The Rich Roll Podcast - Beyond Eat, Pray, Love: Elizabeth Gilbert's Raw Truth About Addiction, Codependency & The Awakening That Saved Her Life
Episode Date: September 11, 2025Elizabeth Gilbert is the bestselling author of "Eat, Pray, Love" and her new memoir "All the Way to the River." This conversation explores sex and love addiction, her partner's death during relapse, ...and finding recovery through radical honesty. We discuss hitting rock bottom while buying drugs for her dying partner, six years of celibacy as self-care, the illusion of control, and learning "no abandonment of self." This exchange reveals how the "Eat, Pray, Love" author ended up in her darkest chapter. Elizabeth's courage to be this vulnerable is inspiring. Enjoy! Show notes + MORE Watch on YouTube Newsletter Sign-Up Today’s Sponsors: LMNT: Get a free LMNT Sample Pack with any purchase 👉 https://www.drinklmnt.com/richroll AG1: Get a FREE bottle of D3K2, Welcome Kit, and 5 travel packs with your first order 👉https://www.drinkAG1.com/richroll Pique: Get up to 20% OFF plus a FREE rechargeable frother and glass beaker with your first subscription 👉https://www.piquelife.com/richroll Momentous: High-caliber human performance products for sleep, focus, longevity, and more. For listeners of the show, Momentous is offering up to 35% off your first order👉https://www.livemomentous.com/richroll WHOOP: The all-new WHOOP 5.0 is here! Get your first month FREE👉https://www.join.whoop.com/Roll On: High-performance shoes & apparel crafted for comfort and style 👉https://www.on.com/richroll Check out all the amazing discounts from our Sponsors 👉 https://www.richroll.com/sponsors Find out more about Voicing Change Media at https://www.voicingchange.media and follow us @voicingchange
Transcript
Discussion (0)
After hosting more than 900 episodes of this podcast, I have noticed a pattern.
And that pattern is that the highest performers don't buy into the latest trendy hacks.
Instead, they obsess on what actually works, which is always the unassuming basics.
And there is nothing more basic than hydration.
Thicker, your body can't hold on to water without the right minerals.
Without them, water is just like this temporary visitor.
but Element has cracked the code on this,
which is why I've been using it religiously for years,
zero sugar, no artificial junk,
just sodium, potassium, and magnesium
in the racial work.
And look, I'm not exactly crushing ultras right now,
healing from this surgery,
but in some ways I need it even more.
In order to properly recover,
I need to treat my body even better than ever,
so it can heal properly and expeditiously,
while also maintaining my focus and my energy levels
about all of these podcasts, write a book,
be a husband and a dad.
And I got to say,
Element keeps my brain firing
in a way that water alone can't.
Their new sample pack features their most popular flavor.
Citrus salt, raspberry salt, watermelon salt.
That's my favorite and orange salt.
Eight stay perfect for finding your favorite
or sharing with a friend.
Get a free eight-count sample pack of elements
most popular drink mix flavors with any purchase at drink l mn t.com slash rich roll find your favorite
element flavor or share it with a friend sometimes the things we think are good enough suddenly get
better in ways we did not expect and that's what happened when ag one launched three new flavors
look i was perfectly happy with the original i've been drinking it every morning for ages it does its job
But then I tried tropical, which tastes like papaya and passion fruit.
There's berry with these blueberry, strawberry notes, and citrus with this lemon-orange thing going on.
This isn't about chasing novelty.
It's about recognizing when something great becomes even better.
The nutritional foundation of AG1 is exactly the same and remains solid, multivitamin, prebiotics, probiotics, and superfoods, all in one scoop.
I still feel that sustained energy, digestive support, all with the same confidence I'm covering all my nutritional bases.
But now there's variety baked into my morning routine.
All plant-based, no added sugar, no shortcuts taken.
So if you've been on the fence about AG1 hung up about the taste, consider that fence officially removed.
Give the new AG1 flavors a try today.
If you head to drinkag1.com slash rich roll, you'll also get a free welcome kit worth 76
bucks when you subscribe, including five AG1 travel packs, a shaker, a canister, and a scoop.
That's drinkag1.com slash richroll to get started.
I have always used people the way other people use substances.
Handing over of the power of your own life force to pour into somebody else is what I used to call
love.
Before I could even like check the words, the words came out, make it worse.
Like I said to God, like, make it worse.
There are certain things that I can't do that other people can do,
and I just know that now, and I hope I don't forget that.
Addiction is giving up everything for one thing,
and recovery is giving up one thing for everything.
Addict's secret lives are dark,
and the reason you hide your secret life is because if people knew it,
it would destroy both your private and your public life.
Liz Gilbert is here, you guys. Can you believe it? Liz Gilbert. Liz is one of my very favorite people. I've wanted to get her on the pod for so long. She is one of the people that I look up to the most. As a writer, of course, as a creative inspiration and teacher, and really just as a human because Liz embodies and is basically the full expression.
of just so many laudable qualities that I personally struggle with,
like total fearlessness and gratitude,
as well as just being this beautiful open channel of creative flow.
But also, when it comes to the deeper stuff,
like how to live life full on and unapologetically
and lead with unconditional love.
Unconditional love, that is the big one.
That's the one when I sat in front of the Dalai Lama,
last year he talked about the most it's the idea the expression the embodiment that i find so
difficult to give and receive despite knowing like really knowing that it's always the answer it's
always the way forward which kind of brings me to today which is a big day because it's nine 11
i'm recording this on september 8th in new york city i'm actually going to be leaving tomorrow so
I'm not going to actually be in New York City on the day that it all happened.
But I have been here on past 9-11s, not in 2001, but on the anniversary dates.
And there really is nothing quite like being in New York City on this day.
And if this is something you haven't experienced, it's not exactly what you might expect.
Of course, it's solemn.
It's sad in so many ways.
But it's also this example of oneness in action.
because even though this city is so large and can be overwhelming,
it also really is a community.
And that day, 9-11, and every 9-11 after is this day
where you have the privilege of witnessing this community coming together
to remember what happened, of course,
but also to remember that people can come together
and that the best of humanity amidst tragedy can prevail.
I think it symbolizes and captures the relationship between two ideas that I think about a lot that are central, in my opinion, to success as an athlete, as a creative person and as a human, which is this relationship between vulnerability and resilience.
And given the very strange state of the world right now, which seems to be bringing out the worst in people, where disagreement and acrimony seems to dominate the discourse as we descend into what to me appears pretty clear.
to be autocracy, it's easy to feel like humanity, not just in America, but in many places across
the world, has lost the ability to come together to solve our common problems, to remember
what's important. And that while we have our vulnerabilities, for sure, we are fundamentally
resilient. And that is the stuff of hope. So I'm grateful to reflect upon 9-11, as I sit here in New York,
a couple days before this anniversary.
I'm grateful to be alive, to be healthy,
to be healing, to have my family to be reminded
that things like community and hope can exist
and can prevail.
And grateful to have this conversation with Liz
to remind me of all of this,
that gratitude and love are not only possible
when things feel dire,
but actually are more important than ever.
You probably know Liz from her stratosphericly best-selling book,
E.Pri Love,
which was made into a major motion picture
in which Liz is played by Julie
Roberts. But Liz has written many books, my favorite among them being big magic, which is
big time magic for anybody who's pursuing a relationship with their creativity and really among
my very favorite books on that subject matter. It's basically a must read that sits right
alongside, at least for me, books like The War of Art, the Artist's Way, and the Creative Act.
