The Moth - Talking About Advice: The Moth Podcast
Episode Date: November 14, 2025If you've been moved by a story this year, text 'GIVE25' to 78679 to make a donation to The Moth today. On this episode, we've got an extended conversation with storyteller and advice columnist John ...Paul Brammer AKA Papi from Hola Papi. He'll talk with host Chloe Salmon about the differences and similarities between advice columns and storytelling coaching, give some ‘tough love’ advice, and so much more. Podcast # 948 To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to The Moth.
I'm Chloe Salmon, and in this episode, we're trying out something a little different.
I just hosted a Moth radio hour that featured stories on the theme of advice,
including one from John Paul Bramer, who is an advice columnist himself.
His column, Ola Poppy, has counseled hundreds of readers over the years,
and he came to the Moth office to chat with me about the world of professional advice giving and storytelling.
We included a short part of the conversation in the radio episode,
but thought you all might like hearing the whole shebang,
including us talking about how to give advice that people actually listen to
and offering up some tough love about listeners' real problems.
We hope you enjoy.
Hey, John Paul, it is so great to have you here today.
Hey, Chloe, I'm so happy to be here.
I'm so happy you're here.
All right, so we're going to start with some questions.
What advice would you give your teenage self
if you could go back and have a coffee with him?
Ooh, getting a coffee with my younger self would be so dangerous because I am now a coffee addict
and just like putting myself on that path even earlier, I can only imagine.
You know, my advice to him would just be you got to calm down.
You got to relax.
Like you, I think I wanted so much stuff so fast and I was just constantly frustrated with myself
for not having it yet.
And I would just tell him the same thing.
I might tell myself today, which is that you got to enjoy the process, man.
It's not about stressing yourself out to achieve results.
You're going to be fine.
Read a book.
That's beautiful.
I think we have very similar personality times.
But coffee wouldn't help with that, obviously.
You're like, look, I just need you to calm down, but here is a quad shot.
I need you to do so much caffeine.
All right.
So you're a very funny person.
It shows up in your story, but something else that I really really.
love about your story is its vulnerability and its tenderness. So how do you find yourself
striking that balance when you give advice to your readers? Yeah. I mean, I'm very lucky in that
Ola Pappy started at Grindr. And so I, you know, didn't take it as a very serious endeavor.
So it sort of short-circuited that thing I mentioned earlier where I tend to like just try
really hard and I want to tackle things very seriously. And so I was able to let loose and be like,
this is an advice column for a gay hookup app.
Like, I don't have to be Dear Abbey here.
In fact, the whole project of Ola Pappy was me being like,
what if I kind of made fun of Dear Abby or like did a satire
where like Dear Abbey is a gay Latino man on Grindr.
I thought that would be so funny.
And even the title, Ola Pappy, you know,
it was for Grindr and their outlet at the time was naming things off of funny little
grinderism.
So they had this outlet called Into,
which is based on, you know, what people would say to each other
and ask each other on the apps.
They had a celebrity interview series called Zero Feet Away,
which is a play on the kind of creepy distance feature on Grindr.
And so I was like, I'm going to just take something that I hear a lot on Grindr
and turn it around, make it my own, make it funny.
And I thought I was going to be running a joke column.
I thought the whole thing was going to be me making fun of people for writing into me
and just talking about how great I am.
But then.
But then, so here's the thing about running an advice column on Grindr, where it gets pushed to the app.
A lot of people on Grindr are in the queer community.
A lot of them are lonely because if you're on Grindr, you're looking for something, right?
And a lot of them never had that, like, gay older brother or that queer elder or that person who could take them aside and be like, hey, buddy, here's how to be gay.
You know, here's how we do things around here.
and they saw an opportunity to write a letter to someone like that.
And they were like, I have a lot to get off my chest.
And so a lot of these letters were very heartfelt.
They were very poignant.
They made me very emotional.
And I realized I can't make fun of these people.
Because I think the first letter I ever answered was solicited from a friend of mine
where I was like, hey, buddy, you're going to be like a pinata for me.
I'm sorry.
And it was like a question from, he played like the clueless white guy who was just like,
I like Latinos.
Is it a fetish?
And, you know, I just made fun of him for asking me in the first place.
But then when the letters came in from actual community members from Grindr, I was like, oh, my God.
What have I gotten myself into?
So today, even still, the recipe for an olopopy column still has that intention towards humor.
It's baked into its DNA.
But it's also a little earnest.
It's a little vulnerable.
