The Moth - The Moth Radio Hour: Cringeworthy
Episode Date: August 20, 2024The Germans have a word for second-hand embarrassment -- Fremdschämen! This hour may have you blushing on our storytellers' behalves. Wince-worthy moments from the halls of academia to a for...eign train station, and a reminder to ALWAYS check who you're emailing before you hit "send." This episode is hosted by Moth Senior Director Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media.Storytellers: Marissa sees more of her mother than she'd like at her dissertation defense. Azhar Bawde-Ali creates an embarrassing situation over e-mail.On his way to a meeting at Warner Bros., Gbenga Akinnagbe ends up stranded on the side of a mountain.Joanne Richards has trouble saying "no."Wendy Suzuki describes her relationship to her emotions as "a struggle for control."
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From PRX, this is The Moth Radio Hour.
I'm Meg Bowles.
I'm a blusher.
And if someone says, are you blushing? It
accelerates to full-on magenta. I chalk it up to my Scottish roots, but let's
just say it's hard to hide my embarrassment. There are all kinds of
situations that cause us embarrassment, like the time you enthusiastically waved
at someone waving in your direction only to realize they were actually waving at someone behind you. Or you're in that awkward situation
where you absolutely know the person but you cannot for the life of you remember
their name and they're waiting for you to introduce them. Or perhaps you're a
teenager and in that case it's probably anything and everything your parents do in public. We all have our moments, situations that, looking back, make us cringe.
Our first story is easily a 9.1 on the embarrassment Richter scale.
So much so, in order to spare her mother's blushes,
this storyteller chooses to only be identified by her first name.
She shared it at one of our open mic story slams in New Orleans,
where we partner with New Orleans Public Radio.
Live from Cafe Istanbul, here's Marissa.
One year, eight months, and 11 days ago was the biggest day of my life to that point.
It was the day that I would finally, officially fulfill my lifelong dream of becoming a scientist.
I'm obsessed with science. I especially like worms, bugs, parasites, ants, mosquitoes.
I like mosquitoes so much that my husband saves them for me when he kills them
so I can identify what species they are.
To become a scientist, you have to get a PhD.
And at that time, I had been working towards my PhD for five long, difficult years.
And at the culmination of this process, I have to give my dissertation defense, or defend
my research, which is composed of an hour-long presentation
to the general public, friends, family,
whoever wants to come, and my dissertation committee,
which was composed of five experts in my field.
And after I'm done with that presentation,
I sit for two hours and they question me
on why I did what I did, how I did,
and then they ultimately decide whether I pass or fail.
And if I fail, that is they ultimately decide whether I pass or fail.
And if I fail, that is the end of the road for me as a scientist.
My life stream crushed.
The room where I was to give my defense was small, but it was packed with about 30 or
so people, standing room only.
There were people out the door. And my PowerPoint presentation was projected against a wall,
and immediately to the left of it
were video projections of people who were live video
conferencing in.
And they were projected really big, their faces
looking at the computer.
And I remember thinking to myself,
I really hope that they know that their faces
are being projected on this wall
right next to my presentation
and don't do anything embarrassing.
So here we are, March 29th, 2018, 12 o'clock noon.
Everything in my life had led up to this moment.
It's go time.
I start.
Hi, my name is Marissa.
Thank you for coming to my defense.
Today I will be speaking about the effects of SIV
on adipose tissue.
When out of the corner of my eye,
I see a notification pop up on that video conference wall.
It says someone has joined the meeting and it's my mom.
And I'm so excited because my mom was able to watch
my defense from where she lives in Florida.
Well, I was excited.
Until her video clicks on.
And suddenly, all you see is my mom,
fresh from the shower,
wearing nothing but a towel,
from the waist down.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I scream bloody murder.
Oh God, Mom, no!
And I run to the front of the room.
I smash myself against the wall to cover my face.
I run to the front of the room.
I smash myself against the wall to cover my face.
I run to the front of the room.
I smash myself against the wall to cover my face.
I run to the front of the room.
I smash myself against the wall to cover my face.
I run to the front of the room.
I smash myself against the wall to cover my face.
I run to the front of the room.
I smash myself against the wall to cover my face.
I run to the front of the room.
I smash myself against the wall to cover my face.
I run to the front of the room.
I smash myself against the wall to cover my face. I run to the front of the room. I smash myself against the wall to cover my face And I run to the front of the room,
I smash myself against the wall
to cover her naked body,
failing to realize that she is now
being projected directly on my back.