I've known Liz for a long time, so this conversation on some level is long overdue, as I said at the
outset, but also kind of perfect because Liz is in a place she wasn't only a few years prior,
which is to say that she is sober, not from the condition that ails me, but from something I'm not
sure I've ever fully explored on this podcast before, which is sex and love addiction. And what
she has to say about it is, I think, profound because this affliction is something I think that
so many people struggle with, whether it shows up as sexual compulsion, codependency, or unhealthy
attachments motivated by a fear of abandonment. This is an addiction for just far too many goes
unnoticed and untreated, in part because it's a little bit harder to identify than something like
substance abuse or gambling, but also because it's the most stigmatized. It's an addiction that
leads to just profound levels of shame and demoralization,
basically like no other addiction,
which means that people end up suffering from it in silence.
Despite the fact that left untreated,
it will destroy lives just like the worst kind of addiction you can imagine.
So that is a huge part of what we talk about today,
which Liz lays out in her latest book called All the Way to the River,
with just the most courageous,
honesty and vulnerability, which makes this book such an important and incredible read.
Obviously, for anybody who does struggle with these issues, but also for basically everyone,
I mean, even if you can't relate to what Liz has endured, it's an important read because,
first of all, this is beautifully written.
Nobody can write like Liz, and this book really burns down the house.
And second, because my bet is that you do have someone in your life, whether you're aware of it or not,
that does struggle with what you're going to hear, Liz.
it's talk about. And you can't really show up to love and support these people unless you have
an understanding of the problem. This is a gift. This one is extraordinary and I'm grateful to share it
with you. So have at it. Pick up all the way to the river right away and check out her substack,
which is called Letters from Love, where you will find her and her 250,000 strong community
actively practicing unconditional love.
We have been going back and forth for, I don't know how long to, like, make this happen, right?
But these things happen when they're supposed to happen.
You know, I would have preferred you to be this coming on for like your 10th time on this show.
If we're going to do 10th time, we have to do first time.
So we'll start with first time and then we'll ramp up.
Well, what I didn't expect is that we would be doing a little bit of what it was like, what happened, and what it's like now, you know?
And that's my favorite kind of conversation to have.
And you're in the right place in your life to kind of have that conversation right now.
Thanks for the little coded introduction to that.
Inside baseball.
100%.
And people can take what they like and leave the rest.
That's true.
Another little inside baseball thing there.
But yes, this is the moment and this is the subject.
Yes.
And Earth School is in session, Liz.
Earth School is always in session, Rich.
So that Largo show, which I do think must have been 2018.
And I'm trying to match that up on the time.
line of your sobriety. You were either in early sobriety or not quite sober at that time.
I think I was, if I do the math, I think I was four months away from walking into the rooms.
Oh, wow. Wow. I was on my last little bender. Yeah. Yeah. You feel like you're in a really good
place right now, though. Oh, thank you. That's good to hear. Thank you. I am just for today.
and I think that's the important thing to remember
because I get into this place
where I start negotiating with the universe
and I'm like, let's keep this.
Like, this is good.
Like, let's keep stable.
I think I've had enough of a curriculum
and I don't need any more big lessons
and let's not have the ground fall out
from beneath my feet anymore.
Let me not be a creator of chaos.
Let me not have any chaos created upon me.
And the answer I always hear back
is like, let's just do today.
Yeah, I mean, grip too tightly to that.
and we'll see what happens.
Usually not good, right?
Trust your 24.
Let's just, you're good right now.
This is just another lesson in our school
of deepening your surrender.
And you don't get to hold on to what you're not giving back.
For sure, 100%.
Was the decision to write about this stage of your life
a difficult one to make, or did it feel natural to you?
It was really difficult.
I mean, so the book is about my part
My partner, Rea, who died of pancreatic and liver cancer seven years ago,
who had been a heroin and cocaine addict in recovery for many, many, many years
and then had a massive blowout bender relapse right before she died.
So the book is about that experience, which was extremely harrowing,
and I was her partner and her caregiver during that.
But it's also in a parallel way about my addiction that I never had had a name for
that I kept acting out in, my version of her bender, which is I use people the way she used
cocaine and heroin. So sex and love addiction, codependency, manipulation and control,
trying to outsource my care to whoever would do it. Like, are you my mother? Are you my mother?
Like that Dr. Seuss book just walking around like handing my power over to people and asking them
to give me back a little bit of it. So the book is about that relationship and it's about my
awakening to that. But I was so rattled after she died. I mean, I was rattled with grief,
but I was also rattled with like, what happened? How did the person who was the most trusted
person in my entire life, like the one person who I trusted without any reservation in my life,
the one person who could always make me feel safe turn into like an absolute vampire who was
using me and degrading herself and me? What did that mean?
What did it mean about us?
I mean, it was so difficult to unthread that.
And there was a part of me that didn't even want to look at it
because it was so excruciating.
There's a part in the book where I say, like,
when I get to the really bad part, I'm like,
I still don't want to tell this story.
Like, I still don't want this to be how that story ended.
So I wrote, right after she died, I wrote sort of a little novella,
like a little 70-page piece of fiction sort of loosely based on it,
and I'm like, you're hiding from this thing.
Like, this isn't it?
And then I tried to write it as a book of poetry,
I'm like, that's not it.
And then finally it was like, dude, you have to actually just sit down and say what happened.
And that's what the book is.
It's just, it's almost like a post-mortem on a crime scene.
Like, what happened here?
How did we get to this point?
And how do we get out of that point once we're in it?
It's hard and painful enough to look at Rea and try to solve the equation of how she went from one person to the next.
But that's a pretty easy equation.
to solve for, you know, insert heroin, cocaine,
amphetamins, you know, all of it, right?
Whatever you're inserting.
Yeah, it's like no surprise that there is a complete,
you know, character shift as a result of that.
The harder thing is to look in the mirror
and to try to deconstruct, like how you went from this person
who believed themselves to be something into something else altogether.
Like, how did you get lured into that trap?
And what is, you know, kind of the wiring inside of you
that impulseed you to make decisions that with time, distance, space, and recovery, you can
see clearly we're not in your best interest.
Right.
And if I had written this book directly after Ray had died, it would have been a book about
what a nice person I am and what a terrible thing happened to me.
You know, and I think I had just enough wisdom and perspective at that time to be like,
it can't be that simple kind of, you know, like, it can't just be that I'm a really nice,
giving, generous, loving person who ended up getting taken advantage of it.
of, but I didn't know what it was. And the question I think that is always present in any of the
12-step rooms that deal with relationships, and I'm in all of them, is what is my role in this?
How did I co-create this? I mean, Raya used to say to me, one of the things I loved about her is
whenever I was feeling even remotely sorry for myself, she would be like, there's no victims in this
room, Liz. There's no victims in this room. And I'm like, I sure feel like there's one. You know,
Like, I sure feel like there's one.
So the rigorous honesty to start to unthread.
Not only why did this happen, why does this always happen?
You know, how did I end up here?
It's not even just a book about how did I end up here.
It's how did I end up here again when I kind of thought I had my life in order in a certain way.
You know, it's like the Zen say that, you know, first they pull the rug up from under your feet
and then they pull the floor out from under the rug
and then they pull the ground out from under the floor
and now you're ready to begin.
