The One You Feed - Debbie Millman on Why Design Matters
Episode Date: July 12, 2022Debbie Millman is a writer, designer, educator, artist, brand consultant and host of the podcast, Design Matters.  Debbie was named one of the most creative people in business by Fast Company Magazi...ne and one of the most influential designers working today by Graphic Design USA.  She is the author of 7 books, including her most recent, Why Design Matters: Conversations with the World’s Most Creative People In this episode, Eric and Debbie Millman have an interesting discussion about why design matters in every aspect of your life.. But wait, there’s more! The episode is not quite over!! We continue the conversation and you can access this exclusive content right in your podcast player feed. Head over to our Patreon page and pledge to donate just $10 a month. It’s that simple and we’ll give you good stuff as a thank you! Debbie Millman and I Discuss Why Design Matters and … Her book, Why Design Matters: Conversations with the World’s Most Creative People Her slow process of shedding shame from her traumatic past Finding her way back to creative work after pursuing security Taking small steps and practicing every day can bring forth hope Design is about intention and decision making about everything Learning to deal with rejection and to perseverance How confidence comes after you do something many times Expecting things to be hard and messy Debbie Millman links: Debbie’s website Twitter Facebook By purchasing products and/or services from our sponsors, you are helping to support The One You Feed and we greatly appreciate it. Thank you! If you enjoyed this conversation with Debbie Millman, check out these other episodes: How to Stay Creative with Austin Kleon Creative Thinking and Action Through Designs with Sarah Stein GreenbergSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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A lot of people wait to do things until they feel ready to do them.
And that's something that I would urge people to try to break away from,
because it's very rare that we ever feel ready.
Welcome to The One You Feed.
Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance
of the thoughts we have. Quotes like, garbage in, garbage out, or you are what you think,
ring true. And yet, for many of us, our thoughts don't strengthen or empower us.
We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don't have instead of
what we do. We think things that hold us back
and dampen our spirit. But it's not just about thinking. Our actions matter. It takes conscious,
consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other
people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.
I'm Jason Alexander.
And I'm Peter Tilden.
And together, our mission on the Really Know Really podcast
is to get the true answers
to life's baffling questions
like why the bathroom door doesn't go all the way to the floor, what's in the museum of failure,
and does your dog truly love you? We have the answer. Go to reallyknowreally.com and register
to win $500, a guest spot on our podcast, or a limited edition signed Jason bobblehead.
The Really Know Really podcast. Follow us on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thanks for joining us.
Our guest on this episode is Debbie Millman, and she's one of those guests where I kind of am pulling at strings to cram a bunch of what she's done into a single intro.
So I'll say this.
She's a writer, designer, educator, artist, brand consultant, and host of the podcast
Design Matters. Debbie was named one
of the most creative people in business by Fast Company Magazine and one of the most influential
designers working today by Graphic Design USA. She's the author of seven books, and on this
episode, we'll discuss her most recent book, Why Design Matters, Conversations with the World's Most Creative People.
Hi, Debbie. Welcome to the show.
Thank you, Eric. It's just a complete honor to be here.
It's such a pleasure to have you on. Years ago, I interviewed Krista Tippett,
and I said to her it was a little bit like cooking for Julia Childs, right? And I feel
that way a little bit interviewing you because you are so good at what you do. I respect your work so much.
We'll be talking about your long career across a lot of things.
We'll be talking about your latest book, which is called Why Design Matters.
But before we get to that, let's start like we always do with the parable.
There's a grandparent who's talking with their grandchild and they say, in life, there's
two wolves inside of us that are always at battle.
One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love. And the other is a bad wolf, which represents
things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops, thinks about it for a second,
and looks up at their grandparent and says, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says,
the one you feed. So I'd like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you
in your life and in the work that you do.
Oh, I knew this question was coming. Well, I feel like my whole life has been a battle between the two wolves in many ways. Not that there's necessarily two wolves active inside me, but I think that there's two wolves active in everything in the world.
And I've had a lot of early experiences with the bad wolf. And I think when you have a lot
of early experiences with other people's bad wolves that need to sort of feed on your wolf, good or bad, it sets you up for an expectation
that that wolf is always going to be coming after you in some ways. No matter how old you get,
I think if those neural pathways have been set at a very early age to expect to be attacked,
you're always living in that fear and in that sort of heavy duty PTSD.
Yeah.
So a lot of my life has been about trying to deconstruct that wolf, understand how and why
that occurred, how to try to find the path to let some of that trauma go and also try to be continually feeding the good wolf inside me
so that my expectations of both myself and others lean towards that arc towards justice and peace
internally and externally. Yeah, it's a beautiful way to think of it. And it was the first time I actually really thought of that idea of someone else's bad wolf feeding on us,
you know, because certainly your background has childhood sexual abuse in it. So I really love
that you brought that up. And I wanted to ask you a question about that. It is that the first time
you admitted sort of to any group of people that you had this was on the Tim Ferriss
podcast. Yes. And he basically asked you, you know, why is the work that you're doing with the
Joyful Heart Foundation? You know, why does that make your life make sense? And you had a moment
where you paused and you went, I can either be honest here, share my truth, or I can continue
to sort of keep this wall up. And you chose to jump out
there. Now, if we were to make a movie of your life, that would be a big significant moment.
But what I'm curious about is what was happening behind the scenes before that, that allowed you
to get to that moment, because those moments don't arrive out of nowhere, they arrive as a culmination
of other things. And I'm kind of curious, if you have any insight into kind of what got you to that point. You had to make a courageous step for sure,
but there were a lot of other courageous steps you must have made to get to that point.
Such an astute question, Eric, and not surprising given your talents as an interviewer.