I also don't realize, because I can't see, but everyone else can see that she hears me
scream and army style drops to the floor and rolls slowly out of the frame. Still here, yeah.
So I'm staring at the audience in horror.
No one says a word.
And finally, I plead.
Can somebody please help me? And after what feels like the longest 60 seconds
of my life, IT cuts the feed.
I walk back to the podium, slowly processing the situation,
struggling to breathe, and I look up,
and I make eye contact with my fiancee,
who has just seen my mother's tits.
Then I make eye contact with my dad,
who has just seen my mom and his recent ex-wife expose herself
to an entire room full of strangers.
Then I make high contact with my dissertation committee,
all five of them who are sitting front and center
who have all just seen my mother's breasts.
I have no choice, I have to continue.
And so I take a deep breath, I gather myself,
and I proceed one more time into my presentation.
So after the presentation's over,
I sit down for the two hours of questioning.
I also found out after the fact
that everything happened so fast
that half of the room thought I was just losing my mind.
And that this was all part of my presentation.
By the way, I passed.
Love you, Mom.
Marissa is a scientist in immunology and specializes in infectious disease, and she says she's loving
every minute of it. I asked Marissa how the conversation went when she finally talked to
her mother that day. That day I called my mom probably eight times before she finally answered around dinnertime. So it was like all day and when she
finally answered she was just like I'm sorry in the tiniest voice and I just
laughed and I told her it was okay and that I passed And every time my mom comes to a talk,
we confirm that she's planning to attend fully clothed.
And it just never gets old.
Words of wisdom for Marissa,
be grateful for those embarrassing moments
because it makes other things,
and in her case, other presentations, feel like a breeze.
Embarrassing situations come in all shapes and sizes.
I've heard so many stories of people who've accidentally shared something in
the family group chat that caused generational chaos, or sent a message
intended for one person but accidentally shared their thoughts on the
movie they saw last night to all in attendance for the legal seminar over Zoom.
Our next storyteller, Azar Bandayali, can relate.
Azar told this story at the Bell House in Brooklyn
where WNYC is a media partner of the MoF.
Here's Azar.
I have a weird relationship with self-doubt.
Like I was sitting down there and I was fine and then I got to the stairs and I'm like freaking out.
You got this!
That wasn't for sympathy, it's a lead-in to the next part.
Like when I look in the mirror, I don't see a happy, healthy, somewhat intelligent man who's loved unconditionally by everybody.
I see this Indian dude that tries too hard and smiles too much.
I am my therapist's retirement plan. But all of that stopped one day on a summer morning in the park in Atlanta when my friend
took the best picture of me ever.
I was 23 years old.
I had just lost some weight and I looked good.
I was resting on my elbows, leaning back, the sun in my face.
I look like a baseball player that's sliding into base, just casually. My face was tilted just the right way,
so that the profile that looked at the camera,
I decided was going to be the only profile
that any camera would ever see for the rest of my life.
It was a good photo.
It's the best photo I've ever taken.
I saw it when my friend posted it on Facebook
the following Monday morning, and I got to work, and I saw it, and I copied the link,
and I sent it to all my friends,
and I sent it to my mom, and I said,
Mom, I'm cute.
And then I went back to work.
I sent some emails, and I went to a meeting,
and I came back to my desk, and I had 7,500 emails.
That doesn't happen. and I came back to my desk and I had 75 unread emails.
That doesn't happen.
So, turns out before I went to my meeting, I'd sent an email to a thread with 400 people
in America, Europe, and India.
Um, the self-doubt came back.
Uh-oh, you're about to get fired.
I sat down and I started going through the email and I kept scrolling and one after another
again and again and again I found Photoshopped images.
Somebody had plopped me or pulled me out of the park and plopped me on a door in the middle of an ocean
at the end of Titanic.
I was in the arms of Rafiki at the top of a rock
in Lion King and I...
Somebody cropped my face and put it on Miley Cyrus
in the wrecking ball video and then... and I, somebody cropped my face and put it on Miley Cyrus
in the wrecking ball video and then,
and then my face was the wrecking ball.
It's the most creative shit I've ever seen.
It was hilarious.
Eventually people made T-shirts of my face.
People started coming to my office
and asking for the email guy.
And I realized I look good in those pictures.
I killed the productivity of an entire office for weeks.
I didn't get fired. I eventually got promoted, which was nice.