And that's sort of the state I was in after she died
where I was like, there's no rug, there's no floor, there's no ground.
I don't know how any of this happened or who I am
and I'm somebody who thought she knew and didn't.
That had to get untangled first though
before you would be open and willing enough
to do that inside glance.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I have so many questions about this,
but I think it would be good to spend a few minutes
elaborating further on sex and love addiction.
Yeah.
Because it is a tricky thing to really wrap your head around
if you're not familiar with it.
Everybody has some connection to substance abuse addiction
or gambling, and there's many varieties of addiction.
And it's great that there's a kind of greater conversation
happening around all of these things to normalize them.
But I feel like sex and love addiction isn't really all that well understood.
And it's still attached to a lot of like taboos and fears.
And I think maybe that's what keeps it a little bit more in the dark.
So maybe talk a little bit more about what it is and maybe how even someone could self-diagnose themselves.
I think the best way to do it is to do this like a qualification and just tell my story.
And I think that people may recognize parts of themselves in it.
I would be loathe to start giving tools of diagnosis
for something that can be so subtle.
But I can say this about me.
I can say that what it manifests as in me
is a sincere belief that there's somebody out there
who I can meet who's going to make me feel okay,
and that my job is to find that person and it's a difficult thing because of course
culture teaches us exactly to do that and especially if you're a woman you're very much taught
that that's a story that's as old as the hills that girls and women are taught there's an
incompletion in me and I'm going to go find the person who's going to who's going to complete me
that's the sort of soft way to describe it the way that I would describe how I experience it is that
I have always used people the way other people use substances.
So there are people who I have used as sedatives, and there are people who I've used as stimulants.
And what I want to take complete ownership over, as I tell my story, is what that has made me into over time is somebody who can be extremely manipulative.
And that's the sort of side effect of this.
It's like if I don't feel okay, and I need to find somebody who's going to make me feel okay, then it's,
In order to get that need met, I'm going to have to figure out how to be an operator in terms
of how do I have to present, like, what do I have to become in order to get what we call in
some of these rooms lava, which is love attention, validation, and acceptance, right?
So that's what I'm longing for because I can't generate that within myself.
Right?
So I need to go get this lava, like somebody else has this.
Somebody's the plug.
Like, somebody's got this stuff.
I don't have it.
And so what do I have to do?
Like what ends like any addict?
It's like what manipulations do I have to do?
What lies do I have to tell?
What tricks do I have to turn in order to get your eye contact on me
and the words that I need you to say?
I need to make you say those words.
I need to make you make these promises to me.
I need to completely abandon myself in order to get you to do this thing for me.
And if I don't get the thing that I need, I'll go get it somewhere else,
regardless of what commitment I've made to somebody.
And so when I look at my particular history with this,
what I see is for 35 uninterrupted years,
tiny little interruption when I written Witt and Roady, Pray, Love.
There was like a nine-month period where I wasn't doing this,
which was actually the healthiest time of my life until now.
I was just going between sedative, stimulant, sedative, stimulant,
this person is extremely exciting, this person is extremely calming, you know, like, okay, now I'm so
calm that I can't bear the restlessness and the irritability and the discontent. So now I have to
go find somebody who's absolutely thrilling, who's going to like light me up until they withhold
and then I go insane and now I need another sedative and now I need another stimulant. And this is,
this is what I did to great cost, you know, to great cost to me, to great cost to other people.
It involved cheating on people, allowing myself to be cheated on,
breaking up other people's families and relationships.
There's a ruthlessness that any addict has,
which is what I have to do to get this, I will do,
no matter what it costs me or anybody else.
And I knew my entire life that there was something wrong with me
because I could see that other people weren't doing this.
I think that's something that every addict kind of knows
from an earlier age than we could admit,
which is like, other people are doing this.
Like somehow other people are just,
going and having a Tuesday while I'm out here playing this like high stakes roulette with my life
and with my body and with my heart and with my spirit bringing other people into danger with me
like putting myself at risk and not being able to stop and that low level of self-awareness
drives shame and isolation and loneliness and you start to compartmentalize it and create this
secret life because deep down even though you know you're not ready to confront it
you know that you need to hide and shroud it from everybody else.
There's a line I quote in the book from Gabriel Garcia-Marquez who said,
everybody has three lives, a public life, a private life and a secret life.
And the private life is the life you share with your family and your friends,
but the secret life is the life you share with no one.
And addict's secret lives are dark, you know,
and the reason you hide your secret life is because it would destroy,
if people knew it, it would destroy both your private and your public life.
Like if people knew what you were up to, you don't even approve of what you're up to.
But the trick there is that the addict thinks that it's their secret life.
They don't realize how patently obvious it becomes when it's your public life.
I know, everybody's like, we all saw that a long time before you did, you know.
But there's something uniquely insipid about sex and love addiction because it isn't necessarily immediately obvious.
You know, you're not going to be necessarily late for work or, you know, there's the general evidence that, you know, people,
use to kind of point to someone and say they have a problem isn't something that you can
like do with that kind of facility with this condition.
Except all those things that happen to addicts also happen in these kind of obsessive
malstroms of like the vortex of insanity that people can get into with each other.
Like not only can you be late for work, you can destroy your entire career.
You know, like you're going to have an affair at work with a supervisor and you're going to
lose your job. You're going to hit on an intern and you're going to be dismissed from the faculty
of the university where you teach. Your marriage is going to be destroyed. All the stuff that also
happens in addiction also happens here. In addition to killing yourself and killing others,
you know, it's one of the leading causes of suicide and homicide is like the horror that people get
into with each other where like, I mean, you read it every, open the papers. It's like every single
day people are killing their partners and or killing themselves over relationships and over
heartbreak and divorce is one of the leading causes of suicide and sex and love addiction
can be a thing that leads to divorce right so so I actually would argue that it's every bit as
destructive but the tricky thing is the culture doesn't say to you in a million different ways
what will cure you is if you do more heroin or gamble more what will what the culture teaches
you in a million ways is what will cure you is finding true love
and so you're being taught
that the solution
I mean you'll be told to go out and try again
yeah you just haven't found the right person
you just haven't found the right person yeah
so how many more people
was I going to try this way
you know
and it's like anybody want to be my fourth spouse
like anybody want to do this again
like really you want to roll the dice with me
like it's like how many more times
how many more different kinds of people
like I put the hours in on this
like men women
open relationships, closed relationships.
Like, I'm like, let me try.
I'm constantly trying to get the levels right
and never able to get the levels right.
But that's why Ray is such a fantastic gift,
you know, back to the earth school idea.
I mean, for people don't know,
maybe you can explain it.
But essentially, the notion is that, you know,
we've all volunteered for this incarnation.
And the curriculum is presenting us
with all of these assignments,
which are essentially obstacles and hardship and suffering
to test our ability to navigate them,
each of which is its own individual opportunity
for growth, evolution, and ultimately liberation, right?
Should we choose to accept it?
Like, you know, in this Mission Impossible kind of context.
And, you know, here comes Rea, this, you know, comet, right?
Who's just like the most larger-than-life character
you could ever imagine.
Like just catnip for somebody who's a people-police.
like the charisma of this individual.
And an intensity addict.
And I can't imagine like the tractor beam or like center of gravity that this person held that made it impossible for you to, you know, it was undeniable, right?