It's me sitting down at the bar with you being like, hey, I've been where you've been.
And I think I can hear you out and maybe give you some advice that will help you in the future.
and, yeah, that's just where the whole thing came from.
Yeah, I love that.
And I also appreciate your pivot.
If you were like, what if you had just been like?
I'm really just actually going to double down on this.
I'm going to be cruel.
I'm going to be actually the worst person you've ever met in your entire life.
Oh, no, I love that.
Yeah, that, like, once you opened up the space, you were very surprised by what came into it.
Yeah, I feel like you've met that.
I feel you've risen.
Oh, thank you.
Thank you.
So do people in your life come to you for advice, or are they like, no,
butt out, John Paul. You know, they don't really, which is quite the indictment of my personal
life. You know, I'm like a pretty standard friend to people in my life who are like,
hey, I'm dealing with this right now. What should I do? But it does feel like I have this
Poppy persona. There's a room in my brain that's dedicated to Poppy, and he's like this
kind of separate person. He has his own quirks. He has his own way of doing things. And I really
like it that way because I have people ask me, you know, do you feel like you're wise enough to
give advice? Do you feel like you're the kind of person who can actually help someone? And I'm like,
not me, but like this thing in my brain or like this character up here kind of can. And I really
enjoy that because it lets me be as messy as I want and need to be. So I go out and I collect the life
experiences that Poppy needs to use to make advice. Like I'm going to make the mistakes. I'm going
to get in scenarios that I shouldn't be in. I believe my friend, the other
day just said it's amazing you're still with us because I was like thank you yeah um so that's kind of
the system we have going on and it really works for me I okay so I love that that idea of it's kind of like a
partition kind of because it's still you but then if you can like flip that switch and say oh
this is poppy now because that was actually my next question is do you ever worry you're going to
give bad advice it feels like a lot of pressure you know like I would be a little terrified to give
advice and then there it is it's the advice you've given do you ever get scared that you might give
bad advice. Yeah, a lot. And I'm sure that if I were to really go through all the columns that I've
written over time, I would probably pick some out that I just no longer agree with or that, you know,
the situation has changed. And I try to think of it as like, this column needs to be able to
function both as, you know, advice to the person who asked, but also as kind of entertainment for
anyone who approaches it and anyone else who reads it. They need to be able to see themselves in it.
And in that way, it's not such a different project from writing in general where it's like you're
trying to let someone into the way you see things, but you're also giving them an experience.
And they need to be able to put themselves in your shoes and vice versa. And so I do feel like
the Poppy Project is a writing project. Like I'm not so much terribly obsessed over like,
what if I said the wrong thing or what if I gave someone a piece of advice that is just
incorrect? Because, you know, it's a, it's not a science. It's definitely an art. And when I think
of it as that way as a place to express myself and bring some
creativity, some compassion. Yeah, but I'm so certain I would look back and be like, girl.
Why did you say that? What were you talking about? Yeah. Again, that feels like a very healthy way to
look at it. Otherwise, I feel like it can be really easy to just totally be frozen and like,
oh, God, what's the exact right thing to say? And unfortunately, I've learned there's usually not
an exact right thing to say. Absolutely. Absolutely. So, you know, advice shows up so much in our
personal relationships with friends and family. But advice columns have
have people writing in constantly to total strangers. So what do you think drives people to reach out
to a stranger on the internet and say, hey, can you help me with this thing? Yeah, I think about this
a lot because it's something I would never do in my entire life. I would never write into a stranger
with an issue of mine. Like, who does that? But I'm so glad they do it because that's my
business model, right? And what's interesting to me is that over the years, I sometimes get a flood.
and sometimes they go periods where no one says anything.
And I think that our relationship with strangers on the internet,
it's like that's something we're still working out.
Social media is still kind of this wild west where we don't know how to regulate it.
It kind of falls apart.
Then a new one pops up.
And, you know, there's Twitter.
Then there's TikTok.
And then, you know, people's platforms disappear overnight.
But then there's this new trendy thing that everyone's signing up for.
And so I've noticed that the people who write into me and when they write into me
is sort of tied with whatever the cultural moment with social media looks like.
So people will tend to talk to me more or send me more letters when I'm on a more stable website.
So like peak Twitter, I was getting so many letters because people already saw me as like this person on the internet they kind of knew.
So to them I wasn't a stranger.
I was like this person that they like kind of wanted to hang out with or that they kind of wanted to talk to.
That's so interesting.
And specifically to what you said about like the ebb and flow of it.
of like sometimes you get a lot, sometimes you barely get any.
