use Father Jonathan Morris, a Catholic priest to come on and talk
about pretty much anything that broke involving the Catholic church. And I got to know him pretty well, super sweet guy. We were relatively new to New York
City and I didn't have a personal connection to a Catholic priest here yet, even though I am
Catholic, just wasn't feeling the bond with my local church. Long story short, he became our
priest and we wound up having three kids, Doug and I, he baptized all
three of our children. He became a spiritual advisor to me in addition to, you know, our
priest, which happens with a lot of priests. Well, imagine my surprise a year and a half, 18,
24 months ago, when he called me up to tell me he was peace outing from the church. I was like,
what? He left the priesthood. So of course, my first reaction,
by the way, he baptized Janice's kids too. And so Janice and I were like, is it still legit?
Like, do we have to have him re-baptized? We got to go down that lane again. And she's like,
my kids are never going to sit for it. But anyway, it turns out that's not, that's not necessary.
They're still good. And one of the reasons why he left was he really wanted to get married and
have children. And you know, the Catholic church is was he really wanted to get married and have children.
And you know, the Catholic church is just so like in the dark ages when it comes to this,
I personally believe they should completely be letting priests get married and have kids. It's
like, it's just so punishing to not allow it, whatever. I'm not too old school. So father
Jonathan Morris, or FJ as we all call him, although some of the women at Fox called him
father, what a waste. Cause he was very good looking. He's a good looking guy. So FJ as we all call him. Although some of the women at Fox called him father, what a waste
because he was very good looking. He's a good looking guy. So FJ this past weekend got married.
He got married to Caitlin who happens to be a TV producer for ABC news and JD and I and a bunch of
the folks from Fox news went and it was beautiful. It was so fun. First of all, to see him up there
on the altar on the other side.
All I could think was like, is he armchair quarterbacking the homily and the vows?
And is he like judging how this guy's doing it versus how he would have done it?
But it's kind of a cool thing to see your priest up there in a tux next to a woman in
a white dress holding hands, taking their marital vows.
In the end, it's about love.
And I think Cardinal Dolan let them have it at St. Patrick's Cathedral, which, you know,
clearly he has the blessing of the church, which was a beautiful sight. And when I saw them at the
reception, those of you who've been following me for years will know that I have a tendency to say
the wrong thing if they're if given too much time and silence. I just feel the need to fill the
silence in a way that always comes back to
bite me. What I said to them when I saw them at the reception, because you never know what to say
to somebody, right? It's like, what do you say? You get like one minute with a bride and groom
and yeah, like it's beautiful and you look beautiful. And I don't know. I always feel
the need to say something more, which is a bad instinct, bad. And what I said was something like,
I can't wait to hear about the honeymoon and I can can't wait to re-watch the Thorn Birds this week,
which is like, yeah, if you grew up in the 70s or 80s,
you know about the Thorn Birds,
about having an affair with a priest,
which is not what happened in this case.
In any event, I thought you might be interested
in hearing my story about,
now we're gonna have to call him formerly FJ,
formerly Father Jonathan,
and how, you know, like all things in this life, love finds a way. And now back to Chloe.
When you're trying to help people love themselves, is that possible? Has that ship already sailed by
the time they get to you? You know, if they haven't learned it in childhood and through
their formative experiences.
No, I don't think so.
I actually think a lot of us adults are walking around just actually just like young people internally or like children, but like in adult size.
So I don't think I don't think it's impossible.
Listen, I actually think that learning to love yourself takes a lifetime.
It doesn't start and stop with theory of enchantment or with your upbringing.
It takes a lifetime because we are, I think that the human being is the most sophisticated
being on planet Earth.
And we are both, in my opinion, dust and ashes, but made in the image of the divine. And so,
you know, we deal with the human condition, we have to deal with things like confronting our
mortality, insecurity, parental baggage, vulnerability, these are all things we have
to deal with as human beings. And so learning to love yourself amidst those things is a lifetime practice. So I definitely think it's possible.
What is it about? Is it about forgiving your own flaws, your quote unquote weaknesses?
Like what does that daily practice look like? Because I'm just going to guess it's not like
looking in the mirror with you're good enough, you're smart enough. But we all have self-doubt,
we all have insecurity, we all have things-doubt. We all have insecurity.