But because this person was so large like a comet, like she was going to flame out, right?
And in the most fantastic way.
And it gets so dark like at the end there.
But ultimately, this is exactly what you needed to interrupt that pattern.
because short of that, you could have gone through a string of 10 more relationships
and kept that, you know, kettle at a low boil
and never, you know, met your maker to learn the lesson that you needed to learn
in order to, you know, evolve to this new phase.
You just said that so well, and that's exactly it.
And I remember when she was flaming out and my life was tanking,
and I was so trapped in this nightmare.
Like, suddenly this beautiful love story turned into Sid and Nancy.
I'm like, what's going on?
How is my house?
I mean, you're literally tying her off
and shooting her.
It's crazy.
Crazy.
How am I going down to Chinatown
to get clean needles?
How am I, like, the lady who wrote Eat, Pray, Love?
Yeah.
Like taking.
This is like the A24, you know.
Thousands of dollars out of my ATM
to buy cocaine from teenagers in the East Village
for my partner so that she'll love me.
Like, how am I in this?
You know, I mean, and how am I in this
is I think, I don't think it's possible
for anybody to go through.
their earth school curriculum without having multiple occasions of how am I in this?
Like, how did I end up?
I thought this was a parachute, but it's a backpack full of bricks.
Like, you know, like, what's happening?
Like, how am I?
And I remember at that time just being so bewildered, like, what, how is this happening?
And I remember going for a walk and leaving her in this like cloud of cigarette smoke and
drugs in our apartment and walking down the street in New York.
And I was like, I need to pray, I need to pray, I need to pray.
and I don't think I've ever told this story before
but you just spurred it in me
which is the weirdest prayer came out of me
I was on East 9th Street
broad daylight and I was like
and before I could even like check the words
the words came out make it worse
like I said to God like make it worse
whatever this thing is you're doing
to my life
this like sledgehammer that you've taken to my life
I don't get it
I don't I still don't get
what this is. I know this has got to be part of an earth school curriculum, but all I see is
like useless suffering and pain, so don't be easy on me. If there's something that you're trying
to show me, hammer it harder, like destroy me so that I can see this, because there's obviously
something I can't see yet. And it did get worse, and I still couldn't see it. You know, like,
it took another, it took a year after she died for me to finally be like, oh, and it took
somebody sitting me down, you know, and 12-stepping me, essentially,
and just saying, like, I've watched you do this for 35 years.
And there's a room for this, and I think you're not well.
And I'll go with you to a meeting.
And I was like, me a meeting?
I'm not the drug addict.
Yeah, it's so interesting because you're in the midst of it and can't see it for what it is,
which I think gets to that other earlier point about, like, it is, it's tough to notice.
until you have some education into what this thing actually is for you to be able to identify it.
Yeah.
Paint the picture of this relationship with Raya, like how it began and kind of where it ended up.
So people understand, you know, kind of the trajectory.
It was a very slow burn.
It was like she was an acquaintance and then she was a neighbor and then she was a friend and then she was a close friend and then she was my best friend.
And then there was a moment I reached where I was like, oh, she's indispensable.
Like, I saw the impact that she had on me, that her incredibly grounding, reassuring, and strong presence had on me.
So I'm somebody who has always had a very deep fear of people and a fear of the unpredictability of people.
And like anyone can go off at any moment.
There's reasons that I have this fear.
But, like, folks is crazy here, you know?
Like, and my job that I took on from earliest childhood was, like, vigilance, you know?
like you must be vigilant, you must never, never rest
because these people are capable of anything.
So read the room, feel the room,
I can read a face from 100 yards,
I can feel, I can sit in a house with 10 people in it
in different rooms and I can tell you what everyone is feeling.
Like it's essential for me to know and monitor and track
the moods and the sensations of everyone in the room
for my own safety.
This is how I always-
You grew up in an alcoholic household.
I grew up in an alcoholic-influenced house.
You know, and I grew up with children of alcoholics.
and deep alcoholic damage multiple generations
down the line on both sides of the family.
So I'm nervous, and I think nervous is my baseline.
So Reyes shows up, and she's not nervous.
And whatever insanity anybody brings,
she'd lived on the streets,
she'd been in Rikers Island,
she'd been in insane asylums,
she'd been in the Tompkins Square riots,
like, she could handle everybody and everything
in this seemingly effortless jujitsu way
and whatever crazy anybody brought,
she just met it with this sort of clear-eyed like,
why are you being crazy, man?
And like just, she was like, she could just hop out,
she was like the calm dog in the herd of,
like in the pack of dogs,
who all the other dogs laid down when Raya walked in.
So when I saw what that did to my nervous system,
I experienced for the first time in my life
when she was in the room, this feeling of absolute safety.
And once I experienced that
and externalized that feeling of safety
where you are the provider of that,
you can't leave now
because otherwise I have to go back
to the anxiety field
that I live in all the time
and that began my addiction to her.
And it starts with,
hey, you can stay rent-free in my house.
Oh, yeah.
What do I have to give you?
I have a spot for, you know,
like all these sort of moves
that you're making unconsciously
to bring her closer
and make yourself indispensable.
Exactly.
I will make myself indispensable
to you because you have become indispensable to me. None of this was above the level of
consciousness and none of this was ever spoken, right? This was like, this is the secret operating
system that I've got underneath me that's hustling to make sure that my needs are met
because I can't meet them.
So I constantly find myself in this situation, a situation I suspect, men.
any of you can relate to, where almost every day, it seems, I'm being pulled in a thousand
directions. Too much to do. But I need to not just show up for it all, but show up with my best
self, with clarity, and with purpose. And I will lean into anything that will facilitate that
in a healthy way, which is exactly what Nandaka by Peak is designed for and why it is my new
favorite coffee alternative. So what is it? It is a neotropic.
adaptogen blend built for focus and calm energy without the crash. No low rent mycelium
fillers, just 100% fruiting body mushrooms. The legit high quality stuff like lines main for
cognitive support, Rishi and Chaga for your nervous system, plus ceremonial grade cacao, rich
in anandamide, the bliss molecule. They've added fermented probiotic teas for gut health and
cacao butter that delivers nutrients right where they're needed. So this isn't about chasing another
caffeine high. It's really about nourishing your brain at a cellular level with organic plant-based
ingredients. For me, the energy is clean, the focus is steady, and it really does help me with
my creative flow. Genuinely, enjoyable, smooth, earthy cacao with this subtle spice,
very tasty, and basically a daily ritual I actually look forward to.
And right now, you can get up to 20% off for life, plus a free starter kit, including a rechargeable frother and glass speaker.
Head to peaklife.com slash richroll to try Mandaka and feel the shift for yourself.
There's this persistent myth that creatine is just for bodybuilders and gym bros.
And I kind of get it.
The marketing has been terrible for decades.
But what the science shows is that creatine is actually this fundamental.
cellular fuel. Your brain uses it. Your heart uses it. Every energy demanding process in your body
relies on it. And this connects to everything I explore on the show, cognitive well-being, physical
performance, recovery, longevity. It's about improving how your cells generate energy at the
most fundamental level. Momentus understands this. And their new lemon travel packs make it simple.
I've got them right here. They're all naturally flavored, of course, perfectly portioned with
grab-and-go convenience. But the real differentiator is Momentus's creatine itself. It's
pharmaceutical grade, not the bulk powder of questionable origin that floods the market.