You know, I think it was a slow process of shedding shame. I think that my work with both the Joyful Heart Foundation and prior to that, my work with the No More Movement gave me a bit more clarity in the dynamic that had occurred, as well as a lot of therapy over the decades. And one of the earlier
positionings of the Joyful Heart Foundation was about shedding light on the darkness
that creates the conditions for any type of sexual violence to be hidden or perpetrated and or.
And because I began to understand so much more about that, I began to have less shame
about my own experiences.
And at that moment in time, when Tim asked me and Tim didn't prepare me for that, we
didn't have a conversation about what I did or didn't want to talk about.
We're long-term friends.
I completely 100% trust him.
That's also why in that moment, I chose to sort of walk into the question as opposed
to retreat from it.
It's not a live podcast.
I could have said, hey, Tim, you know, I don't want to talk about that.
I could have retreated without fear of him being upset with me or
any kind of disappointment on his behalf. But in that moment, I just chose to walk into it,
I think, because in many ways, it was sort of the opposite of a perfect storm. I had
been working so hard on understanding how I'd gotten to that point. I was so proud of the work
that I was doing to begin to eradicate sexual violence and
the rape kit backlog, which is a lot of the work we were doing and continue to do with the Joyful
Heart Foundation. I had been friends with Mariska at that point for several years and really felt
that her work in this area was so important to the world that I wanted to talk about it. I mean,
I don't know that I would say that I wanted to talk about it. I mean, I don't know that I would say
that I wanted to talk about it with like big rah-rah, like let's do this, Tim, you know?
But it was definitely something I think I had prepared a long time to be ready for.
And that moment was a place where I could do it with trust in Tim, comfort in he would never harm me would never do anything to ever
create a more opportunistic situation. You know, it was just it felt safe that there it is right
there. I just got to it. It felt safe. Yeah. And I felt cared for. And I just walked into that
moment with him. Yeah. And then that moment has turned into him sharing his experience with that.
And I mean, he's got such a big audience, the number of people that are helped.
I know.
You know, and I just think it's so interesting how things sort of can start really small,
but they can just ripple out in really beautiful and unexpected ways.
And we don't know when we're healing ourselves or when we're trying to do good in the world. We don't know where it's going to go or what it's going to turn into. It's often
very difficult to predict. This story is one where we can see very clearly how it happens. But I
think that sort of goodness and healing and courage ripples out all the time. We just don't
often get to see it in as clear a ways as we can in this situation. Yeah, absolutely. I asked him if
he'd be willing to write a full word to my book that's out now, not only because he's a dear
friend, but also because he's had so much impact on my work and what I try to put out in the world.
And the first line of it is that he's my brother from another mother. And I think that's so true,
or my sister from another mister kind of thing. We are siblings in so many ways. And I think that's so true, or my sister from another mister kind
of thing. We are siblings in so many ways. And that's sort of one of the unexpected gifts of
my life and this work. Yeah. Yeah. So what do the words play me, bluff me, beat me, tease me,
but please, oh, please let me win mean? So that is that is wow you really did your research i had to do it you
did it it's what you're known for startling people and making them laugh and so i had to do it you
just did it yeah i love that uh so many many years ago i designed i was invited to design a deck of cards for Deck Starter. And I had always wanted to do
that. And I had a blast doing it. I designed 54 original cards. The reason it's 54 and not 52
is because I did the two jokers, which was the best part. So I did the backsides, the number sides of all the cards and the jokers.
But the other side, the side that always faces people when you're playing, the side that they
see was one piece of art that I had to create across all 54 cards. And so those are the words
that I put on that other side. I created them out of felt letters and felt fabric.
And I couldn't repeat them verbatim the way you did because you must have had it in front of you.
I don't have it in front of me.
But I just thought it would be a play, a double or triple entendre on all the ways you can engage with any game of cards that's competitive.
And I had a lot of fun with that.
And thank you for talking about that. I just designed another deck of cards, by the way,
just, just, just, just designed another deck of cards. And this is wonderful because
it's sort of taking some of the conversation that we just had about Tim and now taking part
of the conversation that we have about cards and a card deck. So I've had so many different opportunities to take what I also talked about on Tim's podcast,
the 10 year plan that I had done with Milton Glaser. I've had a lot of different opportunities
to sort of codify it into a book. And I never really wanted to do a self-help book in that way.
But Chronicle asked me if I'd be interested in doing a deck of cards with prompts that would allow people to write their own 10-year plan.
And so I'm just looking at the proofs of it now.
And it's 30 cards and a tiny little journal and an instruction deck that all fit beautifully into a box of cards that are 30 prompts to help people write their own 10-year plan. And they're also now instead of
52 pieces of art or 54 pieces of art on one side and one on the other, I did 30 pieces of art with
prompts and then another 30 pieces of art that just are inspiring directions for that. And that'll
be out in October. So I'm super excited about it because it really is an art project as much as it is anything else. Yeah, I love that. You've done a, I think a great job
combining art and essays in the past and different things. Your creative spirit is amazing. And one
of the things I admire about you, and you talk about this very openly is, you know, there was
a certain point early in your life where you thought, well, I'd like to be an artist, but I'm going to choose a safer route. Yes. And there's lots of reasons
for that. You talked about your childhood, you know, there was a lot of insecurity, you wanted
a little bit more security, you wanted to live in Manhattan, there were reasons you made that choice.
But what I love is how you found your way back to your creativity. And I think that's a really inspiring thing for
a lot of people. You know, we've made choices where we ended up in a place where we're like,
well, okay, my life's pretty good, but I abandoned some part of me back there a little ways. Whether
it was I used to make music or I used to make art or I used to spend lots of time hiking or camping
or I mean, and you found your way back to those things.
What's some of the input or advice you would have for people who are sort of finding themselves in that place where they're like, you know what?
I did leave part of me behind in the pursuit for success and security and all that.
