The Moth - Shhhhhh, It’s A Secret: Tim Manley and Shania
Episode Date: June 9, 2023In this episode, we’ll be playing an episode all about secrets from the Moth’s very first spinoff podcast, Grown! Subscribe to Grown wherever you get your podcasts, or check out its webs...ite for more information: www.grownpod.com This episode is hosted by Marc Sollinger.
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Attention Houston! You have listened to our podcast and our radio hour, but did you know
the Moth has live storytelling events at Wearhouse Live? The Moth has opened Mike's
storytelling competitions called Story Slams that are open to anyone with a five-minute
story to share on the night's theme. Upcoming themes include love hurts, stakes, clean, and
pride. GoodLamoth.org forward slash Houston to experience a live show near you. That's
theMoth.org forward slash Houston.
Welcome to the Moth Podcast. I'm Mark Salinger, the producer of the podcast and your host
for this episode. Yes, I am both producing this episode and hosting it. And yes, I feel
a little weird about that. So what's the biggest secret you've ever kept?
For me, it was, wait, this is actually going up to a lot of people, like a lot of people,
so I'm not going to share the biggest secret I've ever kept.
The most fun secrets I've ever kept were probably all the crushes I and my friends had in
high school. Shout out to Julie and Craig, not their actual names,
but if they're listening to this, I think they know who they are and they probably know
I had a little crush on them.
Anyway, looking back, the secret crushes weren't fun so much as the most important things
ever.
This episode, we've got stories about secrets and about how when you're growing up, every
secret can seem like the end of the world.
And to share those stories, we're going to be playing an episode from the Moss very first
spin-off podcast, Grown.
That's GR-O-W-N.
I could go on and on about how special I think Grown is, but why don't you just hear it
for yourself?
Fonda, I've got something really special for you today.
Oh, yeah.
It is my diary from 2008, and I would like you to do the honors of reading some of these
passages from 10-year-old Aliza.
It would be my honor.
I'm going to set the scene.
I'm going to set the scene and I'm going to talk about this.
All right, so this is a blue hardcover journal
and at least that set up tons of highlighted sticky notes
throughout it.
Okay, I start off by writing,
no one can look beyond this point.
Uh-oh.
Are we going beyond that point? You got Cheri beyond this point because now. Are we going to be on that point?
You got to read beyond this point
because now I've moved on past every single year.
Should I start right here?
Yeah, I think you can read that.
Wow.
I'm so nervous.
Tomorrow is the first day going to school.
Knowing, like me.
I don't know what to say to him.
Yikes!
Yo!
Yikes is like written in the biggest with an ex-legamition point.
Let me see it with you.
Okay.
So, f*** asked me out, but I said no.
But now I want to go out with him, but he won't ask me out.
So, I asked him out, but all he said was,
isn't it supposed to be the other way around?
And now I'm pissed off. Oh my God. And now we have bold, red, writing, all taking up the,
like one line, taking up the whole page of the next page. And it says, Bella, cross,
this is a crossed out Bella with a circle. Who's Bella?
Bella Swan from Twilight.
All right.
All right.
She's not going to get it.
She's not canceled.
She's canceled in this.
She's canceled.
New moon breaking dawn.
I love Edward Cullen.
And then that's what's going down
December 16th my heart is broken into a trillion pieces is going out with
She used to be my friend and then she has her own signature, okay
Okay And then she has her own signature. Okay. Okay.
No.
December 22nd, 2008.
2008 is coming to an end.
parentheses ill, lied to everyone.
She isn't and never was going out with f***ing.
It has mono, the kissing disease.
I wonder who he got it from.
Perenthase is not me.
And then a whole nother page about toilet.
Ridiculous.
Grown.
Grown.
Grown.
I'm Alisa.
And I'm Fanzo.
And this is Grown, a podcast from the mouth full of stories about what it means to grow up.
So Alisa, why are we reading your diary again?
Well, because this episode is all about secrets, the stuff we hide and what happens when they're uncovered.
Are the secrets gonna be about Twilight?
No, no, no more Twilight secrets, at least for now.
First up today is Shania.
She told the story at the mothball,
a once a year celebration of storytelling
that the moth puts on.
Fanzo and I actually got to go this year
and hear the story live.
You're in for a real treat.
Here's Shania.
I didn't always want to be an older sister.
I was a younger sister for a while, I have an older brother and I really enjoyed the perks.
But I have this vivid memory of me lying on the floor of our apartment.
I'm coloring in a picture.
It's vibrant, it's beautiful, I'm in the lines.
I'm doing my best five-year-old drawing.