There's comes from Germany, and it's called Creepure. So if you have been curious about
creatine, but just kind of put off by the broscience marketing, this is your entry point. Use code
rich roll at livemomentus.com slash rich roll for up to 35% off your first order.
With this hypervigilance and this sense that the world is not a safe place to encounter somebody who is completely unafraid, is insanely truthful in every regard, has no care for other people's opinions.
There's something intoxicating about being in the presence of someone who feels that liberated when you're so guarded and so afraid to be yourself and trying to figure out which mask you have to wear in which context, which is exhausting, right?
And then here's this person who doesn't have any of that.
How is that possible, right?
Yeah.
And you're the successful one, and she's the hairdresser who's weathered hardship and, you know,
is not really living in the same socioeconomic, you know, sort of strata as you are and operating
in a very different world.
Yeah.
So I was like, I'll bring you up to my strata, which is where you've always wanted to be.
And she pulls you instead.
She pulls you down.
And we did a little of both.
A little, yeah, yeah.
We did a little of both, you know.
I mean, she did write an incredible memoir.
You guys did a tour together, right?
And I helped her get it published.
Like, there were things I was doing for her.
I mean, I'm very careful in the book to say there's two things I don't want to do.
I don't want to pathologize every single instance of this relationship.
And I also don't want to idealize.
So that's also why it took me so long to unthread this book.
Like, where's the truth here that's somewhere between pathology and idealization?
Because we loved each other a lot.
and we cared for each other a lot.
That comes across very clearly.
And we helped each other a lot.
And I think you do do an excellent job of showing, like, listen, like this was an incredible person
who had insane gifts who was so courageous and unafraid and capable and cool.
Was this person that everyone wanted to hang?
There were all these amazing qualities, right?
And also this, you know, self-destructive thing inside of her.
And this was a person and here's what I could.
And so once I'm blinded by need,
now I cannot see the full truth of you
because once I've idealized you and pedestalized you
and decided that you're my solution
and that you're my drug and you're the reason I don't have to suffer anymore
it's imperative that you not have feet of clay
you can't I mean this is a child's idealization of an adult
it's like you are my I mean I made her into my higher power
like absolutely I was like in any circumstance
where I would now go to what I call my higher power
where I would now get silent and pray and meditate
and ask source, what should I do?
I called Ray and said, what should I do?
And she would tell me great advice most of the time
about what to do.
But what I wasn't seeing through that haze of idealization
was, for instance, this was somebody
who had 13 years sober.
I mean, this was somebody who was like a hard, low bottom drug addict.
Like living on a park bench with a needle in her arm,
drug addict, multiple stays in jail.
like hard, hard, hard, drug addict who finally found recovery in 12-step
and whose ego decided after a certain amount of time in 12-step
that she didn't need anymore and decided that she didn't need to go to the rooms anymore
and announced to me and to the world, I am no longer an addict.
I've cured myself of my addiction because I'm rea fucking Elias.
But the best part is that she says, she says like,
I want to start drinking wine because my friends are pressuring.
It's like she put it on her friends.
Her family. She said they had an intervention.
My friends had a, I don't even know if this is true.
I doubt that it is.
We need you to start drinking wine.
We need you to start drinking a wine because it's uncomfortable for us
when we're at the table drinking and you're not.
And she's telling me this and she's saying,
I'm going to start drinking again.
Oh, and by the way, don't tell any of my friends in 12th step
because they're going to be really upset.
So this is going to be our little secret.
This from the woman who taught me the phrase,
we're only as sick as sick as our secrets, right?
So she comes to me and says, like,
I want to start drinking.
It's not a big deal.
Alcohol's not a problem for me.
I'm a heroin addict, not an alcoholic, don't tell anyone. And I also kind of hate alcohol.
And I was like, okay. You know, and because I had created a construct in which everything she did was
was right, strong, powerful, and cool, I'm like, Ray is so cool. Like, Ray is so cool, she's the addict who can drink.
You know, so this is the kind of stuff that, like, when you give your power away and you give your
perspective away and you give your wisdom away, what you're left with is just, I have to go along with
whatever you say, because I've fully given you my power.
I don't have the power to be like, hang on, what?
Your friends had a reverse intervention and they told you they want you to start drinking.
That doesn't even make sense.
Yeah, it collapses on top of itself immediately.
Instead, I'm like, let's get a bottle of wine, you know.
And so I can see now that she was slipping back into losing herself at the same time that I was losing myself.
at the same time that I was losing myself into her.
So, of course, the end game was a disaster.
I'm curious around your response
now that you've had time to reflect on it
when she gets diagnosed with cancer,
which that was like 2016.
Like in a perverse way,
that is almost your opportunity to really lock it in
because now she really can be dependent upon you.
I will take care of your every name.
And I remember in the horror of the diagnosis, and some things happen very quickly, there's that famous line in F. Scott Fitzgerald about first slowly, then quickly, it's been used a million times, but that's often how benders go. You know, like first she sort of slowly drank amester bitters, and then she sort of slowly drank wine, and then she started smoking cigarettes again, and then she started doing mushrooms and I was going to MDMA again, and then it's like, ooh, we might as well have a little cocaine, you know, and then it's just like builds and builds and builds. But
the slow love story that I was having with her escalated immediately upon that announcement
that she had six months to live. I'd been hiding that love for her from me, from her and from my
husband up until that point. But the thought that she was going to die very quickly was the
energizing excuse that was needed for me to finally say this thing that I hadn't been saying for years,
which is I am in love with this person. And I left my marriage to go to be with her. And I remember
even in the horror of I'm losing the foundational person in my life, in the first weeks of her
diagnosis, I remember showing up at her apartment with my suitcase and saying, I'm not going anywhere.
I mean, like a threat. When I see it now, it's kind of a threatening thing to say to somebody.
I didn't say, do you want me to stay? I just said, I'm not going anywhere. And for somebody who can't
take care of herself and gets her worth and value and esteem from what I can give to others
and then have reflected back to me about my value from what I'm giving. This is a perfect storm
because the feeling I had was one of utter, I remember this deep calm where I was like,
now I know what I'm here for. My purpose on earth is clear. I am here to serve Reyes every need.
I don't have to have an identity anymore. I don't have to have any needs. I can completely abdicate
for myself. No one would blame me for it. I mean, I'm being heroic. I'm showing up for somebody
who's dying. Yeah, that's the added bonus. Like, look what a good person I am. Like I'm a
I'm an angel. Which is what I've always wanted to be. So it's this weird thing because on the one
hand, there's this liberation from the marriage that wasn't working. Like you were able to stand up and
speak your truth and there's a freeing, very healthy, you know, kind of piece to that. But only so that you
could entrap yourself in, you know, in a situation and kind of indulge this, this, you know,
addictive tendency. Yeah. One of my friends in the rooms, she and I have a, are sort of daily
kind of test of sobriety. Sobriety is kind of easy to chart when you're a substance
addict. Like you're either using, you're either drinking or you know. It's hard to know. It's hard to
know. So we're like, so I have a couple kind of markers that I can use. So one, one definition I love of relapse is
that in all the relationship programs of 12-step
is relapse is returning to your original role
in the family system.
So good, right?