And life went back to normal.
Next year, I decided I was going to run the New York City
Marathon as a charity runner.
And I needed to raise $5,000.
I got to $2,500500 and then I hit a wall.
No money was coming in.
I was training more and more every day and I was more and more exhausted and I couldn't
keep doing the fundraisers.
It was stressful and I used to have these nightmares of 5,000 kids lining up to get
food and I would get to the $,500th kid and look down,
and I would have no more food,
and I would have to turn away each one of those kids,
one after another.
And I would wake up in the embrace of self-doubt.
Ooh, I'm not cut out for this.
Ooh, I'm disappointing a lot of people.
What if I don't get to run?
And then it hit me.
I woke up one day and I drafted a Facebook post
and that sounded like a Ponzi scheme invite
combined with a kidnapper's note.
And it said, I have 50 more of these pictures.
I will post the next one
when I get $200 donated to my fundraiser.
And I tacked on the Lion King picture to it,
and I uploaded it to Facebook.
Within 30 minutes, I had $200.
Then I did the Titanic one for $500.
And then I did Miley Cyrus for $500.
Within 48 hours I had $2,500 and I reached my goal.
I had an OnlyFans before there was an OnlyFans.
Who's cute now?
We raised, we gave the money to charity, I crushed the marathon. And you'll be happy to know my self-doubt is cured.
Nah, I'm kidding.
I doubt myself every day.
But what I do now is I doubt the doubt.
I, if I can survive being memed
and if I can raise $5,000 on a whim,
and I can run a fucking marathon,
then what's there to doubt about the 20 page presentation
that I have to do this week?
That shit's easy, yo.
That shit's easy, yo.
That shit's easy, yo. Yeah! Yeah! Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! Everyone who attended got a t-shirt with his face on it. You can find out more about that story, and yes, we have pictures of those hilarious memes.
That's on our website, TheMoth.org.
Coming up, being stuck between a rock and a mortifyingly hard place
when The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts
and presented by the public radio exchange prx.org.
I love to take long weekends in the summer to relax.
I travel to the Catskills, to Montauk, and to the Jersey Shore near Cape May.
Sometimes while I'm relaxing on the beach, I wonder, wouldn't it be so amazing to offset
this trip and make a bit of extra money?
While I'm away enjoying my vacation, my home could be working hard to earn me a little
extra spending cash.
I could host my home on Airbnb for other travelers from around the world during specific date
ranges that work with my schedule.
Are you getting away soon?
You could make some extra money while you're away by hosting on Airbnb.
Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how
much at airbnb.ca slash host. This is the Moth Radio Hour from PRX. I'm Meg Boles.
So often people will keep their secret humiliations all to themselves. You know
the ones, the thing you did that no one saw that you can absolutely never repeat
or admit to.
But if working at the moth has taught me anything, it's that your most embarrassing moment has the makings to be a good story.
You may know our next storyteller, Banga Akinabe, from his countless stage, TV, and film roles.
But what you may not know is while other celebrities insist on a car and driver,
Banga prefers his trusty bike. But what you may not know is while other celebrities insist on a car and driver,
Banga prefers his trusty bike.
From a main stage we produced in New York City, here's Banga Akinabe live at the Moth.
I love my bike.
I love my bike.
I take my bike with me everywhere. I live in Brooklyn.
It's the best way to get around the city.
I love my bike so much. I travel with it. I have a bike case. I put my bike in the bike case
I check it in like luggage. It is luggage and on this particular day
I'm in Los Angeles for a week of meetings and I have a meeting at Warner Brothers studios that I'm very excited about and
I check my GPS and it says 40 minutes to get there. No problem. I jump
on my bike and I head out. My GPS then tells me I need to turn off road to get
to where I'm going. I get off my bike, I start to walk it onto the dirt path and
the moment I step onto the dirt path my GPS goes out. No problem. I know the
direction in which I need to go. I'll
eventually get to Warner Brothers, right? So I keep going. Path starts meandering, disappearing,
reappearing, and it occurs to me that this path is not actually a path, but a dried out creek bed.
And I've been following for about five minutes.
And I'm like, well, okay, this is a little bump in the road,
but I'll just keep going.
Eventually, the ground in front of me starts to incline to a little hill,
and I'm walking my bike up this hill.
The hill gets more and more steep,
and I find that I have to start to use my hands to climb this hill. And I'm like, that's cool, that's cool. I'm pretty
rugged. I can do this. I can use my hands to climb this hill and take my bike with me.