I'm like Michelangelo, this is my cysteine chapel.
And I stand up to show the picture to my grandmother
and my older brother.
And just at that moment, the door opened,
and my mother and my father walk in,
and they're holding this little bundle.
And everyone runs to the door to see the new baby,
to see my baby sister.
And I'm standing there with my cysteine chapel
and no one's looking at me.
And I'm like, oh my God, this is gonna be the rest of my life.
But then this thing happens when your siblings get older
and it turns out they have personalities
and sometimes those
personalities are pretty good and they grow on you and we spent summers together in Jamaica
making up stories going on adventures. We read the same books. We didn't always watch
the same movies but I realized that I could bring my sister to the movies I liked and make my sister like those movies if I tried.
And even though my artistic career peaked
with my five year old coloring,
my sister turned out to be this incredible artist
who could paint and draw and weave baskets
and crochet blankets and, okay, it was a little annoying,
but it was still really cool.
And just as I was realizing all this, I was graduating high school
and I was moving a thousand miles away and I had this fear
that I was losing my chance to be the older sister I knew I could be.
I had this ridiculous fear that my sister would forget me
or worse that I hadn't done anything worth
remembering for my sister yet.
But luckily around this time that I was graduating high school, my sister was graduating middle
school.
So middle school problem was coming up and my mom was working and my mom was like, well,
someone needs to go dress shopping with my sister and I volunteered because I was like, this is my chance.
This is like our movie moment.
I'm going to find the perfect dress.
The one that our mom would never pick,
because she doesn't have style, and I do.
And it's going to blow my sister's mind,
and this is going to be our big moment.
And she'll forever tell all her friends
about this incredible moment with me.
So I make it a big affair.
We're at Macy's.
We have like a hundred dollars.
We're in the mall.
And I'm like, this is, this is going to be it.
And I'm running around and I'm grabbing dresses and I'm holding them up and I'm getting
these like shrugs and these head shakes.
And I'm like, that's fine'm getting these like shrugs and these head shakes and I'm like,
that's fine, I will not be thrown off.
I'm not gonna buy the dress that gets a shrug
or a head shake, I need to blow my sister's mind.
So I'm running back and I'm grabbing more dresses,
I'm holding them up, I'm getting shrugs,
I'm getting head shakes, I'm running back,
I'm getting more dresses.
Around dress number 15, I'm realizing
this isn't going so well and I don't know what I'm doing wrong
Maybe I'm not as fashionable as I thought
But the Macy's doesn't that big and we are running out of dresses. So
I'm looking at my sister and I realized that my sister is looking across the aisle not at the dresses
But at the suits and at the blazers and I'm like oh
shit I have to I'm doing the wrong thing. So I put down the dress, I'm holding, and I walk over, and
I'm like, do you want a suit? And finally, I see this little glimmer in my sister's eyes,
and I get a nod, a nod, finally. So I'm thinking about it and I'm having a little dilemma because I know that
our mom gave us money for a dress and our mom's expecting a dress and our mom is very
traditional. And so if we don't go home with the dress who knows what can of worms that
will open or what conversations we'll have to have, but this is still my big moment. So
I get to thinking. And we run to the discount rack, and we find this very simple plane dress that's like
white at the top, black at the bottom.
It kind of looks exactly like a suit, almost like it was put here for us.
And it costs like very little money.
So I pick that up, and I'm like, how's this?
And I finally get a nod.
And so then we run across the aisle to the suits
and the blazers, and now we're having fun.
And we're trying on blazers.
And I'm like brushing off the shoulders,
and I'm giving all this advice that's
based on nothing where I'm like, oh, your shoulders
can't look like that.
They have to look like this.
And I sound really smart, even though I'm not. And we find the perfect suit, we find
the perfect blazer for, we find the perfect blazer. And then we aren't done yet because we
need to accessorize. And so we start looking at pocket squares, we start looking at bow ties,
because my sister's really into bow ties, not regular ties. I don't know how to tie a bow
tie, but our figure will figure that part out.
So we find a bow tie that matches the handkerchief and
they're like, it's their like little blue dot. It's very decorative. It's very good pop of color.
And we go to the register and I've been doing the math and we are a little over.
But I'm in high school and I have my first debit card and I don't have a job, but I do have Christmas money.
And I'm really excited to use my Christmas money.
So I'm really excited when I get to pull out my wallet, pull out my debit card, slide it across, you know, like I'm in a movie.
And it's like $13. It's not that big a deal.
And so we leave and we're so excited and we go home and we're prepping for the big day.
I'm watching a YouTube video on how to tie a bow tie.