I feel like it's kind of similar to, like, my work at the moth or our work here at the moth.
It's like a trend of stories that we're getting pitched.
But it is really interesting of how the cultural moment influences what people are thinking about,
what they want to share, what they're reaching out about.
I mean, as a nosy person, this is one of the most amazing authors.
Like, it's no coincidence that you and I have ended up here on this floor here today
because I am so nosy and I just love hearing people's.
I don't care what it is as long as this cheese.
me, I want it.
Yeah, no, I am exactly like that as well.
And this is the perfect job for me because it's not invasive.
And same for you.
People are coming to us.
Exactly.
And being like, oh, like, I would like to tell this story.
And then I get to say, tell me literally everything.
And it's the happiest I can ever be.
Absolutely, yes.
Like, tell me all about it.
Okay, so I'm an oldest sister.
I have two younger brothers.
And I feel like I've been giving advice for a long time.
They might say I've been bossing them around and having very strong opinions for a long time.
How do you give advice in a way that doesn't feel judgmental?
Yeah, you know, I am also an elder sibling.
I have a younger sister who is much more emotionally together than I am.
So I don't think the dynamic quite maps on to what you're talking about.
But yeah, I think about this a lot, and it does factor in quite a bit to what the poppy voice is.
Because I always thought of Ola Poppy, like literally when I sat down to map out what this whole thing would look like.
I did think of my first experiences in gay bars when I would go in, and the language felt totally alien to me because, you know, like, LGBT is another language entire.
Like, the slang is, like, out of control whenever I find myself having to explain to a straight man, like, why we're calling everything mother.
It's like, well, what about that bar is mother?
And I'm like, oh, Teddy.
You just have to, you just have to get it.
Yeah, like, you're either here or you're not.
But I just remember feeling so overwhelmed, and, you know, I grew up in rural Oklahoma, and my, I'm quite a stubble.
in person, so I was closeted until I wasn't. So like in the closet, I didn't interact with
the culture at all. I was not looking for anything. I didn't know what the community was getting
up to at the time other than listening to Lady Gaga. And so when I came out, it was like a
completely alien world to me. And I remember how vulnerable that felt. And I remember how badly I
wanted someone, anyone to just take me under their wing. And it's such a delicate position to be in,
because when people come to deal with vulnerability,
obviously there's a heightened sensitivity.
They are listening very intently to every last word you say.
It's so full of landmines.
And so I just wanted to be the kind of cool mentor figure that I always wanted.
And I just let that be my compass.
This is after I decided to start taking the project more seriously
and that I wasn't going to bully people.
I was like, okay, I'm going to be, I guess, in a way, like a community resource here.
And what does that look like?
because I'm not going to sit around and explain how everything works.
It's a conversation.
It's not me talking down to you.
And, yeah, I would say that's still how the column works.
Yeah, I love that.
Because, yeah, it is interesting.
You know, I read advice columns all the time because I just, again, I'm nosy.
I'm like, oh, gosh, what did this, you know, what is this person asking?
What did this person say back?
Is it in line with what I would have said back?
But, yeah, that idea of, again, like the persona, right?
and like the thought that goes into that.
Because, yeah, you're taking people's vulnerabilities.
It takes a lot of bravery to share something that is deeply personal.
You know, when I work with storytellers, it feels the same way.
I feel like I really want to honor that, you know.
You have to hold that in a way.
But also the idea, again, of like, okay, but then at the end of this, you know,
you're writing a column for entertainment.
Like they're going to be up on stage telling a story.
You know, what version of that can be up there can still feel true?
to the vulnerability can still feel safe for them, but that can also be something that people
want to listen to. It's interesting. It really does map onto the moth experience. Like there's so
much symmetry there. Yeah. Depending on what you share and if you come with an open heart and open
mind of what people are here to tell you about and vice versa. I just know that like after every
moth experience, I walk away with like five people who were previously strangers and then it's like,
oh, these are my best friends in the world. Yeah. It's just like. It is. It is.
very much. Like, you form the bonds.
So quickly. Yeah, you're out somewhere in the middle of nowhere in this town together,
and everybody in town is really nice to you because they're excited to come and listen to what
you have to say. And then, yeah, it is. It's a really special, it's a really special experience.
I wonder, too, and this is just my curiosity, you're writing that I've read, and I'm sure
this kind of umbrella's over all of it, is very humorous, but honest, vulnerable.
That's why when I started reading it, I was, this person is going to tell an amazing.