No problem. And as I continue on, I find that I have to now use my entire body to climb
this hill. The sun is baking down on me. I'm higher and higher on this hill and for a
second I consider going back until I turn around and I look down and I'm
struck with just how high I am right now on this hill. I realized it's more
dangerous to go down than it is to go up so I've decided that I should probably
stop and rest because I'm getting more and more tired.
So I take my bike and I wedge it between some bushes and I grab one bush and it comes right out of the ground.
I start to like laugh at how ridiculous this all is because I got up this morning thinking I'm going to a meeting at Warner Brothers.
And it occurs to me that it's time I should be honest to myself and that this is not a hill but a mountain.
And for some reason I've accidentally started to climb this mountain.
And then I start to think like, there's a very good chance I'm not going to make it out of here.
And I start to think like, I probably might need get help, because I don't know where I am.
I don't have water.
I'm very tired, and the sun is getting stronger.
And so I take out my cell phone.
And of course, my cell phone has one bar.
And I'm thinking, well, who am I going to text?
Everyone in New York.
Well, they're in New York.
And everyone in LA that I know, like it's
like I can't even get my friends in LA to come pick me up at the airport, let
alone find me on some random mountain in Los Angeles. I was like I'm not even
gonna try. And just then I look up and across from me on the other mountain
facing the mountain I am on is a ridge and I see a man and he's
just been staring at me and his dogs are just running around playing it was such
a beautiful picture and I felt such tragedy and fear and all I wanted to do
was scream out to this guy for help and I knew that one he would not hear me and
and and two there was very little he
could do to help me. And so I decided I might have to just go on. And because I have a book
bag, I can't just put my bike on my back. I have to crawl about two feet at a time,
then reach back and pull my bike. I'm dragging my bike up the mountain across bushes and rocks,
watching my beautiful machine get beat up,
but I will not leave my bike behind.
And so I continue up and I see something above me
and it looks like an antenna.
And I know that antennas are usually
on some sort of platform, some sort of firm ground.
And maybe if I get up there,
I might be able to like save myself.
I don't know what's up there,
but at least right now I have hope.
So I keep climbing, I keep climbing,
and I crawl over the edge of this mountain
onto where this antenna is,
and right by the antenna is a path.
And I am shaking, I'm so excited.
My face is covered with
nondust, my eyes are sweat all over, my helmet to skew. I'm
like, I look very disheveled. And I look up and there is a
woman walking towards me and I'm thinking, I don't want to scare
this woman, but I really need her help.
And so I walked towards her and she's approaching me.
I'm approaching her.
We're about 10 feet from each other.
When at the same time we say to each other,
do you know how to get off of this mountain?
I'm like, no, no, I thought you would tell me.
I don't know where I am.
I'm so lost, please help me. She's like, well, what about the way you just came that path? I said, I didn't come from that path. I climbed off this mountainside. I don't know what's going on. I was like, what about you? What's back where you came from? She's like, well, we can go back where I came from and see if we can find our way. So she turns around and you walk back to where she came. And we run into a group of hikers. Now they were real hikers. The two of us, we were just like lost people in the wilderness on
the edge of life and death. And so they help her, they tell, they point her in the
direction in which she needs to go and they tell me in the direction I
need to go. So we start walking, me and the hikers. I'm just thinking in my head,
oh my god, I can't, how ridiculous my life is this morning and then all of a sudden I hear someone say are you the guy from the wire?
Yes, yes, I
Was very fortunate to be part of that show. I mean, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, you can watch it several times
And you get something different from it every time you were right. Yes. Yes
And and then his friend says do you have any acting
advice? I was like oh I mean well theater is good I like theater I do theater and
I'm in my mind I'm just thinking I just need to get to this meeting I just need
to get off this mountain and they get me to a road and I I ride my bike down this
road and I hit Barham Boulevard and I know Barham Boulevard. Warner Brothers
is on Barham Boulevard and it's three blocks ahead of me and I see it and I get a phone
call and it's the assistant my manager's office who's telling me that they want to cancel
the meeting for the day and reschedule to have it later that afternoon in Hollywood back on the other side of the mountain.
I lose it. I start laughing uncontrollably. I'm just that guy on the side of the road in LA, sunbaked, just laughing at the sun.
And to this day, I'm not quite sure how I ended up on that mountain or what mountain it was.