We all have things about ourselves we wish weren't so. And I think that's what leads to,
if not self-hatred, then at least bouts of self-loathing, which you accurately point out is what leads to one acting out. When one acts hatefully, it tends to originate with hate or
loathing for one's self. So what does it look like inside of a person?
And what is the day-to-day process of eliminating it or at least controlling it?
Yeah, so I mean, we teach a couple of things in Theory of Enchantment.
We teach, first and foremost, folks need to accept the fact that imperfection is a part
of life.
There's no such thing as perfection.
And that's one of the hard things, I think,
for people to really try to practice and internalize.
The fact that we will always be imperfect
just because that is the nature of life.
Another issue is practicing vulnerability
because we teach Brene Brown's TED Talk
on the power of vulnerability when she talks
about- I love it. That's so worth everyone's time. It's on Google. It's on YouTube.
Yeah, everyone should check that out. It's a great TED Talk. But she talks about how vulnerability
is the birthplace of feeling sad and feeling down, but it's also the birthplace of joy.
It's also the birthplace of feeling larger than life. And so if you numb vulnerability, you numb your, you numb joy.
And so it's hard to practice vulnerability,
but we teach people to do that because otherwise they will remain like
paralyzed by fear.
And fear is another issue that we teach people to sort of practice getting
over, practice doing things that they fear they would
not be good at or good enough or worthy enough to approach. And I failed to mention this earlier,
but we use a lot of pop culture to teach a lot of these things so that it's memorable and repeatable
and people can recall to memory in difficult times. This is exactly the opposite of cancel culture, exactly the opposite,
right? It is, which is, which causes fear intentionally, which makes no room for humanity
and human failings and error, which sizes up an entire person based on one incident or, you know,
one mistaken fall down, right? Like I, the thing I hate most about cancel culture is how
it reduces a human being to one bad moment and tries to pretend that, that that person is all
about that moment. And this is being kind, this is the charitable version where the person actually
did do something bad. You know, nine times out of 10, they did something totally innocuous that
is only bad in the eyes of sort of these far left woke scolds. But that's what I hate
about it because then it doesn't lead to expansion or willingness to be vulnerable. It leads to
contraction and hard shells and the desire to fight. Right. So cancel culture is also a byproduct of our hyper-consumerist society.
Even the language of cancel culture is very transactional, right? It's like canceling a
subscription. It's like canceling a human being, which is absurd. So we've been conditioned to
act in these ways for a very long time. So we have to train ourselves to practice, to think differently, again, to think about things like restorative justice, which would help. It's interesting
because some people on the woke left claim to be pro criminal justice reform, right? But then they
practice a culture of cancel culture, which is antithetical to criminal justice reform.
You know, I think about this in theory,
and I think I agree with all of it, all of it. But then if you say, okay, now apply that to Harvey
Weinstein, I get stuck. I get stuck. And it's not that I can't understand that he may have been a
kind father in some ways, or may have in his own weird way, loved wife and may have you know donated millions of dollars
to good causes and so on so it's not that i'm saying the entire man is bad but i don't feel
restorative when i look at him you know it's like i i even i mean i spent some time in the south side
of chicago interviewing a bunch of moms there whose whose kids had been sent to prison uh many
of them had been shot. Their kids
had done the shooting as well. And they're big on restorative justice. And they talk about trying
to raise their boys in this impossible environment where crime is everywhere. And it's very tough to
pull them out of it and get them to the age of majority without having had any real exposure
to criminality and danger and life-threatening danger. So I get it. In that case,
I actually get it more than I get it in somebody like Harvey, who spent a lifetime abusing people.
So what are your thoughts on somebody like that? And how this whole theory would apply to someone
like that? So that's a great question. I mean, restorative justice is not about a lack of
accountability, right? And that's sort of a misnomer around restorative justice. So it's definitely about accountability,
but restorative justice is also about restoring the victim.
And oftentimes in the punitive system,
what happens is the state or whatever institution is,
sort of has a jurisdiction,
basically passes down the conviction or the punishment for the crime
and the sentence is served, but the victim is not necessarily centered. No one comes to the victim
and asks them, you know, what do you need in this moment? So restorative justice is actually about
really restoring, seeking the restoration for the victim. and and that oftentimes in turn actually restores
the soul so to speak of the offender um and in the case of in the case of harvey weinstein i mean
in a in a more i guess in a more restorative justice environment it isn't like he wouldn't
serve time it isn't like he wouldn't be held accountable for his actions, but there would be
a conversation about how he became what he became and why he did what he did and all these
motivating factors for him. And I feel like there would be space to have that conversation.