Ma's story. And honestly, like, the first kind of draft you shared with me was so strong
and so great. And I was curious, you know, telling a story live on stage, you're not reading
off of a script, there's not notes, you know, but you're pulling from your memory. How did that
experience feel different to you in some way from what you've done already? Or did it feel like,
oh, actually, like, this feels mostly similar? Oh, gosh, yes. Well, it really feeds the part of me I've
always had, which is this, like, inner Thespian. So I remember, like,
being in Catholic school, and the only part of Catholic school that I liked was when I was
tapped to do the readings at the front of Mass, and I'm saying words, I don't know what they
mean, Corinthians, Ephesians, or whatever. But the priest was always like, that young man, he reads for
the back of the room. Like, that's like it was the best compliment to ever receive. I just love being
in front of people, which makes no sense as a super anxious person. And I have a lot of social anxiety,
and I don't function so well in, like, intimate groups, but put me on a stage with a bunch of
people and I feel like I activate in a fun way but like I never would have tapped back into
that or not for the moth and so being able to marry these two parts of me where it's like I love
writing but I also love presenting I just loved it and like I remember ramping up to the first time
I ever did it I was like oh wait this is like something a crazy person would do like I was just imagining
someone with any ounce of stage fright in their body and this is like the craziest roller
coaster that you could probably go on in that situation and yeah I was just so impressed
that you were able to notice, like, who would be good for this?
Because I kind of hadn't given you any material to, like, reinforce this idea
that I was capable of something like this, but you just knew.
Yeah.
And so, like, I think the moth is so good at making me feel like I'm in good hands
with people who know what they're doing.
And that feeling of knowing what you're doing kind of rubs off.
And I'm like, no, I can do this, actually.
It's totally, yeah.
Like, it's another day at the office.
Yeah, I mean, it's so conversation-based as well.
Like, I talked to you when I immediately was like, oh, yes, absolutely.
But, you know, even people who, I've worked with people who are like, I've never gotten up on a stage before.
You know, people who aren't writers or comedians, people who aren't used to, you know, putting themselves out there in any way.
And, yeah, it is every time I'm just like, wow, when people agree to do it, I'm like, in my head.
I'm like, really?
Yeah, right.
Then everybody does still get up on stage.
Again, it's just a humongous amount of bravery.
I feel always so proud of everybody.
I was talking to someone the other day and they were like, so what is the moth?
And I was explaining what, you know, my experiences have been like with it.
Yeah. And he was like, so like a bard.
And I was like, yeah, kind of.
But like there is such a strong tradition of storytelling that all this sort of connects back to.
Like with my advice column as well, like I started nerding out immediately after I realized that I was a successful advice columnist.
I was like, I should see what the roots of this thing are.
Yeah.
And I was looking into it.
And the advice column was like one of the very few open doors where people who weren't traditionally,
allowed to have writing careers kind of found themselves.
So it was like a lot of women.
It was a lot of LGBTQ people.
And it was a lot of people who, for one reason or another,
just weren't given that like prime time slot of like,
oh, you're like our star journalist or you're our star writer.
And so it's just funny how the roots of these things tend to manifest in modern day life
where it's like, oh, I also found myself in a room with these people.
And, you know, my ancestors in the advice column world kind of have some symmetry with me.
Yeah.
Yeah, like these traditions of storytelling, like oral storytelling, what the moth does, and advice.
It's just fun to feel like you're a living aspect of these traditions, and you're kind of keeping them alive, and you're kind of, you're still doing it.
Yeah, that's a lovely way to look at it.
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John Paul, you have very kindly brought in a couple of questions that have been sent to you.
I will read the first one.
Ola, Poppy.
My friend and I have known each other for over 15 years, and I've always considered her one of my best friends,
as well as one of my few friendships that's endured several moves, schools, and countries.
Over the years, we've spoken less frequently, but still made time to get together for big events.
My perception of our friendship was shaken last fall.
She had gotten married in a small pandemic wedding
and had always said she'd put on a bigger wedding
to invite all her friends once it was feasible.
I heard from a mutual friend
that the wedding was officially being planned
but no date had been set yet.
I didn't think anything of it until a couple months later
when her sister messaged me and asked
whether I was coming to the wedding.
It was then I learned that not only had a date already been set
but it was hardly a month away.
The day of the wedding passed
and she posted all over social media about it.
I liked the post, hoping she'd see the notification and reach out with an explanation.
It's been half a year already, and I haven't been able to stop obsessing over it.