But I do know that I pay attention
to the little things now, all the little things,
like GPS instructions, whether they're
the walking GPS instructions or the biking GPS instructions.
I pay attention to how much weight is in my book bag
before I head out on the day, whether I have water. I pay so much attention, I
probably pay too much attention because you never know when the wrong choice
might just end you up making life-or-death decisions on the side of a
mountain. Thank you.
mountain. Thank you.
Banga Akinabe is a successful actor of both stage and screen. He said being an actor you routinely have to put yourself in embarrassing situations. You have to be
willing to fall on your face in front of people. The worst thing you can be is a
safe actor.
As for the getting stuck on the side of a mountain incident,
he said he wasn't as embarrassed as he was, thankfully,
survived.
You could see a picture of Banga and his bike
on our website, themoft.org.
Next up, a different type of situation that leads to mortification.
You know, agreeing to something in order to be polite that ends up making you uncomfortable.
Like that double date you went on to help your sister out only to discover your date
is your boss's son.
The I had the best intention type of embarrassment, which is exactly the term I would use to describe
our next story from Joe Richards.
She told it at an Open Mic Story Slam competition at Howler in Melbourne, Australia,
where we partner with the Australian Broadcast Corporation, ABCRN.
Here's Joe Richards.
I volunteered at an ashram in Lesbos in exchange for accommodation and the only other volunteer
was this very tall Israeli man and it seemed very natural that we should just have an affair
over chopping vegetables and meditation.
I left to go to Rome and he hinted that he wanted to come with me and I said no because I was meeting a friend.
A week later I went to an internet cafe and I received an email from him
suggesting that he should come for a week and my immediate response was no.
It felt like that affair had existed in a time of sun and vegetables and Grecian stones and olive trees
and it was best to just leave it in that time and place.
He replied and asked, why wouldn't I be open to the possibility?
And now if I received that reply I would run because why was he questioning my
no but back then being younger I thought oh yeah I don't want to be I don't want
to be close to possibility yeah I want to be that person that's open and
adventurous and yeah sure he should come So we arranged to meet at Florence train station and I so distinctly remember standing beneath
this big electronic dashboard looking down the line of the railway track and all of these
very polished, well-dressed Italians in white and beige coursing past me and off in the
distance I saw this man get off the train and my whole body me, the no got louder and louder.
And he got closer and closer and he went to kiss me and I hugged him instead.
And so began this torturous few days because there was nothing in me at the time,
and I have so much compassion for her, that even could conceive that I could be honest
and just say, actually, hey, this isn't working for me.
Instead, I made my feeling wrong.
And I just really struggled with it and how could I feel this after he'd flown all this way for me? And he kept telling me
to relax and of course that just made everything so much worse and over the
days I just got more contorted and twisted as I completely
invalidated my own experience. And it kind of culminated in this fight at another train
station in Venazza and he said he was leaving because he'd flown all of this way and I was cold and I was like, yeah.
Like...
And so I went to wait with him for his train at the train station because at the time I
thought that was the polite thing to do.
And we were waiting there and there was all this tension and turmoil as if we'd been lovers for years
but we just kind of met a couple of weeks ago.
And he was berating me and asking me why I was having this feeling and I was like, I don't know.
And I just kept looking down this tunnel, this train tunnel and just waiting for the train to come.
And the train just kept getting delayed and delayed and delayed.
But I sat there politely with him.
politely with him. And finally it came and I can't tell you the giddiness that he might actually go and this whole experience might soon be over. And he got
up and picked up his backpack and he walked towards the door and I played my solemn, I'm sorry, role.
And then he turned around and I thought, oh no.
And he said, I could have loved you. And the doors closed behind him.
And it was kind of like that moment when you say goodbye but then you go in the same direction.
He came back and sat next to me and we waited another two hours
for this train to come.
And he did finally get on the train and the liberation, the absolute joy that I felt, I so relished that experience.
It was such a contrast of this bow being pulled back and then just this release
of this feeling of freedom that I was just free of this whole situation. And now that
I'm grown, what I love most about being grown is that how I feel is valid. And I don't owe anyone my politeness.
And I can change my mind at any time.
And I now know that being honest about where yes, and my no is a no.
Thank you.
Joe Richards is a public speaking coach, speechwriter, and a sovereignty mentor who coaches and educates
on boundaries and personal clarity.
She told me that in her early 20s she couldn't conceive of saying anything that might hurt
someone's feelings.