And I'm not sure I'm ready to just throw all that away and become a bohemian artist, which is not the route you went.
But you started to find little ways. And so what would you share with people?
Well, Eric, I think it has a lot to do with the name of your podcast. You know,
what's the one you feed? What do you ultimately want to make? And how do you feed that part of your spirit. And again, all of these decisions about which wolf to feed happened for me much later in life. I don't want to say that I was feeding the bad wolf by pursuing a corporate
career, but I was definitely living, trying to protect myself from the bad wolf because I was so afraid that the bad wolf would get me. I set my life up to
have a lot of walls to keep that wolf out and to be as safe and secure as possible. And that
meant self-sufficiency that meant body autonomy, that meant being able to be safe at all costs.
And I mean that literally and figuratively. And you get to a point where you
realize that when you have a foundation of safety, any higher foundation isn't going to make you any
safer. It's not going to make you penetrable. And I began to realize as I was getting older and
older and I'm talking about, you know, really at the age of 55 saying, well, if not now, when? And at that point, really had to make a decision. No, I'm not going to be the CEO of this branded consultancy that I've been the president for for 20 plus years, because really, how much more security and power do I need? And at that point,
really made a very difficult decision at the time. It doesn't feel difficult now,
but at that time it was like, okay, you know, I do have enough. And while it might never,
ever feel like enough in my heart, in my body, in my head, which is where I tend to live, I was really able to say,
okay, if not now, when, and that was when I had to take that leap over the wall a little bit and
let some more light in. Yeah. Well, similar to what we just talked about with the way you
eventually made what appears to be a big step with talking to Tim,
like, okay, we can see that as the big move. We can see the big move for you turning down becoming CEO of that organization and stepping out on your own as the big move that had been
building for a long time. You had been doing a lot of work while you did that, while you were
still working at that organization, you had been
building your creative career, your podcast, you know, the work that you did with your brand
institute. And so there was a lot of pre-work that was done. And so when you made that jump,
it was, yeah, sure. Of course it's scary. And it was a jump that had a pretty good chance of working
out, right? Because you had done a lot of work. And that mirrors my story, right? When I saw you in New York, right, I was still working a corporate job
when I was on your show. And, you know, a couple years from there, I finally was able to start
doing this full time. And of course, there was a moment of stepping away from the steady paycheck,
you know, the good, big, steady paycheck. But it was also a move that I've been building towards
in a sane way for
quite some time. And I see that sort of in you also. Yeah, I mean, and I think for your listeners,
this is a really important point, because people talk a lot about wanting to reinvent their lives,
wanting to take a different path. And you and I both did something very similar, which I think
is a really important thing for people to understand. We didn't just abandon one thing and do another. We created a Venn diagram of our lives in a lot
of ways. We can look back on it and see, you know what? I was doing all of that. And then I started
to do something else, but I was still doing that other thing until I could take that middle of the
Venn diagram and then expand it outward and do it on its own.
And I think for anybody that's looking to pivot, anybody that's looking to take a different path,
it isn't just a go from one to the other process. I don't know anybody that's done that.
It's really a matter of setting yourself up for security first while you're doing this other thing and then do it at the same time.
And it might mean doing both at the same time and really maybe for a little bit of time burning the candle at both ends.
But then you set yourself up to pivot into a place where then you can run with it.
And I think that's super important for people to know. Yeah. And I think the other advantage of that approach is you can actually focus on the
thing you want to do and do it in a, I don't like this word, but it's the one that comes to mind,
a more pure way because you don't have to make a living. Like if I had abandoned immediately,
like I want to start a podcast, I'm going to quit my job, right? I would
have had to make all kinds of decisions about this show early on in order to have any chance of paying
the bills. And I'm glad I didn't have to do that in the beginning. I was able to sort of pursue
my vision a little bit more. Absolutely. And anybody that's looking to start anything new
like that, especially with a podcast, I say, do 10 episodes before you launch
it. See how that feels. See what it feels to make 10 episodes, how much work it is. If you really
love doing it, sometimes people love the idea of doing something more than they actually like the
doing. You know, it's like when you say your eyes are bigger than your stomach, when you're at a
buffet, really understand how much you want to do something before you just whole
hog go into doing it. Yeah. I've had a bunch of coaching clients that I've worked with where
what we're working on is like, let's do that thing you really think you want to do.
I want to be a writer. Okay. Let's get you writing. Oftentimes what people find is no,
I don't. I've held onto this idea that I want to be a writer because I thought that when I was 20 and now I'm 45 and now I'm doing it and I'm like, I don't even like doing that.
And that can feel defeating, but actually I think it's a victory to set aside something
that you've been thinking you should do because it's taking all this mental energy and space and
you're like, okay, that's not it. Set it aside. Okay. Right. Freeze up the
space for what's next. Absolutely. And knowing that, and I think there's something really
important to experiment with the things you think you want to do. And so do those 10 episodes,
write the book, see if you really want to, I mean, whether it's a writing career or a podcasting
career requires a lot of solitary work. It's not just
turning on a microphone and talking to someone. It's hours and hours and hours and hours of prep
and research and booking and details and producing and editing. I mean, there's so many things that
go into it. And that takes time to understand whether or not you are going to like it, especially if you've never done it before.
You know, there's no way of really knowing.
And so experimenting with that, I think, is so important.
I totally agree.
So one of the things that you often ask your students is you say, what is keeping you from trying this or doing this?
you from trying this or doing this. And I'm curious if for you, is there anything if you look at your life right now that fear is holding you back from? Oh, Eric, you with the tough
questions. You can always pass. No, no, no, no. I don't really like doing that. That's a cop out.