So if I'm the caregiver,
if I'm the one who's got to make everyone happy,
if I'm the one who has to take care of all the grown-ups,
if I'm the golden child, like that's a relapse for me.
But another way that we sort of test relapse
is no abandonment of self.
That's our, this friend and I, that's our motto.
Like no abandonment of self.
So at the end of the day, like, was there anywhere in this day where I said yes when I meant no?
Like when my body said no, but my mouth said yes, where I people pleased my way through some sort of situation in order to gain love approval, validation, and acceptance, where I infantilized myself because I was in a really difficult situation and I didn't want to face it and I try to make someone else do it.
It's like, no, you be the grown up and you do this thing because I can't, I don't want to.
So those are sort of these markers
but
handing over of the power
of your own life force
to pour into somebody else
is what I used to call love
and what I thought was love
and now when I see it
there's a sign
Ray was a songwriter and a musician
and we used to write music together
and there was a song I wrote for her
that at the time that I wrote it
I'm like this song is so beautiful
and it's so romantic
and it encapsulates completely
this story and she wrote the music for
and she sang it and performed and I was like, this is so great.
And one of the lines in it, in my voice at her, was,
I'm just trying to give you a home, my body and life are your own, right?
It's like this complete, and in our culture, we actually kind of like reward that
as what a beautiful romantic story.
But when I hear those lyrics now, I'm like, yikes.
Like, my body is yours.
Like, my life is yours.
My money is yours.
my energy is yours, I'm your home, where's mine? If I'm making my whole existence into your home,
there's no one home here. And I see that now and I'm like, my little cousin, when she was
little, used to have a little seal and we used to play this game where the seal was trapped
and we would just say, help, help, I'm trapped in kelp. And I look at that now and I'm like,
help, I'm trapped in kelp. Like, what am I doing? And I'm calling that love and I'm calling that
friendship and I'm calling that nobility and sacrifice, but what it also actually is is
complete and total abandonment of self. How much self-awareness did you have prior to going
into the program around this? Like, presumably, I mean, you're the, you pray love person, right?
Like, you're in touch with your past and your trauma. You know, there's therapy. There's all
these other things that you're doing that I would imagine gave you a glimpse of some of these
patterns and habits prior to, you know, kind of all the chaos that ensued later.
So why was that not enough to rectify?
Addict to addict, you know.
I'm setting you up here.
That you have a disease.
You know, addicts have a disease that lies to them and says you don't have a disease, right?
So the first person we fool is ourselves, right?
So there's like a section of Eat, Pray, Love, that I quote in this new book where I describe my
addictive tendencies, and that was 20 years ago.
Like, I could have written a doctoral thesis
by the time I was 30 called Why I Act Like This.
Like, I totally know the psychological reasons
why I act like this.
It didn't stop me from acting like that, right?
Like, what they'd say in there was, discovery is not recovery.
Like, knowing why something is...
Yeah, self-awareness will avail you nothing.
Of nothing, right?
Like, I was an expert on my dysfunction.
And every single time, I was like,
this isn't that, though.
Even though it matches up completely
with the fingerprint of what I always do,
I'm not doing it
in the same way that Rea was like
the drinking that I'm doing
isn't a problem
it's not a substance
drinking and drugs are not the same thing
I'm an addict but I can drink
it's not okay and I was like all right
and she was like all right
she's so honest
she's so honest she's so
candid she's not hiding it
she's telling everyone she's doing it right
so I have infinite
capacity to be a
PR agent for my own bullshit
you know and
I have to. I mean, addicts, one of the things I write in the book is that addicts have to lie.
Attics have to live double lives because they can't, until you find recovery, you can't live
without the thing that you're using. And so you've got to create these incredibly elaborate
sort of narratives to pretend that you're not doing what is so obvious that you're doing. I mean,
Ray has said to me during her spiral when I confronted her, since when is cocaine addictive,
she looked me in the eye. She looked me in the eye with these.
like pupils like this and she's like, since what is cocaine even? She's like twitching.
Yeah. And I'm like, what did you just say? And she said, it never used to be back in my day.
Yeah. You know, and I'm like, you're amazing. Attics are amazing. We will say anything. And I believe
that if you hooked her up to a lie detector test at that point, she would have believed what she was
right. Of course. Like since what is cocaine. That's amazing. It's one of my favorite lines I've
ever heard in my entire life. God bless her and me. So I was doing precisely what I have done
a million times I was leaving someone
to go be with someone else
which is my pattern while at the same time
saying it's not like that this time
even though it 100% is
had you ever not been in a relationship
did you just go you were just overlapping them
one along from the get-goed like cordwood
yeah one after another I mean I started when I was 15
I would have started a lot earlier if I was prettier
like I was trying to do it earlier
but you know it wasn't until I got over my like
ugly duckling thing that I could make it work.
It just can't not be in a relationship.
Can't.
And there was a part of me that always knew that I was missing, I was robbing myself of
something.
I knew, I knew that it's important to learn how to be with yourself and to learn how to be
alone.
So the only time I didn't do it, there was like a nine, ten month period during the E.
You pray love journey when I didn't do it.
But then I met somebody who was so loving.
Yeah.
Right to it.
He was so attentive and so loving and so dialed into me.
And I was like, I can't deny myself this.
Like, this person's so good to me and so kind to me.
This is why it's such an innately human story.
Like, you go on this journey with Eat, Pray, Love,
and you meet your maker and probe the depths of your soul,
trying to find these answers.
You return, you meet this man, you get married,
and you write this book, and it's this smash,
sensation success, and then you kind of slowly, you know, slink back into self-will and old habits.
Slink is such a good word for it. And then you're just kind of doing your thing and you're like,
it's fine, right? Yeah. And you need this, you know, comet to collide with your planet in order
to wake up and realize like, oh, the work wasn't done when I left Bali. Like, there's still
more that I have to do that I have to look at. What is it about needing these incredible
incredibly painful moments in order to get us to awaken to ourselves and make those changes
that are obvious to everyone else except ourselves. It's such an intractable human problem.
It's adorable. We're so cute. We're so cute and hopeless and adorable and loved. And when I bring
that up with my what I call God, you know, and I want to be really careful when I use the word God that
there's a Rod Bell line that I love where he was always like, whatever God you don't believe
and I also don't believe in that God, so we're good.
Any God trauma that anybody has,
but it's a word I use for the mystery
that doesn't have any other word
that I do feel loves me
and wants me to be okay.
And the way that it speaks to me is like,
oh, honey, we tried as gently as we could
to get your attention about this.
Like we tried.
Right.
There were a lot of knocks.
If we could have done this without sending the comment.
But why can't we just heed that gentle nod?
You can't see what you can't see. And I think when you're somebody who's accustomed to being very
powerful, which is something, like, there's another element of me where I'm like, I'm the
manifester. Like, I can create things. Like, I can make, like, I can do stuff in the world. I'm a
person who can do stuff very successfully. I'm accustomed to being successful. Raya was accustomed
to being powerful. She was accustomed to walking into the room and being the effortless alpha in
every room that she walked into. Why the hell could she not manage a little bit of cocaine? Like,
why the hell could she not manage a little bit of alcohol? It's like, this is her Achilles heel, right?
Like, I'm accustomed to manifesting beautiful things. So why can't I have a normal relationship,
like a normal person? And the thing that I find so touching and that I come back to again and
again about addiction that I find so sweet about us, I say us as addicts of all sorts,
is like, because you can't.