She said, I had to learn that it's okay for others to be disappointed.
Being polite over being honest can create a lot of confusion.
The story would have been so different if I had simply been able to say,
this isn't working for me, and we could both go our separate ways.
Coming up,
a neuroscientist confronts her discomfort with emotion when the Moth
Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts,
and presented by PRX.
This is the Moth Radio Hour from PRX.
I'm Meg Bowles and our final story in this hour comes from neuroscientist Dr.
Wendy Suzuki, an expert on the brain where our emotions take hold.
And no, understanding the brain doesn't always help with the feelings.
Live from St. Ann's in Brooklyn, here's Dr. Wendy Suzuki. In my family, real emotions were something to be hidden, to be tamped down.
I often like to say that you can think of my family kind of like a Japanese American version of Downton Abbey without the money, the real estate, or the servants. Growing up,
showing emotion would call too much attention to yourself. It would embarrass
the family. So no emotions in public, good or bad. But as a neuroscientist, I've always been fascinated with the study of the neurobiology
of emotion, even though personally, my own personal relationship with emotions can be
described as a struggle for control.
So growing up, this was always difficult.
And when I grew up, this was particularly difficult
because I've always been somebody that cried at weddings.
Any and all weddings, even fake TV weddings, I would cry.
And so the struggle would happen all the time.
And growing up, I was always trying to avoid
these situations. Weddings, graduations, eulogies, I couldn't even imagine having to give a eulogy.
So when my father passed away, I knew I couldn't participate in his eulogy and I remember being
so grateful that my younger brother stepped up and he said,
no problem, I will do it.
And he gave the most beautiful eulogy for our father.
And I was filming him as he was telling this beautiful story
that I'd never heard before.
And I could see the emotion welling up,
and I could see that struggle that was so familiar to me
and I felt so uncomfortable. I had to stop filming. I couldn't put on film that intimate moment.
Well, about three months later I was having breakfast. I was having, it was six thirty in
the morning, early in the morning, in my Manhattan apartment.
And I wasn't having breakfast,
I was actually doing something I do every single morning,
which is a tea meditation,
which is a meditation over the brewing and savoring of tea.
I do this every morning, it grounds me, it opens me up,
it sparks creativity.
But that morning, the phone rang, first thing at 6.30 a.m.
But it was a number from Shanghai,
and my brother was living in Shanghai, so I picked it up.
But it wasn't my brother.
It was my brother's business partner,
who called to tell me that my younger brother
had had a massive heart attack, and he didn't make it.
So only three months after we lost my father,
my younger brother was suddenly and irretrievably gone.
Our original family of four were now down to only two.
And I remember hanging up that phone and time stood still.
I could feel my heart beating.
I could feel the sweat on my palms.
And it got really quiet so that all the thoughts in my head got 10 times louder. What do you
do when you lose somebody that you thought was going to be there for the
rest of your life? And then at some moment I realized that the only one that
didn't know the news was my mother and I couldn't call her to tell her. It was still early so I
immediately booked a flight from New York to California and I managed to get
the most uncomfortable middle seat that any airline had to offer. And not only
that, the middle seats video monitor was broken. So I had six and a half hours there and all I had to do was think about what I was going
to say to my mother.
And I was worried because her hearing isn't great.
I was really scared that I was going to scare her when I came into the house because I hadn't
told her I was coming.
So I get home, I knock really loud, I open the door and I say, Mom, I'm home, it's Wendy, I'm home.
And I scared her.
She came down, but we laughed about it.
And I'll never forget that look she had on her face, smiling,
when she said, What are you doing here?
And I had to tell her that I had the most terrible
news, that David was gone. And we stood there and cried together and we sat
down, we cried together some more. But that crying was such a relief because it
meant that I had done my job.
I had one job to do that day
and only I could have done that job.
And that cry that we had meant that I fulfilled my job.
I did it.
But I also knew that there was nobody in the world
that my mother needed more at that moment than
me and there was nobody that I needed more in the world than my mother.
So the next week I stayed in California and we accepted all the condolence calls and visits
and we never knew whether it was going to be crying or laughing and reminiscing.
But I could tell you that our favorite visit was when my cousin came over.