You know, Roxanne asked me this question yesterday, like, what do you want to do that you haven't done yet? And there's so many things. I feel like there's so many things. And I definitely
want to work on an illustrated memoir. And I'm really ramping up emotionally for that. Like,
I do feel like all the sort of ways that I think in my body are sort of gearing up,
all the gears are spinning. I'm getting ready and preparing myself to do that
in a lot of ways. So I definitely, definitely want to do that. I want to write a play of sorts,
and I'm not exactly sure what kind of play. I'm thinking maybe a one-woman play,
not that I want to perform in it. I don't like that at all. But I definitely want to do some
type of performance piece for somebody else to perform that I write and maybe illustrate the sets.
So there's so many things that I still want to do.
There's no lack of ideas that I have.
So I want to do a lot more traveling once it becomes.
I was doing a lot more adventuresome traveling before COVID.
I had gone on a National Geographic expedition.
Also in my mid-50s, I decided that before I died, I really wanted to see as much of the world as
possible. And so I went on a global expedition with National Geographic in 2018 and 2019.
And it was one of the most extraordinary experiences of my life. And I want to do
more things like that. I also went on another mini expedition with Roxanne to Egypt, and then another one more recently to Antarctica,
but I want to do more things like that. I'm Jason Alexander.
And I'm Peter Tilden.
And together on the Really No Really podcast,
our mission is to get the true answers to life's baffling questions like
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We got the answer.
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We talk with the scientist who figured out if your dog
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Plus, does Tom Cruise really
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Wayne Knight, welcome to Really, Not Really, sir.
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Really? That's the opening?
Really No Really.
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I'm going to quote you here.
You said, I once read that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.
I fundamentally disagree with this idea.
I think that doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results is the definition of hope.
I love that. And that's a phrase also that has been very much adopted by the recovery community that said often, you know, doing the same thing over and over and expecting different
results, like using drugs or alcohol again, and expecting it to be different is insanity.
I love that there's another way of framing that as hope, because it strikes me that it could be
both. It could be either or. Sometimes it could
be hope. Sometimes it could be insanity. And I'm curious if you have any thoughts on how we might
tell the difference between those two. Oh, that's good. I think that if you are working towards
something and practicing, that's really where I think the difference is. I think if you are engaging in destructive behavior and expecting the result of that destructive behavior to be the same, actually, I think it is enhance your life. Those small steps, those incremental small
steps are really the definition of hope because you are continually getting better. And that
ultimately, I believe, results in mastery. And I think there's a tremendous difference between doing something destructively and hoping for difference and doing
something practicing and ultimately achieving better results over a long period of time.
It's like playing the piano. If you play the piano every day and you practice,
you're inevitably going to get better. If you are an
athlete and you're practicing every day and you're running the same route or you're exercising the
same muscles, over time you are going to get better. And I feel the same way about life.
Yeah, I think that's a great way to think about it. And I think some of it too is, you know, what do we mean by expecting results? What is the result that we expect? And how much of the
result we're after can we make, at least, you know, I think, intrinsic versus extrinsic, you know,
because I can't control exterior results, right? But I can more control intrinsic things. So like
your example of the piano for me it's guitar
right i practice guitar every day i made a commitment like i'm actually going to get better
at this you know instead of just sort of fooling around now if i'm expecting that that's going to
take me to carnegie hall i'm very likely to be disappointed it's not saying that it's not
possible but it's very unlikely right it's not what I'm aiming for. You know what, Eric, though, if you wanted to and did this for the next 20 years,
you might. You might be 65 at Carnegie Hall. But if that was your non-negotiable for the rest of
your life, and that became the focus of everything you did, you very well could. Knowing your drive,
I wouldn't discount it. But I do think it takes a tremendous amount of commitment, and
it really does need to be a non-negotiable, where it becomes the one thing you want to
do more than anything.
That's right.
I think that speaks to what we don't necessarily always tell ourselves the truth about, which
is, okay, I keep saying I want X.
I really need to think about what does that mean? Like what would
it take to get X? And then look at that and go, am I willing to do that? And if I am, then step
up to the plate. But if I'm not, for me, it's always been refreshing to look at that and go,
nope, I'm not willing to work that hard for that thing. So I can stop feeling bad about not having that
thing. I can stop feeling like, oh, I'm not good enough because I don't have that thing.
It's more a priority thing. I got to prioritize. I can't play Carnegie Hall and play in the NBA,
right? If you want to be a master of one thing, you kind of have to double down. And people like
you and me, to some degree, I think my interests are a little more broad. You know, I'm not necessarily interested in being
the best guitar player. I love playing guitar. I want to get better at it. But it's not where
I want to devote my life. There's eight other things I want to do. And so I think that clarity
can be really helpful. Yeah, absolutely. I think that for people that are solely focused on one thing for most of their early life,
achieve mastery at it much earlier. For people, I think like us that have a variety of interests,
we still have to put in the same amount of time. We just are dividing our time between so many
more things. And therefore it takes longer to achieve mastery
at any one of them. And often, it might take well into our sort of seasoned years to achieve
mastery at any of them because of that division of time and energy. My foundation in thinking
about almost anything is always, you know, from a branding perspective, given my background, when you're positioning a brand, it's really the art of sacrifice. You can only really
own one or two or three attributes and only have one mission statement. Otherwise, it's going to
be very confusing for anybody that is engaged with the brand. And with people, you know, if you have
multiple interests over multiple
disciplines, it's going to take a lot longer to be known for any one of those things because
you aren't willing to sacrifice. And sometimes it's willful lack of sacrifice. And other times
it's just because you have this many things that you want to do and you're just doing them.
I read somewhere you saying that you don't really believe in the idea of the personal brand.
Say more about that.
Well, I think that a person can own a brand. I think a person can direct a brand,
can manage a brand. But I think that when we start to aspire to be a brand,
we run into difficulties. Brands don't exist unless humans make them. And so
over the years, I've come to the realization that brands are really manufactured meaning.