Even the funny posts we would send one another have dried up.
I keep replaying the last time I saw her over in my head wondering if I did anything to upset her or make her feel excluded.
I know our mutual friends, who also didn't receive any invites, are sick of me talking about it.
I feel like Katie Herod, helpless to stop invoking Regina George when everyone else has been.
past it. At this point, I don't know how to move on. How do I make peace with the fact that my longest
friendship is over and that for whatever reason that I may never know, she chose not to say anything
about it. Ooh. Okay. Layers, layers, layers, layers. My goodness. This is tough. I know. Well,
my favorite part of this letter is the part where she was like, I started liking the post.
I know. You ever just like be on social media and do something that just makes you feel like an
absolute creature.
Yes.
Yeah, I know.
And that's so tough, too, because you're so emotional.
And friendship's ending, we don't talk enough about how devastating that can be.
Like, there's space to talk about a relationship ending, like a romantic relationship
ending and how horrible that is.
But friendships, some of my friendships that have, like, gone by the wayside have impacted
me so much.
It's a really painful, it's a really painful time.
I don't think I've liked any, liked any posts, but still.
Also, you know, in our culture, it's the norm to bring a really formal end to romantic relationships.
We have a system where it's like, okay, we need to both sit down and really declare this thing over with.
But we don't have that for friendships, which can just sort of drift away or can just wordlessly stop.
And often in advice column world, I have to do a lot of work to dress up the same three pieces of advice over and over again.
Because most people are just one frank conversation away from the,
conclusion to their issue.
Like, I think if I were this person, and mind you, marriages and weddings, this is
something of an exotic culture to me.
Like, so my sister and my two girl cousins that I was raised with, they're all getting
married around the same time.
And it's all coming up in the near future.
And so I'm learning.
I'm listening.
I'm seated down.
I'm growing.
I am trying to understand their culture.
It's a lot.
It's a lot.
I have friends getting married.
And it brings out, like, it brings things for.
from the, like, from the, they just erupt.
It has its own separate logic to it, and I'm kind of finding that I don't always have
the good answer for, because like etiquette around weddings, it's so based on all these
millions of traditions.
Like, for example, I learned just recently that you're supposed to keep the top of your
wedding cake and put it in the fridge or the freezer for like a year.
Yeah, and then eat it on your one-year anniversary.
Yeah, I've heard that too.
Yeah, that is a thing.
What?
And so I'm sitting here in disbelief being like, okay, can you walk me through why?
And the answer is no.
No.
It's just...
There is, I'm sure, a reason, but it has been lost to time and everyone just does it because
it's what you're supposed to do.
Right.
And this is why I so rarely answer questions related to marriages or weddings because I'm just
like, girl, all this is so confusing.
Anytime there's like an arena in which the logic is like, because that's how we do it,
I tend to short circuit a bit and I'm like, uh, uh, uh.
But luckily for us, they are now like half a year out from this wedding.
Okay.
And I mean, my question for this person would be like, what is stopping you from just asking?
You know, like, hey, you know, I've always valued our friendship.
I saw you got married recently or had a ceremony.
Congratulations.
I was just wondering.
Yeah.
Like, I would have loved to attend.
And because I value you our friendship, I would just want, I'm interested to hear, like, you know, what's up?
Yeah, no, absolutely.
And those are the conversations that always feel, often feel.
impossible to have, you know, because then you have your answer. You know, and it's like if you're in
this weird limbo space, but then that can be tough too because you're building up resentment,
like maybe this friend hasn't even thought about it and you're stewing still and like getting
so upset. And, you know, sometimes too, the painful thing is that there are moments where you realize
that maybe they don't think of you as much of a friend as you think of them. And that really
taps into a lot of, like, deeply seated stuff.
So I feel that in here.
But it's also interesting, something that I noticed was this writer said, I know our mutual
friends who also didn't receive any invites, right?
So it's like, wait, how many people also didn't get invited, you know?
If it's not just you, is that better or worse?
Or you're like, you feel you're in a different echelon.
And, you know, so that was interesting to me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Also, like, okay, so Ola Pappy is saying, like, you know, have a conversation with this person,
John Paul Bramer is saying, like, find one of those mutual friends who didn't get an invite,
DM them being like, girl.
And this is why the separation is important.
Exactly.
I'll be like, girl, isn't that crazy?
Like what's going on?
I would just be fishing for like data.
What happened?
Not wanting to know is so relatable.