That is not how you tie a bow tie.
They make it look so easy, but I didn't really figure it out, but I figure, you know, close
enough.
The big day comes.
We have this plan where my sister goes in and then I'm like, oh no, they forgot the
purse. And so I go in and I have my backpack on
with the blazer and the bow tie and hankerchief. And so we're in the lobby of the like prom venue and
we're putting the suit, we're putting the jacket over the dress that looks like a suit and I'm
buttoning it and I'm tying the tie and I'm putting the hankerchief in. I'm not tying the tie super
well. This isn't like our, This isn't like a perfect movie moment
because the tie is crooked.
That's not what it both I supposed to look like.
But for whatever reason, we are still having the time
of our lives, and I'm like beaming,
and he's flushed with joy, and he's ready to run in.
And I'm like, wait, no, I have to take pictures.
So I step back, and I'm snapping pictures.
I'm kind of tearing up, but I'm still trying
to be the cool sister. So I'm like, this is fine
And I'm like we have to get some pictures with your friends and then I realize I'm actually being the lame mom so I have to stop
So I back up and I try not to cry and I watch my brother walk in
Thank you
Thank you. That was Shania.
When we asked Shania how her younger self would describe her now, she said, she's me,
but with a fear of heights and a much better sense of who she is.
Up next, a story about holding a secret so hard manifest on your own body. But first, Fanzo, I wanna get your thoughts
on sharing secrets, AKA gossip.
Are you gossipers? Do you like gossip?
I feel like, but gossip comes naturally.
You know what I'm saying? When you're with your friends,
stuff comes up, you know what I'm saying?
I don't trust anyone who's like,
I don't like to hear gossip, like no, no, no, we all do.
Like, I said, I mean, when things happen, you know,
when things happen, you talk about it, you know what I'm saying?
But yeah, everybody gossip is a way of life, you know what I'm saying?
Just like storytelling.
Yeah.
Okay, we didn't bring it home, but no, that's so true.
Gossip is just like natural storytelling.
We're just trying stories.
I have this like one distinct day in high school,
I remember I was definitely a Gossiper in high school.
Not like I would like whisper Gossip to people,
but I loved the Gossip.
It like fueled me to go to school every day.
And also I probably wouldn't have gone.
Like I just wanted to know what was happening.
And I remember one day, this couple broke up,
and then something else happened.
And I happened to be around for both of those events.
So people would be trying to figure out
what was going on throughout the day.
And people would be like, go to Lisa, she knows.
So I just had people coming up to be like,
we heard that you know, I'm like, I know everything.
And I was just telling people what had happened.
And I felt like, I felt on top of the world that day,
I'm like, I am the keeper of the gossip today.
You know?
Usually I'm the one that hears it,
but I like, I held the gossip.
You were the New York Times that day.
You were a Lisa, the Lisa post.
Nice.
Yeah, definitely.
When you just have the scoop, you know?
When you just got the scoop, it's scoop,
especially it's like high school,
or like any, if you're around your friends,
what you letting that loose, you know what I'm saying?
You letting that loose.
I don't know, but do you think like secrets are like gossip?
Well not gossip, but secrets.
Are secrets always bad?
No, secrets are not bad.
And I think in Shania's story, it's especially good to highlight that.
And it was something that couldn't be understood by
adults maybe at the time or or someone who wasn't well versed in those
those situations, you know what I'm saying? Or or didn't look at it, look at it in the brightest light. And so we have secrets for a reason.
We have secrets because we want them to be withheld
from certain people or groups.
Like sometimes things aren't secrets,
but they're not, they're just things that aren't
ready to be revealed to the world yet.
Yeah.
And exactly.
You know, I think that those things can be heavy,
but to find the people you can confide in,
you know, lift some of that weight a little bit.
Yeah, you don't have to lift it completely.
Oh, scream it from the heavens.
Mm-hmm.
But I bet, you know, telling someone you really love
and telling someone you trust, that feels pretty good.
Yeah.
And that's all you probably need.
You don't need to have everyone know something all the time.
That's so true.
Kind of similar to that.
Me and my boyfriend had been dating,
we've been dating for four years
and he had never met my grandma before.
It was this unspoken secret.
Like she knew I had a boyfriend.
Everybody in my family's
met him except for her, but I just was too afraid to talk to her about it
because she's a bit more, she's a grandma, she's been more traditional and
you know, and I'm the girl of the family whatever. And so recently I was like
grandma I really want you to meet him, like it's time and she's like okay if
you say so, and I was so nervous she's like, okay, if you say so.
And I was so nervous.