We manufacture meaning around a trope, around a construct that wouldn't exist if we didn't make
them. Otherwise, brands don't grow on trees unless we determine that they become brands like an orange and
Tropicana or a banana and Chiquita, but they don't grow out of the ground unless we determine
that that thing is going to be then manufactured as a brand.
Brands are created by people.
We tend to like when they're consistent.
We tend to like when they are predictable.
We tend to like when they're consistent. We tend to like when they are predictable. We tend to like when they're easily understandable. Humans are the opposite. Humans are messy and complicated. Brands don't
breathe. They don't bleed. They don't have a consciousness. They don't direct themselves.
Humans do all of those things. Why would anybody aspire to be a brand when brands don't direct themselves, don't have
a consciousness and don't have a soul. So I feel like anybody that aspires to be a brand is limiting
the possibilities of their lives, develop your character, develop your reputation, but always
aspire to keep your humanity. That's beautiful. So your latest book is, A, it's gorgeous, which I'm not surprised by, right?
You're who you are.
Design is a big part of you.
But it is a book where you pulled out a bunch of interviews that you love and excerpts from
them and put it all together.
And the title of the book is Why Design Matters.
And this feels like a cheap and easy question, but I'm going to use it anyway.
Why does design matter?
Well, design is intention and decision making about everything.
How do you want to live?
How do you want to organize the way that you engage with the world?
That's design.
And so I feel that while my original podcast was all about designers talking about design, over the 18 years
now, it's evolved to really be about how people create the arcs of their lives, how they consciously
create what they make, how they live, the decisions that allow them to be who they are. And so that arc of life that they create
and make for themselves is something that I'm really endlessly fascinated by. And it's all
a process of design. It's a process of decision making. It's a process of determining how and
why they want to live the way they do. And that's what I'm interested in understanding.
And that's all about design. So let's talk about rejection for a minute. You write very much
about rejection. You talk about how early part of your life there was a lot of rejection. Tell
me a little bit about what you would say to people as they're dealing with rejection.
Well, I think rejection is only a failure if you accept the defeat.
Rejection is one person or one organization or one entity saying thanks, but no thanks.
That doesn't mean that everybody else in the world is going to say that too.
And when I was experiencing rejections all through my twenties and into my thirties,
experiencing rejections all through my 20s and into my 30s, I misrepresented that rejection to myself and thought that if this one thing is rejecting me, this one person, this one entity,
this one institution, this one organization, whatever it was, that was a determination of
my value and my worth. And so I would retreat. I would apply to one school or one job or one thing.
And when that rejection occurred, would then abandon my hopes of ever being able to do anything in that realm.
And I think that a lot of people do that.
And they take that rejection as a stamp of unworthiness or not being good enough.
And I think it's just one entity's decision. It's not the decision of the
world, but it's very hard to see that and feel that and experience that as just one decision
in what could be thousands when you're experiencing it. You know, I always have felt
mortally wounded in those rejections only to find that they were not mortal wounds.
They were just profound wounds, but they didn't stop me in the grand scheme of things.
But I can say that now, you know, 30 years later, after multiple more tries, and I think most people
stop trying. From what I've read, they stop making attempts at things after two or three
rejections. And for those of us that do persevere, that just increases the odds of our eventual
success. I don't quite know what the cognitive behavioral therapy term or the cognitive bias for
this is. I think it's something like generalization, right? Which is where I take one specific instance
of something and I apply it out to everything. I mean, I remember early in my life, in my,
you know, my dating career, if one woman wasn't interested in me, I just assumed that meant
they're all not going to be interested, right? Exactly, exactly.
Which is profoundly not true, but it seems so true in the moment. The other thing that you say
that I love is what I would say is don't accept
the first rejection ever. Give yourself options. The timeliness of those options or the timeliness
of those retries, do it your own pace. I keep going back to one of the early questions about
the conversation you had with Tim about where you were finally able to do that was you had your own
timing for when you were finally ready to come forth with some of that.
And you gave yourself the ability to, as you say, control my own timing on these things and how
frequently I redo these things. Yeah, absolutely. I think that a lot of people wait to do things
until they feel ready to do them. And that's something that I would urge people to try to
break away from, because it's
very rare that we ever feel ready, that we ever feel confident enough to do something. I think
that confidence comes after you do it multiple times. And because it's really unlikely that
anytime we try something brand new, we're going to be good at it. I mean, who picks up a guitar,
you know, maybe start from Joey Mitchell and Bob Dylan and can immediately start playing. Those of us,
us mere mortals take time to be able to learn how to do something. And then we develop confidence
over the years of practice. You're not going to want to have a concert for your friends after
your first guitar lesson, but you might after your 1000th. And so the confidence comes from this successful repetition of getting better at doing
something over time. Do you ever get your guitar back out? You reference in somewhere, I don't
remember where it was that you'd put your guitar kind of under the bed or in the closet. I'm curious
if it's ever come back out. Yeah, yeah. It's actually in the little room right next to me.
Yeah, there's a little room right there. And that's what I call my craft closet. And so I have all the things that I love
to make with things in there. And my guitar is in there and I have an accordion and I have all my
felt and paint and yeah, all there. Accordion. All right. Not an accordion. I'm sorry. Ukulele.
Ukulele. Okay. Not an accordion. Ukulele. Another
instrument that starts with a vowel, a ukulele. Okay. Okay. And it's a little bit closer to a
guitar in the way you approach it. Exactly. Exactly. I just had this visual of trying to
play the accordion and it just cracking me up. Maybe that's the next thing you've been, you know,
maybe you should add it to the list. Along the same lines with that. You also say,
I expect things to be hard and I expect things to take a long time and I expect things to be messy.