He walked right in, he opened his laptop, and he immediately started showing my mother
and I the most extensive set of vacation photos from his last two trips to Germany and Japan
and my mom and I looked at each other and we said show me more what's the nice
beer Stein what other sushi did you eat because we needed that relief so much we
didn't talk about my brother once that afternoon we didn didn't have to. We knew what we were feeling and that
was such a wonderful relief. So after the end of that week I flew back to New York and
I felt like my life came to a screeching halt. There were these waves of grief that would
come over me and I couldn't control when they would just
suddenly come over me. And to be sure I know that I'm not the only person to
have lost somebody but I was shocked at how devastating these waves of grief
could be and how much they colored every single moment of my life during that time. And somewhere in the haze of that grief,
I realized it was a eulogy to give,
and that I was the only one that could do it.
So I knew I could write it,
but could I actually get through this thing
that I had essentially been fearing all of
my life without doing the thing that scared me most?
Crying incoherently, publicly, in front of not only family but all the friends that were
going to come out to my brother's eulogy. So a month and a half later, I'm standing in front of 200 friends and family at one of
my brother's favorite golf clubs on what would have been his 51st birthday.
Behind me, beautiful greens, to my left there was a beautiful
portrait of my brother framed in flowers, and in front of me 200 faces around
round tables looking up at me. And so I started by telling them that my brother was a legend.
He was a legend for all the friends that he made.
He was that guy that you wanted to be friends with.
But then I got to that part that I was scared of,
the part that I wanted to tell about how he loved
and how he was so proud of his family.
And I could feel the emotions coming up,
and I could feel the struggle that was so familiar coming up.
And you know what?
I just cried.
I just cried there, and I let it out.
And I invited everybody to cry with me.
And after a lifetime of damping
that down and trying to control it and struggling, it felt so good to let that
emotion, let the grief and the sadness come out in those tears. it actually felt good to just feel those emotions.
And it felt great to invite everybody in that room
to feel them with me and cry with me.
And when I made that invitation, I
could feel the shift in the room.
Well, I'm teaching a first year seminar class right now called How to Build a Big, Fat,
Fluffy Brain.
And we have talked about the power of human emotion.
And during that lecture, one of my students said, I love all those positive emotions,
but I just want to skip over those negative ones.
And I thought, that sounds familiar.
But what I've learned is that emotions are essential messages.
They tell us things about ourselves. They tell us what we value,
what we hold dear in our hearts. That grief and sadness, I realized was an
expression of my deep, deep love for my brother. I can't have that love without the grief and the sadness and the sorrow that
comes when that person is no longer there. I can't have one without the other. I can't
have the deep love without the grief. I can't have the relief without the anxiety. I can't have the joy without the fear. So I now
have a different relationship with my own emotions. Okay, I'm always going to be
embarrassed that I cry at fake TV weddings, but today even in public, I'm not embarrassed about showing my true emotions, because I
know that they are one of the most powerful tools that we have to show and to know who
we really are as human beings.
Thank you.
Applause
Dr. Wendy Suzuki is an author, professor of Neuroscience, and Dean of the College of Arts and Science at New York University.
She says these days she finds herself crying in public on a somewhat regular basis.
It's still terribly uncomfortable and she struggles with it every time, but she's learning
to stay focused on the empowering part of showing your emotions.
You can find out more about Dr. Suzuki and see pictures of her and her
family on our website themoth.org. In this filtered Instagram world we're
living in, everyone is so focused on being perfect and enviable, but I argue
that those embarrassing moments are actually gold. We need to be able to laugh
at ourselves.
No one is perfect, no one.
And all you have to do is spend a little time coaxing folks
into telling you about their most embarrassing moment
and voila, instant connection.
That's it for this episode of the Moth Radio Hour.
We hope you'll join us again next time.
This episode of The Moth Radio Hour was produced by me, Jay Allison, and Meg Bowles, who also
hosted and directed the stories in the show. Co-producer is Vicki Merrick, associate producer Emily Couch. The rest of the Moth's leadership team includes Sarah
Haberman, Christina Norman, Sarah Austin-Giness, Kate Tellers, Marina Cluchet,
Leanne Gulley, Suzanne Rust, Brandon Grant, Sarah Jane Johnson, and Aldi Casa.
Moth stories are true, as remembered and affirmed by the storytellers. Our theme music is by The Drift.
Other music in this hour from Chet Atkins, Herbie Hancock, The Blind Boys of Alabama,
Guthrie Trapp and Youssef Latif.
We receive funding from the National Endowment for the Arts.
The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts
and presented by
PRX.
For more about our podcast, for information on pitching us your own story and everything
else, go to our website, TheMoth.org.