Sometimes it's just the idea of knowing is so scary and final because my instinct says
that yeah, your friendship probably has changed quite a bit over time if they didn't even think
to invite you.
And that's not something that's very pleasant to confront.
on a random afternoon, but...
No, absolutely not.
There's like a whiplash to it, really,
where it's just like you have so thought
of it as this one way and then suddenly not.
Okay, so the advice is...
Reach out.
What don't you ask?
Yeah.
Ask.
Why don't you ask?
Yeah.
All right.
Ola, Poppy.
I hit my artistic peak in college.
When I was doing an art minor
and consistently taking classes,
learning new skills,
and being challenged to get better.
I don't pay this much anymore.
I hastily sold my favorite,
college-era painting, a huge watercolor on paper depicting stormy waves right after graduation
for way too cheap to an acquaintance when I was broke. I've always deeply regretted it,
especially because I know I couldn't make another one like it now. A few years ago, I messaged
him explaining my regret and asking if I could buy it back. He sheepishly admitted he'd given
it to a friend as a wedding gift, and when I asked if I could have the friend's name to reach out
to him, he didn't respond. Fast forward to this month, the purchaser, who is a
also a musician, DM'd me asking permission to use my name and a song about said friend.
The line is, I gave you my name's painting.
Oof, okay.
The idea of a song about friendship is nice, and I don't mind from a privacy perspective, so I said yes.
But what I really wanted to say was, I want my painting back.
I still think about it and get sad.
I've considered doing some investigative work and reaching out to the friend now that I have
his name.
Should I?
Is there something else I should do?
I don't know why I feel so much.
much grief over this painting, but I really do.
It feels like a part of me got lost.
Thanks, angsty artist.
Also a moment for like the sign-offs for advice.
I love them.
Like how you, the art of deciding how you're going to sign off onto like an advice piece
you're sending in is to me something that should be studied.
Oh, this is a bummer.
Oh, it's so sad.
Oh.
Yeah, it's like to me, this is one of those rare questions where I have different answers to
address the two different aspects of it where so in the beginning you know I also make visual
art I sell it et cetera and to me like once I have sold it it's unfortunate but it's theirs
you know like I can't just be like hey I want that back yeah we exchange currency for goods
etc etc fabric of society we kind of need to have that and like it sucks moving on from that
probably isn't what this person had in mind but they kind of have to but then if my buddy didn't
answer my query as to who bought it, and then it's like, hey, I made art about the situation.
I would be like, oh, so your art kind of matters. Interesting. What about mine?
I would be openly cranky about that. I would be like, I would still love to know who this person
is because I would like to reach out, et cetera, et cetera. And so yeah, like, first aspect of the
whole thing to me is like, yeah, sucks. You sold it. It's theirs. Second aspect of it is just like,
this person needs to get some sass, I think.
I would agree with that because, yeah, there's, yeah, there's a level of audacity that
I was, I was a little like, ooh, okay, wait, what?
But then I think that's a thing that comes up a lot.
Sometimes people do have the audacity.
And then it's like, but then you have to deal with that, you know?
Are you going to say something to them?
Are you going to not?
Like, it's hard.
I get outraged all the time.
Like, I get outraged so easily.
Like, I just, my poor boyfriend is just like listening to me.
being outraged constantly about things like, and this guy, you like, stopped in the middle of
the sidewalk and he didn't move to, you know, whatever.
I am very, same, same, same.
I am very easily wronged.
Yes.
Actually, I'm in that community as well.
Yeah, yeah.
But yeah, sometimes it does, it does suck because, yes, you're right, the painting's gone.
And I wonder, too, and not to say, like, I just make another one, because, you know, they've
explained why that isn't a thing.
But I don't know.
It does also feel like maybe it's a little bit about this piece of them that they're
they don't feel they have access to anymore and that aren't going to have access to again.
And this has become a little representative of that, which is tough.
Yeah, I mean, see, this is why I can't be an advised columnist because I would write back and I would say,
you know, I, like, let's, let's collab on a strongly word letter.
Let's show up at his house.
Let's steal it.
Let's do a heist.
Yeah.
Let's do a heist.
Also, like, I just know.
that this song, and
my apologies if I'm completely
measuring the situation, maybe they're a lovely person.
This song probably sucks.
Like, the song has got to be the most obnoxious, like.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm just imagining, listening to it as this person
being like, the painting that I want back
is now in this soundcloud.
I know.
MP3 or whatever.
It doesn't see, yeah, I gave you angsty artist's painting.
Like, that's, I wonder what rhymes with that.