And I love that because I don't know where so many of us got the idea that things should be easy,
but you know, if you expect something to be easy and it's not, that's a very easy way to
give up. Absolutely. And I've just come to discover that very little in my life has ever just been
easy from the beginning. The only thing that I can really point to is my relationship with Roxanne,
which always there was always an undercurrent of my feeling like this was it this was meant to be.
Everything else has been just arduous.
Well, even that though, right? You talk about how you emailed her and tried to get her on the
podcast and she said no. And you know, then you got a series of one syllable responses from her.
And so even that, I mean, maybe once you guys finally got in a room together, it was clear and
it was easy, but, but get into that point,
you had some work to do. You had some perseverance.
That's true. Yep. Thank you for pointing that out. How convenient that I've forgotten that.
It's so lovely to see you happy in that way. It's so great.
Thank you. Thank you. I do feel very lucky. Very, very lucky. But for everybody that might be
listening, I didn't meet Roxanne until I was 56 years old. So yeah, there, very lucky. But for everybody that might be listening, I didn't meet Roxanne until
I was 56 years old. So there you have it. Yep. I am extraordinarily fortunate with Ginny and I
don't think I met her till I was 46 maybe. So a little bit younger than you, but certainly not.
It was the one area of my life that I thought, this is the area I'm not going to figure out.
Me too. I'll figure out career. I'll figure out creativity.
I'll figure, I'll get all the rest of this stuff.
But that area, I'm broken.
Eric, same, same.
I felt like it was my Achilles heel.
I would often say that to people.
I'm like, nope, relationships in my Achilles heel.
I'm never going to get it right.
Never.
Yeah.
Now look.
Amazing.
Yep.
Somewhere you wrote, if all else fails, I try to obey this message I got in a fortune cookie, which I've since taped to my laptop.
Avoid compulsively making things worse.
You know, this is something I actually, I didn't think of that specifically, but I was thinking about the sort of tenets of that when you were talking about generalization.
Yeah.
And I have often had the tendency to what I call catastrophize. So if one thing is wrong,
everything is doomed. And that is what I think that fortune cookie was warning me of, you know,
avoid compulsively making things worse because when we think something bad has happened,
we then will extend that to our whole lives. I'm doomed. I'm never going to be happy.
I'm never going to get it right.
I'm never going to whatever.
And I always have to tell myself in those moments, stop globalizing, stop catastrophizing.
And I do that with my friends.
I do that with Roxanne.
You know, we're constantly trying to help each other.
Roxanne says, okay, pull this back now, 190% or pull this back 115% or pull this
back 75% because we recognize that tendency in each other to globalize, catastrophize
that somehow we're so damaged that any evidence of wrongdoing or bad things mean that we're
never going to be able to escape it. And I think that
comes from trauma. I do think that comes from those neural pathways being wired in a certain way.
And it takes real effort to push yourself out of that mindset, but it's well worth trying. I'm Jason Alexander.
And I'm Peter Tilden.
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I sometimes jokingly say so much of the work that I do with people
is about just how to not make things worse,
which is about the least exciting marketing phrase you could ever come up with.
But when you have the capacity to make
things worse that many of us have, that's a pretty profound thing to stop doing. It is just like,
okay, I can live life as it is without making it worse. It's a very important step.
I had an experience a couple of years ago. My brother had picked me up from the train station.
I was visiting the family and he got a work call and he was like, I'm sorry, I have to take this. And he took the
call and something wasn't going well with one of his clients. And after he finished the call,
he went into that catastrophizing. It's like, oh my God, I do exactly the same thing. Maybe
this is how we were taught to respond. It was such a profound moment, Eric. I can't even
really fully articulate what witnessing that observation did because suddenly I saw how
genetically attached we were and his doing that gave me such a perspective on how I do it too
and wanted to forgive myself for doing it and also share whatever I learned in that
process with him so that he could do the same thing. How personally he took that situation
and how compelled he was to see it as a marker of something much bigger, which it wasn't,
was profound. I don't know your brother, but I have an appreciation for him because you talk somewhere
about coming out to him and you say that he threw his arms up in the air, turned at his
wife and was like, I told you so.
And there's just something so sweet and lovely about that moment to me.
It's beautiful.
It was a beautiful moment.
I have several brothers, so I could be talking about any number of them.
Okay, okay, okay.
But no, but this one, this one actually happens to be the same brother. But yeah, that was a beautiful moment. I have several brothers, so I could be talking about any number of them. But no, but this one, this one actually happens to be the same brother. But yeah, that was a beautiful
moment. I was so worried, you know, looking back at our histories, our joint histories,
you know, I was worried that he would reject me because I experienced so much rejection from my
family in so many different ways that sharing that with him was terrifying. And then, you know, he proved me
wrong. And that was a beautiful moment for me. I don't even know if he realizes how beautiful it
was for me, but it was. I would love to hear about you pouring through the racks of Lee Ward's in
search of a crocodile patch to stick on the front of your shirt. Just share that younger Debbie.
So Lee Ward's, I don't even know if it still exists, but Lee Ward's was a craft store on
Long Island, about not even a mile away from where I lived. And when I was in middle school,
which at the time was then referred to as junior high school. So that was seventh,
referred to as junior high school. So that was seventh, eighth, and ninth grade. I didn't have a lot of what would be considered to be cool clothes. My mother was a seamstress and taught
me how to sew from a very young age. And so I made a lot of my clothes in an effort to be
fashionable. They weren't particularly fashionable, but nevertheless, the big fashion statement at the time were three things, a Lacoste polo shirt,
a pair of Levi's and some type of either Nike, Puma or Adidas sneakers. The sneakers didn't
intrigue me all that much. I've never been a sneakerhead. However, I did want the costume.
a costume. And so I really wanted a pair of Levi's and a Lacoste shirt. My mother could not understand what the difference was between what were then called dungarees. So sort of a standard
pair of dungarees that you could buy at Models or wherever you were shopping out on Long Island,
the Walt Whitman Mall,
and the pair with the little red tag on the back pocket. She didn't understand.