Like, there are certain things that I can't do
that other people can do,
and I just know that now,
and I hope I don't forget that.
But, like, other people can do things that I can't do.
I have a friend who's a ferocious alcoholic,
and we were at a wedding together,
and somebody handed her a glass of flue champagne
to make the wedding toast,
and she just went like, you know,
it says in the big book of A,
we recoil as if from a hot flame, right?
And, you know, she's calling nine years sober,
and she just was like,
you know, she just backed up from this thing.
And the person was like, it's just for the photo.
Like, you can surely hold a flute of champagne safely in your hand.
You're not going to drink it.
And she just said, I cannot do things that other normal people can do.
Like, this is what I have to know about myself.
In this regard, I am not normal.
And I think what I was doing for my entire relationship history
was trying to like, I wrote a whole book about marriage
trying to figure out how do I contain this thing?
How do I do this successfully?
How do I be normal?
And I'm not.
And that's lovely.
I'm just not.
This is how it is.
And that abnormality that brought so much pain and suffering and shame and degradation
is also my path to God.
Right.
Because it's where my power ends.
And if I were as good at relationships as I am and everything else,
I wouldn't need a God.
I'd just be out here given sense.
seminars. I mean, it would find you, it would find you in some other way. You know, and then,
you know, I'm so good at life. You know, here's what's great. Here's this great. You're cruising
around, you know, America doing these workshops with Rob Bell on creativity. You know, I adore Rob.
Like, what a wonderful human being. And the two of you together, it's like a supernova. It's like
an amazing energy. These two human beings who have this spiritual connection and know
beyond a shadow of a doubt, that creativity is something divine. It's something that we can court
and make ourselves available to flow through us, but it is not something that is generated
inside of us. And it descends upon us when we open the portal are in a place of ease and
allowing. Like, you know, all of that, like, you're the best at this. There is no question that you
are tapped into something very real and deeply spiritual. And yet, you're walking around with
this God-sized hole in your soul, determined to fill it with externalities. What applies to creativity
doesn't apply to relationships. You have compartmentalized your spirituality. And, you know,
God came down and gave you a reckoning and said, your surrender. You're like surrender is half
baked, right? Like, you have it for this. You're very clear about that. You helped all these
people and you've been able to, you know, build this beautiful, creative, inspirational life
in this one area. And yet, you can't seem to understand that you need to apply it not just to
this other area that's going sideways, but to everything. And I'm curious, like, where's Rob Bell in
this? Is he going, hey, Liz, is he seeing this? Is he not seeing this? Like, where's the blind
spot. Oh, for me, like calling me out or being like as your friend. Not for him necessarily,
but it's like the blind spot is what's interesting because we all have them. Like I'm not like
judging you. I have a million of them. You know what I mean? It's like we think we've got it figured out.
I feel like you just, I don't feel judged. I feel the delicious velvety softness. I always feel in the
truth. You know what I mean? Like that's just what you just said is true. Like I'm like, yep,
that you just, what that guy said. And so yeah, Earth school says. What that guy said.
got another class for you. Right, right. We hate to do this, honey, and we'll do it as gently
as we can, but here we go. I don't think the definition of a blind spot is that you can't see it.
You know, I mean, that's where the beautiful human quality of mercy has to come in. Of not instead
of like, how could you not see this? It's like, of course you can't see this. Like, of course,
of course you can't like I feel the only compassionate way to look at an addict is not like why do you
keep doing this but like why in the world wouldn't you you know like why in the world wouldn't you
and nothing can save me but a miracle like psychology can't save me like my own massive creativity
I mean how many times did I say precisely what you just said rich like I wish I could be in
relationship with people the way I am in relationship with creativity it's so clear to me
how this works in creativity.
It's so effortless.
It's so beautiful.
It's so warm.
It's so soft.
It's so free.
There's no stakes.
I've got no attachment to the outcome.
I can,
and this just happened a couple years ago.
I can write, like, spend four years, write a book.
Yeah, you wrote this novel.
And then just be like, oh, okay,
and just not publish it and not lose a minute of sleep over it, right?
That was insane.
I remember talking to Adam about that.
I was like, what was the interior experience of that?
Mellow.
But I know you were like, it's cool.
It was me.
Because you were doing it for the love of doing it in the process.
But I can't, that level of detachment, that level of non-attachment to outcome,
I have never been able to do that with a person.
You know, it's just like once I feel that they have something that I need,
like all addicts, you can't take it away from me until it's got claw marks in it.
So that's my thing.
That's what I came here in this lifetime to address.
And that's what I'm doing.
to the best of my capacity
with the help of a very amused God
you know who's like
all right honey
how many more times do you want to do this
you done yet
if you're done yet
come with me
if you're not done go try it again
like go try it again
this episode is brought to you by
whoop
whoop is the only wearable
that turns your health and fitness data
into personalized guidance, leveraging everything from resting heart rate,
HRV, sleep stages, and efficiency, and real-time stress levels to inform how you train,
work, and recover so you can live better.
And now the all-new whoop is here, and the recent upgrades are dramatic.
In addition to the sensor, now being 7% smaller, the battery life now extends to a remarkable 14 days.
The new health span feature shows how your daily house.
habits impact your pace of aging, and hormonal insights provide personalized guidance throughout
your cycle or pregnancy. And the new WoopMG even boasts a heart rate screener with on-demand
ECG reading so you can monitor your heart anytime and share your results with your doctor.
It's the only wearable that offers a complete view of your body, not just for tracking,
but for insights that shape your decisions about your health, especially when recovery matters
most. And you can join now at join.wop.com slash roll. That's join. Dot whoop. W-H-O-O-O-P.com
slash roll.
Movement is so much more than just exercise or training or motion even. Movement is a language.
It's a way of connecting body, mind, and environment. Movement as a way of being. A way of being
that brings me close to myself, closer to other people,
and to what matters most in life.
And for me, what we wear in that pursuit plays a crucial role.
And that's what I appreciate about on.
They don't just make gear.
They engineer apparel that supports and elevates the practice of movement itself.
From running shorts with built-in support to technical teas that cool you down right where it matters.
Every detail is widely intentional.
scene placement, reflectivity, breathability, minimalism that works together so the gear disappears
and nothing gets in the way.
This is apparel born from precision and tested by elite athletes, but made for anyone
committed to the path.
I've been with On since 2023, and I'm still just so impressed by how they continue to elevate
and innovate in the name of purpose, not Flash.
Head to On.com slash Richroll to explore gear that supports you.
every step of the way.
When you came into the program,
were you open-hearted about it
and willing to do the work,
or were you fighting it
and trying to convince yourself
that you didn't fit?
Which time when I came into the program?
I don't know.
Well, you tell me.
When I came into the program,
the first time, I came as a spectator.
And so a friend 12-step me
and was like, you've got to go check this out.
And I went, and I checked it out.
And I was like,
these people are super sick
you know like these people are really not well
I'm not nearly as fucked up as these people
the literature is good I get it
I'm very smart I'm a lot smarter than other people
so I'm just going to read the book
in an afternoon and download it and be like
okay cool cool cool cool I see that
definitely not going to get a sponsor
definitely not going to ever make a program call
with another fellow because these sick people
I don't really want to do with these tragic
Like this is how I was seeing it
And I was there for a couple months
And then I was like, I think I've
You know, I'm an accelerated student
So I think I got it
Cool, thanks a lot, thanks for the lessons
I don't need this
And I went out and picked up again
Like instantly picked up another person
And instantly did the thing I do
So after that kicked my ass
And this was after Raya died
Like one comment wasn't enough
It's never enough
You know?