Maybe it's not a rhyming kind of song.
No, I know exactly what this song sounds like,
unfortunately.
Like, I completely, it's one of those, like,
talk singing ones that's sort of like folksy indie kind of yeah yeah yeah so I I guess I guess
the question they're asking is if they should try and reach out to the person who now has the
painting and I don't know I mean there's always the argument there's no harm in asking but I
I feel personally I probably couldn't or wouldn't do it I don't know what do you think
well what if we're running into wedding etiquette again where it's just like this was a wedding
gift and like it is also a little because then you'd be blowing up the other person
spot too of like they gave you something you know they didn't buy it they like oh my god wait that's so
funny yeah they're like oh i have this this like painting that i you know that i mean i guess they did
technically buy it you know but it's uh they didn't it wasn't like a specific wedding they just had it
in their house i don't know okay maybe i'm being unkind to this person maybe this the the person
who's who they sent it to actually came over and was like oh my god that's beautiful i love it and then
this was a thoughtful present who knows who knows we can't extrapolate i would i would still
ask. I would just be like, hey, here's the situation. Especially once this person made a song about
it, I would be like, well, now I'm... Yeah, that's fair. That's fair. And if they say no, then
that's it. We got to put it to bed. Yep, you got to move on. We got to put it to bad. Okay.
All right. Our last question,
Ola, Poppy. Like many queers, I have had more experience with bullies than I would prefer.
So I'm a bit surprised that has taken me a couple of years to realize that one of my good
friends is undeniably a bully. Let's call him Tom.
also the art of aliases and advice columns because I'm like,
I'm going to put their first and last name in this.
Okay, Tom.
I was introduced to Tom a couple years ago by a friend from college.
He has a huge network of gay friends and was initially really kind,
bringing my husband and I into his friend group.
Through this group, we've met some of our dearest friends.
But over the last year or two, the tone with Tom has changed.
He started ridiculing my job, aspects of my character,
spreading information about our attempts to have kids that we shared in confidence, etc.
I, uncharacteristically for me, tried to be direct and had a conversation with him about it, but he flatly denied that he had done anything.
I've also noticed him bully our friends, say horrible things about people we know behind their back.
I know that the bullying comes from a place of insecurity, but I am too old to hang out with bullies.
The problem is that he is still integral to our friend group and lives on our block.
Should I remove him from my life and, in effect, remove myself from the group?
Should I just ignore it?
Should I bully him back?
Be please advise.
This one should decide Pete.
Pete's like, look.
Pete's like.
I also appreciate that.
Should I bully him back?
I love that part so much.
It's like an option.
Like, let's lay out our options.
One of them is to bully him back.
I know where that comes from too.
Like I very much fostered a community over time where I'll answer some of these letters and I'll be like, do it back.
Yeah.
What if you just did it to him?
Let's fight.
This person, I mean.
Tom sounds like he sucks.
Yeah.
I don't want to be around Tom.
And, like, I can just so clearly see Tom.
I know what it's like to be around Tom.
I've met many Tom's in my life.
And it doesn't get better.
No.
No.
Tom's not waking up one day and being, like, time to go on the apology tour.
I've actually been really rude.
And I think, too, the really tough thing about passive aggression, which I, too, Midwestern,
like, I come by it honest.
The really tough thing about passive aggression is if you do what Pete did, which
just try and be an adult about it, and you'd say, like, hey, this thing is bothering me that
you did, that because of the passive aggression, you can just say, I didn't do that.
And I think people like Tom absolutely know what they're doing.
They always bake some plausible deniability into it.
They sort of mask it with humor or it's just like, especially in the gay community,
there's lots of just like, well, I'm just, you know, I'm reading.
I'm just being funny.
And it's just like, no, you're just being cruel.
Like you're not like a celebrated drag queen who's doing like comedy roasts.
You're like, we're just trying to eat lunch here, and you're just, like, being mean.
Yeah, I know.
And I think, too, like that, oh, it was just a joke or it wasn't that deep.
It's just like, it's so infuriating to deal with.
And there's really no way out of it other than to just not really talk to that person.
I feel like, obviously, you've gotten to the point where this is bothering you a lot
and you find it unpleasant to be around this person.
I mean, yeah, it does feel like maybe just don't talk to Tom anymore.