And so she offered to sew me a pair of dungarees and sew a little red tag on the back.
And she didn't understand how that would actually be worse, having a fake pair.
So no, that wasn't going to work for me. And then she suggested, well,
all the Lacoste shirt is, is a standard polo shirt with a little embroidered emblem above the breastbone. And so she suggested that I go to Leewards and look in the embroidery section to see if I could find something similar.
And I actually thought you could.
So I rode my bike up to Lee Ward's looking for a embroidered animal of sorts,
hoping for a crocodile or an alligator.
Didn't find anything of the sort.
So I came home glumly without anything.
And then finally, finally, finally, she did buy me a pair of, I think had to be in the triple markdown section, a pair of Levi's.
They were lime green corduroy bell bottoms, but I wore them all the time and felt that I was
potentially considered, you know, cool by having these.
You shared the closest thing you could find to the crocodile was Tony the Tiger. And
I just so deeply wish you had a polo shirt with Tony the Tiger sewn on the chest. I think that
would be great. It's so funny, though, we must be, you know, close in age, because when I was in
elementary school, it was Levi's, you know, polo shirt like that, same shoes. And my mom insisted on buying me
Sears Tuffskins, which were essentially the same jean. But I mean, still to this day,
it's like a scar, you know. They're so not. They're the opposite of Levi's, the opposite.
You know, by the time I got into my later years of high school and started babysitting and earning some money, I do have a look for it. I have a photograph of me wearing a pair of Levi's and a Lacoste shirt. And I just
remember feeling like, okay, this is it. This is like the best moment of my entire life right now.
Somewhere in my teenage years, I crossed over. Well, I know what happened. I listened to the
Sex Pistols and suddenly I was like, I'm going to be a punk rocker and abandon all that, which was easier because I could just go to the thrift store and buy something awful and cut holes in it and put safety pins in it. And I was suddenly, I thought I was cool. So that's how I got around that one for me.
Oh, yeah. For me, it was being a deadhead when I got to college and then just wearing like loose Indian shirts. Yeah. There was a time, I don't think it was that long ago,
where you were asked to review a couple of books in a competition against each other for a website.
One of them was The Water Dancer by Tanashi Coates, which I think I pronounced that close
to correctly. And you wrote, alas, well, it may have been for Oprah because Oprah thought it was
one of the best books. You said, this is not one of the best books I've read in my entire life, not by a long shot.
The reason I'm bringing that up is it has nothing to do with the book or the author.
What I'm curious about is, was it hard for you to write a review for a book by somebody who's a cultural figure of that prominence, who's endorsed by Oprah, who everybody loves that book, and you to come out and say, I really didn't like this. Was that hard for you? Or were you just sort of naturally like,
I don't like it. I'll just say I don't like it.
It was very hard for me. Ta-Nehisi Coates is a cultural icon, a national treasure. But I also
knew that I was being asked to review two books and pick one in a competition to move forward
and felt like I owed it to the readers, to be honest. So that's sort of why I cloaked the review
with all of that fear of what I was doing. I didn't just review it and say, I don't like it because of this,
this, this, and this reason is if that's enough. I had to sugarcoat the review with the trepidation
that I felt in doing that. So it's funny thinking back on it and looking back on it now, that was a really weak thing to do, because I didn't have enough confidence in my own
opinion to be able to just state what I felt emphatically. I had to say, well, you know,
this is a book that Oprah loved, and Ta-Nehisi Coates is a cultural treasure, and I, but I
didn't like it. So I think that that was maybe in looking back on it kind of disingenuous.
Interesting, because I thought it was very straightforward.
And I was like, wow, she's really just sort of saying what she thinks here very honestly
and in a very straightforward way.
And I was just struck by it because I was thinking like that, that's a gutsy thing to
do kind of in some way, given, like you said, that he's considered by people that you and I would both like and respect to
be a national treasure. And for you to say, this isn't my thing. Do you trust yourself with artistic
judgment like that? Like, I just don't like this. Or do you always feel like, well, do I just have
bad taste? Do I not understand? Do I need to learn something? Kind of curious.
Oh, yeah. I don't have a lot of confidence in certain areas.
I have a lot of confidence in what I think about design.
I have a lot of confidence in what I think about art.
I have a decent amount of confidence in what I think about decor, but I don't have a lot
of confidence when it comes to more intellectual heady pursuits.
But, you know, in the case of the competition that you were just referring to,
it's interesting because I was very tentative and nervous about my opinion of Ta-Nehisi Coates' book versus the book that I was reviewing and decided was better,
which was Maria Gaines' book called Optic Nerve. And as the competition continued, because I
had judged the first round. So if anybody's thinking about this competition, it's sort of
like a fantasy football kind of
competition where you are putting one book against another and then it seeds and it goes to the next
round. So I had that choice in the very first round, Maria Gaines's book versus Ta-Nehisi
Coates's book, picked Maria Gaines's book. Her book went all the way to the final round.
So it went through the way to the final round. So it went through the winner. It would,
it almost did. And, and then, and this is why I think it's so interesting because I'm
very opinionated about what happened in this final round. It was reviewed against
Sally Rooney's normal people, which is a book I hated. And I'm saying that with a tremendous
amount of confidence. And had I been given
Maria Gaines's book and Sally Rooney's book in that first round, I would have eliminated Sally
Rooney's book at the outset and Maria Gaines. And I wouldn't have written, I don't have the
capacity to judge. Whereas with Ta-Nehisi Coates' book, I absolutely felt like I had to be very
clear about how I made the
decisions. Whereas if I had been reviewing optic nerve against normal people, I would have been
like, no question. Interesting. Very interesting. There's another book that lots of people love.