It was like revealing a secret.
You know, that how is she gonna take it?
Is she gonna accept the secret?
Is she gonna, you know?
And she loved him.
And it all went really well.
And I felt so silly for holding on to the secret
for so long, but I knew that I needed to get to a point
where I felt ready to let.
And you got to that point, that's amazing.
Yeah, yeah, it was nice.
Shout out to my grandma.
Up next is Tim Manley, with a story all about what it means to wear your heart on your
sleeve.
Thank you.
I love you, Tim.
I love you.
I love you.
I love you.
It was a spring night in 2008, and I'm lying underneath the covers next to my best friend,
Ben.
This had become kind of normal for the past few months that we slept next to each other
with this, like, one-foot space between us.
We were pioneers of a new masculinity, comfortable expressing our platonic care for each other.
No concern for homophobic social norms.
And I was totally in love with him.
Don't.
Not like a friend love, but like a love like when I like felt alone, I thought about
Ben and it made everything okay.
And I decided that tonight was the night I was going to tell him. And he's lying next to me,
but he's facing the other way. So all I can see is the street light on the curve of his shoulder.
And I start to say something, but the words stop in my throat.
So I reach out my hand, but no matter how much I will it, I can't move my
hand closer to him. I can feel the words inside of me. They're like physical objects that are like
all piled up and like pressing against me, but I can't say them and my body is immobile.
In the morning, go to bed, wake up. Ben makes us some granola and yogurt.
And I sit at the kitchen table silently.
And underneath the table, I'm massaging my own hands
because when I woke up, I had these weird tender nodules
like on my palm and in between my fingers.
He's like red bumps that hurt when I press them,
but I kept pressing them.
When I went home, I had to lie down on my bed because my legs hurt so bad.
When I lie down, I looked at them, my legs were all swollen and they had these red splotches
on them and on my thighs were those like bumps again.
My roommate came in and she said that the bumps were my emotions trapped inside of me.
And if I could just learn how to say the things that were stuck inside of me, my body would show that.
My rheumatologist felt otherwise.
She felt around a lot of my arms. She cut out a big chunk of my leg.
And she, not a little piece of my leg, and she, not a big, a little piece of my leg, I should clarify.
And it wasn't that crazy.
And she explained that the skin tells you a lot
about what's going on beneath it,
that it's sort of like the communicator
between the inside of your body and the outside world.
She also told me that I had this rare thing
called cutaneous polyarderitis nodoza.
Right?
Totally.
Seeing the Buzzfeed article about it.
It's an inflammation of the blood vessels,
but only in the skin.
And she said that I was actually very lucky
that it was only in the skin because if it moved
to my internal organs, which sometimes it did that it was only in the skin because if it moved to my internal organs,
which sometimes it did, it was often fatal.
And I asked her how often does that happen.
And she replied very casually,
oh, that is not enough research.
I was like, all right, well,
and she gave me a prescription for a medication
that's usually used to treat gout in the elderly.
On my way home, I passed by the drug store,
and for some reason, I couldn't bring myself to go in
and get it filled.
Instead, I went home, and I worked for a long time
on an email to Ben, which, of course, I couldn't send
when I was done.
All the words seemed cliche.
All the sentences started with, I feel like, that's a lot.
I needed instead sort of like an email wasn't right.
So what I did, then I opened up the drawer next to my bed and I took out a black pen and
I wrote on my hand, Ben, and the ink shimmered
for like a heartbeat and then it dried and I continued to write a message to him.
I wrote Ben when I feel stuck or when I feel frozen by my fears and by my doubts, I think
of your face and you're telling me yes.
I took a photo of it with the camera on my laptop,
but I couldn't email him the picture
because it felt like it'd be too vulnerable.
And it wasn't just Ben that I had these things inside of me
that I needed to say to them.
You know, there was also like my brothers,
and my sisters, and my mother, and my father,
and my stepmother, there were so many people in my life
who had so many things to say to.
And so I decided that I would write a message to someone in my life every night on my hand.
And I took a photo of it every night and I started a blog called, I need you to know how
much I love you.
I didn't tell anyone about it.
And every night I'd write on my hand and I'd post the photo.
And in the morning I'd wake up with phrases,
like tattooed on my face backwards.
And they'd become righted in the bathroom mirror.
Like, I don't know, but, or I wish I could,
where you are so.
And I was taking those things that were trapped inside of me
and I was communicating them to the outside.
And as I started to do this, I did it for like,
well, as I did it for months, the stuff on my arms
and my legs totally cleared up.
I was also like excising more and eating better
and drinking more water.