And I feel like if you don't create the space to have that conversation, then as a society, we are less equipped to be able to ask ourselves, well, how do we create conditions in our society so there's not another Harvey Weinstein?
And so like that added piece is, I think, would make justice more sustainable in the long run.
We had among the women, the moms, they were in like a prayer group circle. And one mom, her son had been killed by another of the mom's sons who was in jail serving time for the murder. And they were friends and they loved each other. And the mother of the son who had been killed had completely forgiven the other mom's son. And they were talking about that as restorative justice, you know, like that,
we making that kind of a connection only served the victim and the perpetrator. Well, you know,
it wasn't in no way, was it painful? It was to the contrary, as hard as it may be. And I feel
like you can get past that. You can get past anything, but can I talk to you a bit about faith? Because they were women of faith and, um, you know,
their prayer group was being run by this heroic nun who we did a story on, um, a couple of years
ago, but I know faith has played a role in your own life. It's played a role in my life. It's,
it's for me, made me a very forgiving person. I, I feel like it might be easier to go to forgiveness if you have
a faith background or just if you have God in your life. Yeah, I think that's probably true.
I mean, I will say that I think that the society that we live in has been shaped by a Judeo-Christian
ethic. And so even if you consider yourself a secular person,
the morality of the tradition still seeps into the culture. You know, even if you don't personally
identify as someone who is a religious person. But I definitely agree with you that if you've
been raised religious, I was certainly raised religious. And I think probably your spiritual sensibility,
and I'm generalizing here, but your spiritual sensibility is more acutely developed. And so
you would be more likely to see the world through the paradigm of forgiveness and mercy.
But I do think that because we're seeped in that culture, I do think you could still teach it,
even if you're in a secular environment. And there's not, there's also not that vacuum that you need to fill with
the quote, religion of wokeness or, you know, or even politics. Some people treat politics like
it's a religion. All right. Can I ask you a couple of personal questions? Because I don't really know
you. You sound incredibly well-read, philosophical, smart. Like what does Chloe Valdry do for fun? I like you so
erudite. I can't picture you at a bar slinging drinks like hanging out like,
what do you do for fun? Tell me about you. Yeah, I'd like to dance a lot, actually.
Prior to COVID, I would go to a wonderful club in Williamsburg in Brooklyn called Bembe and I would
go there every
week to dance for like hours and hours like by myself um so I love to dance I dance is like a
spiritual practice for me um I love to produce produce music I love to mix music both like on
the vocal side and also on like the DJ side um so that's how I that's like my I guess my artistic outlet for myself.
Now, do you what what is your love life look like? Is that fulfilling? Are you like, I just feel like you have to be with somebody really smart. You can't be with a moron. I haven't found him yet. So you let me know if you find him because I haven't found him yet. But so I am definitely single. But and I agree with you that I have to be with someone who can challenge me, but also be fulfilling as well and be a real supporter and partner.
I haven't I haven't found him yet, but I'm enjoying single life in the meantime and just trying to spread theory of enchantment is for it and why it's possible. I think you're going to one day introduce
one very special man to it
and he's going to be
feeling exactly that
when he meets
and gets to know you.
Chloe, thank you so much.
Thank you for putting
so much goodness
out into the world
and for trying to tackle
such a difficult subject
with such goodness.
It's wonderful to meet you.
Thank you, Megan.
Good to meet you too.
All the best.
Our thanks to Chloe Valdry. So much appreciate her coming on
later this week. Stay tuned because we're going to have Piers Morgan. I have taken so much crap
from my girlfriends for saying that I want to be just like Piers Morgan when I grow up.
It's not because I agree with all of his opinions. It's because he says whatever the hell he pleases. He says whatever he wants to say
and he is unapologetic for it.
And I love just his freedom.
Like he doesn't, he has zero need to be liked,
which explains his approval ratings.
No, I'm kidding.
I love the guy.
I just think he's really brave.
And I'm not the biggest fan of Meghan and Harry.
And I will not miss one of his columns on them.
I mean, they're like stinking holier-than-thou attitude.
They're going to lecture everybody on their privilege while they're sitting in their $20 million mansion in California.
All right, I digress.
We're going to get into all of it with Piers when he joins me later this week.
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