Yeah, I think, too, you have to trust the way that people make you feel.
because I think like for me I'm I'm simultaneously someone who's very easily wronged but I'm also someone who will question if I'm right to feel wronged where it's just sort of like yeah but if I really go through the math here what do they really do do they mean it what if they were having a bad day like I will just find ways to just sort of like wiggle out of blaming someone for something and sometimes you just have to be like I don't like who I am or the way I feel when I'm around this person and I think that that is a huge
sign that you shouldn't be friends with them. You shouldn't be hanging out as much as you do.
And like, I know what they're saying when they say like, oh, but they're in the friend group.
Yeah. I'm actually, I've gotten pretty good at like being able to still hang out with a friend
group and just sort of ice one of them out. Totally. I feel like there's a middle ground.
I feel like this, I feel like Pete feels like it's either continue to be to put up with being
bullied by Tom or lose all of my friends. And it's like there's probably a middle space there
where you go, you still hang out with these friends and you just are gorgeous.
to top. You know, you, you're polite, but you don't lean in, you know, maybe let's stop
scheduling one-on-one hangs with Tom, but, like, you know, in a group setting, the group is there,
but you don't, as you say, necessarily have to, like, really interact with this person just
because they're around. Yeah, I've also gotten pretty good at finding little ways to stop
someone's momentum when they're really trying to start their whole shtick of, like, saying
cruel things about people or... Wait, please share. I need to know this. Yeah, I'll just, like,
looks at them in the eyes, be like, okay, just, like, move on, like, let them know that I've
acknowledged and I'm now dismissing what you've just said and turning my attention elsewhere.
You kind of want to make it clear that you are hostile to this sentiment that they're
bringing to you.
You have to make it clear, like, this isn't going to land with me, and if we're going to talk
like this, I'm going to go hang out with the adults, you know, like belittle it in a way
and make them feel embarrassed for even saying something like that.
Yeah, and I don't know.
It sounds like Tom also is not very kind to the rest of the friend group.
Is it possible that everybody is having this dilemma separately?
Not that I want to encourage gossiping about someone behind their backs, but I don't know.
He doesn't sound like to be around.
This is what I love about doing this with a fellow gossip is that we consistently find ways to just be like, okay, but like, let's talk to the friends.
Yes, let's see.
Maybe, oh, gosh, I know.
Toxic.
But also, Tom is toxic in this situation.
They're strength in numbers.
Yes, they sure are.
If everybody is privately like, oh, gosh, I wish I didn't have to be around Tom anymore, but I have to.
because of the group, and everyone's thinking that independently, I don't know.
That also solves a problem.
There is, like, no greater dopamine rush than, like, talking to someone and sort of, like,
tiptoeing towards being like, do we kind of both have this problem with someone?
And then suddenly they're like, okay, right?
Yeah.
Friends for life.
I activate.
Friends for life.
There are lights in my brain that turn on in that situation where it's like, ugh.
Yeah.
I'll be happy for days after this.
Yeah.
And honestly, like, if this person have Pete and written in and with all of this and did
not have the part where he tried to talk to Tom about it, then as you say, the answer would be
to have a frank conversation. But you already tried to have a frank conversation with him,
and he's not open to it. He's like, he's really doubling down on being the meanest person in the
room. So, you know, adjust accordingly. Yeah, it's always funny when these people in their letters
sort of cut off what I would have said, where they're like, by the way. They're like,
I already actually did the thing that you would have advised me to do. So now what?
Yeah. All right. I think that that wraps us here. Thank you so much.
much for coming in. John Paul, it's always a pleasure to talk to you, and I have loved
being able to give advice alongside you. Thank you for having me. Anytime you want to join in
on Ola Poppy, we can have Ola Chloe. You're going to regret saying that so soon. You're going to
have to move. All right. Thank you so much for coming again. Thank you. Chloe Salmon is a director
at the moth. Her favorite moth moments come on show days when the cardio is done, the house lights go
down and the magic settles in. This episode of the Moth podcast was produced by Sarah
Austin Janice, Sarah Jane Johnson, and me, Mark Salinger. The rest of the Moth's leadership team
includes Sarah Haberman, Christina Norman, Marina Clucay, Jennifer Hickson, Jordan Cardonale,
Caledonia Cairns, Kate Tellers, Suzanne Rust, and Patricia Ureña. The Moth podcast is presented by
Odyssey. Special thanks to their executive producer, Leah Reese Dennis. All Moth stories are true,
by their storytellers.
For more about our podcast, information on pitching your own story, and everything else,
go to our website, the moth.org.
Okay, only 10 more presents to wrap.
You're almost at the finish line.
But first...
There, the last one.
Enjoy a Coca-Cola for a pause that refreshes.