I have not read it, but I mean, it is loved by so many people. I liked the first half and then
it lost me. I find that ability to sort of have
our own opinion about things interesting. The other thing that I find just looking at myself
with things like that is that particularly with music, I will often listen to something a time
or two and be like, I don't think I like it. But if I listen to it a few more times, I start to
like it. And I'm like, well, is that that I'm starting to discover
it and understand it, particularly with an artist that I love something new of theirs, I'm almost
always like, well, I don't like it as much as the last thing. And then I'll listen to it enough.
And I'll be like, Oh, it's amazing. Yeah. You know what, I have a tendency that I hate. And I try
every time I'm in this mindset to remind myself that this is what I hate about myself.
And that is if I don't know about something and then begin to learn about it, whether it be an
author, artist, whatever, my tendency is initially to not want to like it. If I don't know it,
I don't want to like it. And I know that enough about myself now to say, wait a minute.
But I don't know why that is the case.
I don't know if it's because of my not knowing it.
It sort of ignites something in my reptilian brain, which makes me feel less secure or inferior.
Or I don't know what it is, but it's a tendency that I have that I really loathe.
It's probably the thing I loathe about myself the most aside from my thighs. It's interesting because I think so much of
our reaction to art of any sort has to do with where we are at the time. Yes. So like, you know,
there was a long time I did not like Bob Dylan. I just couldn't understand it. It made no sense to me.
And then something clicked, and I was like, oh, this guy is an absolute genius.
And there's been so many things like that.
I'll listen to something, and I'll be like, I don't really like it.
But then there'll be another time where it'll be the right time, or something will have
happened in my life, and the lyrics will be about that thing.
And so it causes me to always take all my judgments about
art fairly lightly, because I'm like, I don't know if this is good or not good. I just know
it doesn't resonate with me today. And that's extraordinarily subjective.
Absolutely. I think that certain things are an acquired taste. That's one of the way I feel
about eggplant. I would agree with you about that. Yeah. A taste I've tried, and I haven't tried that hard to acquire those.
I don't like mushrooms.
And that seems to be among many people a crime.
Yeah, it does.
Yeah.
I only like maitake mushrooms or hen of the woods mushrooms.
I would urge you to try those.
They're the most un-mushroom-like mushroom there is.
And it's just absolutely extraordinary.
Anything called hen of the woods too has got something going for it.
I think that's true. I think that's true.
I think that's true.
On a Creative Mornings article a few years ago, you said there's some things you'd like
to do less of.
And I'm just curious how you're doing.
This is your checkup on these things.
I don't remember what I said, so tell me what they were and I will reveal my process.
The first is worry.
Trending in the right direction?
Um, yeah.
Trending in the right direction, but still not completely absolved. And you know what? I was looking at some journals
that I'd written when I was in middle school back in the day when I was a pining for my
Lacoste t-shirt. I was a constant worrier and I was so much a worrier that I actually
worried about how much I worried. And I do think that
it is definitely better than it was when I was that age, you know, but I also noticed a tendency
at one of my nephews was, was really worried about a grade that he'd gotten. He was waiting
for the grades to be posted. And he's like, Oh, I might be up all night worrying about this.
And I was like, Oh, I wonder if that's also something that was a learned behavior from an early age that we then genetically pass on.
Yeah.
Because I was so concerned about him worrying.
Yeah, I still worry.
Just not quite as much.
Yeah.
Well, worry does seem to sort of fall under the personality trait of neuroticism, which the research on personality traits seems to be that you know somewhere around
20 to 40 percent of that is inherited right but then you have to assume since it's inherited
your parents have it so not only did you inherit it genetically you probably inherit it behaviorally
environmentally right it's sort of socialized that way it's the double dose of it right and so
absolutely yeah, feel insecure
and or doubt myself is number two, constantly, constantly still going on. I would say it's, it's,
it's, it's plateaued. And that plateau continues. And do you suffer from it less? Or let me ask that
question slightly differently. Not does it occur less? Are you able to take it a little less
seriously as it happens at any point? Yes, I would absolutely say yes. Absolutely. Okay. So you can't turn it
off, but you've learned to relate to it differently. Yes. That's an improvement. That is an
improvement. I will give you that one. Sit on the tarmac in airplanes. This is probably a yes,
given where we've been pandemic wise, I would imagine. Yeah, definitely improved, without a doubt.
I would assume maybe you were traveling a lot for work at that point.
Absolutely. I was a business traveler. I was traveling every week. And yes, that just came
with the territory being sitting on tarmacs and smelling other people's smells. Yeah.
Yeah, I don't miss the business travel. It sounds romantic. And in the beginning,
maybe it is, but boy, that wears off pretty quickly. And the last one is to feel afraid
of what I want. You know, I, I don't want to backtrack what I said at the time,
but I think in thinking about that wasn't so much about being afraid of what I want. I think it was
about being afraid to admit what I want.
And I do think that that has improved.
All right.
Well, across the board, then things are looking up.
Yeah, definitely.
All right, Debbie.
Well, we are at the end of our time.
I love talking with you anytime I get the opportunity.
I love your podcast.
I love your writing.
Your new book is amazing.
So thank you so much for coming on.
You and I are going to talk a little bit more in the post-show conversation about therapy.
I'd like to talk about your experiences with therapy, how often you go to therapy, and
maybe some things that people can do to get the most out of it.
And so we'll do that in the post-show conversation.
Listeners, if you'd like access to that and ad-free episodes and all kinds of other great goodies, go to oneufeed.net slash join. So Debbie, thank you so much. It's
always such a pleasure. Eric, you're a prince helpful to you, please consider making a monthly donation to support the One You Feed podcast.
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I'm Jason Alexander.
And I'm Peter Tilden.
And together, our mission on the Really Know Really podcast
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