And I started wearing these like,
knee high anti-ambulism compression stockings
that grandma's wear.
But it was definitely all about letting the feelings out.
And so once my body looked good,
I knew I could call Ben, and I called him
from the window of my bedroom, and I told him, Ben,
I have this idea about me and you.
It comes to me the way that ideas for drawings come to me.
Me and you, swapping t-shirts, me and you holding hands,
me and you like brothers. And he said to me, Me and you swapping t-shirts, me and you holding hands, me and you like brothers.
And he said to me, Tim, I think you know,
and I did know, and it felt so good.
And he said, I think you know that I'm only attracted to women.
And that's how I was so sad in a way,
because I knew I just lost the thing
that made me feel less alone.
But also, my body felt so good,
because I'd learned how to take this stuff that was inside of me,
and I put it outside of me, and in the process,
I'd transformed who I was on the outside and the inside.
And then that night, I wrote on my hand, Ben.
Thank you for helping me become the person I wished I could be.
Thank you. That was Tim Manley. He told us that my younger self would say that I am very lucky not to be in my 20s anymore.
Err, sheesh. I wish.
Well, if you want to see pictures of Tim's drawn on hand, check out themouth.org
slash grown. We've also got information on our storyteller's bonus content. Ways
can act with us, all of that good stuff. And if you're wondering, Ben is an artist living
in LA and he and Tim are still best friends. Now, it doesn't matter if you're in love
with your best friend or if you have a crush on Edward Cullin.
Everyone has secrets.
As long as you're not Tune Jacob.
We decided to go on to the city and hear some of them.
Here's David Lepelstad.
Hello, my name is David and I'm out here right near the Staten Island Ferry,
a very secretive and a very windy part of New York City.
And we're going around asking people if they can tell us
a little bit about a secret from their life.
So I was wondering if you've ever heard a secret
that changed your life.
I guess the biggest secret that I found out was maybe
that I had like a half brother from my dad.
Wow.
Yeah, it was like pretty recently after he was born, but it was still like a
secret, I suppose. So that was kind of like different in mind blowing for me. So I had no idea.
So when I was in the seventh or eighth grade, I was hanging out with this person. It was our first
time hanging out. And I coughed too hard and I peed myself in the Harris
Teeter. Oh, no. I had to lock back home with my pee stain pants and yeah I was
our first time hanging out. My daughter is here, do you mind? No. I don't have that
money. Many. I guess I probably would have told you this too
when I was 18, down in the Virgin Islands,
streaking around a pool because I lost a card game.
Was there a secret that you kept when you were a child
that no one else knew?
That I'm a lesbian?
Wow!
As a child, when did you sort of figure out
that this was a secret you had?
I don't know, I started to see girls and like them. I don't know.
And then I liked a girl, so I told my friends and this year I've been for a year with my
girlfriend. Oh my gosh, congratulations. Thank you. And I told my grandparents and my parents, and everything, and I don't know.
I'm so happy.
So secret, no more.
So how does it feel to now have it not be a secret,
and have it be something that you're
able to share, and have your love be something
that you're able to share with your family?
It feels good because it's what I am,
and it makes me happy.
And it was so frustrating not to share something
that makes me so happy, you know.
You just listened to an episode of Grown.
If you like what you heard or if you think that a young person in your life might get something
out of it, the entire first season is available from wherever you get your podcasts.
And you can go to GrownPod.com that's g-r-o-w-n-rownpod.com for more information on how to listen and the people that make the show.
We just know you'll love it.
From all of us here at The Moth, have a story-worthy week.
Mark Solinger is the podcast producer at The Moth and the senior producer of grown, The Moth's spin-off podcast.
In addition to his work at The Moth, Mark makes creepy horror podcasts, bakes a mean
banquel, and feels very weird about referring to himself in the third person.
This episode of The Moss Podcast was produced by Sarah Austin-Jones, Sarah Jane Johnson,
and me, Mark Salinger.
The rest of the Moss leadership team includes Sarah Haberman, Catherine Burns, Jennifer
Hickson, Meg Bowles, Kate Teller's Jennifer Birmingham, Marina Kluccheche, Suzanne Rust, Brandon Grant, Leanne Gellie, and Aldi Causa.
All most stories are true, as remembered by their storytellers.
For more about our podcasts, information on pitching your own story, and everything else,
go to our website, themoth.org.
The Moth Podcast is presented by Pierre-X, the public radio exchange.
Helping Make Public Radio, more public at Pierre-X.org.
The podcast is presented by PIRX, the Public Radio Exchange, helping make public radio more public at pirex.org.