Like I'm a low bottom sex and love addict
I have to have many more serious consequences than a normal person to finally give up.
But then I came, the second time I was like, okay, got it, let's do this now.
Who will be my sponsor?
Let me take 10 phone numbers.
Let's do the steps.
Let me put this thing down.
And I was still negotiating.
There was a beautiful moment at the beginning of my recovery where I said to my higher power,
who I feel like I can hear and who hears me.
I said, if I do this, if I do this right and I'm good
and I do the steps and I get a sponsey
and I like am the perfect A student,
will you send me another great love story?
And instantly I heard,
I will promise you no such thing.
Yeah.
You know, I will notice you.
It's not a conditional thing.
It's not a quid pro quo.
Uh-uh.
Like the gift of sobriety is sobriety.
but I want the cash and prizes that come after
and the invitation that I felt at that moment was
are you willing to
are you willing to fully put this thing down
are you not willing to just do like
90 days of no contact with your qualifiers
or a year of celibacy
and working on yourself
are you willing this is my deepest dream
this is always my best idea for how to be well
and God was like will you
what I heard was like will you put it on the divine fire
and not take it back out
like just here
you can have this. You can have this dream. You can have this fantasy that the entire culture has
celebrated. I mean, I, eat pray love ends with me as Julie Roberts, literally sailing into a sunset
with Javierbert. Like, that's the story. Like, it's literally, and like, that's the story I had
built and created. And God was like, can I have that, can I have that dream? Like, can I have that
dream can I have all and and what I often hear God saying about surrender is like can you come to me
with your hands empty can you come to me with nothing a little bit hidden behind your back as an
ulterior motive of if then if I do this then maybe I can you know and and I did I was like
like I pushed all the chips in I'm like you can I'm putting this down like I'm putting this down
with no promise that I'll ever get anything in return except a life that is for the first time
in my life manageable, right? Which is the gift of sobriety. Like I can actually handle my life
today. Today I'm okay. So that's the only deal. That requires a tremendous reservoir of
willingness. And willingness is something I've been thinking a lot about lately. And I want to run this
idea by you that I've been thinking a lot about and working on. Your ideas around ideas in
big magic, that's something I think about a lot, like the notion that ideas are out there
in the ether. And, you know, when one occurs to you or you grab it or it descends down upon
you, it is your responsibility or obligation to bring expression to it or it will evaporate,
return to the ether, and make itself available for somebody who is willing to do that.
In the way that ideas work, I think there's something to be said that's analogous around the way that willingness works.
Because I don't think that willingness is something that can necessarily be self-generated.
You can't, you can like be willing to be willing, but that's sort of like wanting to want something that you don't actually want.
You can aspire to willingness, but that doesn't necessarily make it so.
I think willingness is something that arrives from somewhere else, much like an idea.
It strikes you, and then you have a brief moment of time where it's your responsibility to exercise that willingness through some kind of action, some kind of contrary action.
But if you don't do that, it will pass and evaporate.
willingness is like this very fickle thing
that I can't quite put my finger on
but it's so powerful when it does arrive
if you have the awareness and the presence of mind
to recognize it and take that contrary action
because in that moment where you did have the willingness
this extreme capacity to turn everything over
it's a very dramatic act
there were many days and probably darker days
more desperate times when you didn't have that
and couldn't make that choice.
I always say I wish I'd found recovery programs
in this problem earlier,
but I also need to call myself out
on how very unlikely it would have been
that I would have availed myself of them
because I think I still felt like I can solve this, right?
I can solve this with my intellect.
If I learn more, like I'm a great student,
So it's like I'll learn more.
Like I felt like I divorce-proofed my second marriage
by writing this book called Committed,
where I spent three years researching the history of marriage,
all the sociological data around marriage,
interviewing everybody that I met about marriage,
and then collating it into this book
where I was like, now I'm divorce-proof
because I have every single piece of information
that there is about marriage
because I never want to go through a divorce again.
So I'm like, I'm going to just apply this.
I'm just going to learn my,
way into safety which is not the same thing as being willing to not know. You know, one of the things
when I was going through withdrawal and withdrawal from the dream, right? Withdrawal from
the dream, the fantasy that someday I'm going to get this thing right. Like the humility
of being like, I might never get this thing. I might not be here to get this thing right.
This thing maybe can't be made right. Like all of that. And the deep loneliness, the deep
loneliness like the searing physical pain of waking up in my bed in trauma literally shaking and crying
like a baby and this voice being like hysterical inside me being like this is not okay
like this is way too much we need someone here we can't like go get someone like go get someone you
know how to go get someone go get someone it doesn't matter who
Like, doesn't matter who, just a body needs to be here in this bed.
This is not okay.
And sitting with myself through night after night of that and calling and just being very unhappy
and miserable and uncomfortable, like all withdrawal, and calling my sponsor and saying,
when will this end and what will be my reward?
You know, like what will be my reward for all this discomfort and when will this end?
and she said, it'll end when it ends
and when it ends, it won't be you who ended it.
Spoken like a true, right?
It'll end when it ends and when it ends,
it won't be you who ended it.
And can you live without knowing what the reward is?
She said, can you do what you're sober predecessors
before you did and walk through this withdrawal
without knowing what you're going to get?
You who love to know.
I mean, knowing is how I stay safe.
and I found there's to be something like when I when she introduced the concept of a lineage like others before you have done this like others before you I don't know why that makes me just want to cry right now but like others before you have been in this much pain like this pain is not original to you and the people who were in this much pain before you found a series of actions that they could take that kept them out of extreme degradation
and suffering. And can you just walk where they walked without knowing why you're even doing
it? And I think, I don't know whether my willingness to do that was a decision of my own will
or if it was a gift from the mystery to be like, this kid has suffered enough. Like, let's just put her
on this path. Like, let's just make her willing to be on this path. Like, maybe she's had enough.
of this particular kind of pain.
When did the idea of doing this extended celibacy come in?
I didn't make a decision to be extendedly celibate.
I made a decision to leave that up to God.
So I'm not in a celibacy experiment.
God is in charge of what I do in this realm.
I don't make any decisions around this realm.
So for me to say I'm going to be celibate
is just as ridiculous as me saying,
I'm going to stay faithful in this marriage
or I'm not going to be attracted to this person.
Like, I'm powerless over this.
So the relationship that I'm in is,
what's your will for me, God?
What is your will for me that would be of the highest use of me
and service of me to this gift of life
that you've given to me and to others
where I would cause the least harm
and be able to do the most service?
And so far, you know, as of like 20 to 4, on this day, six years into my recovery program, God's been like, I want you doing just what you're doing.
And I will notify you if that needs to change. And if that needs to change, it's not going to be your idea. It'll be my idea. But, you know, actually the shorter answer is when I say to my higher power, should I be dating? God's like, LOL, no.
like uh-uh and other people in my program do date you know and they date with sober dating plan i mean
i have a sober dating plan i've got a document in place for if that day should come and i hope that
i have the sobriety to use it if that day should come but for now the answer is we have so much
healing to do of the it's not just that i have so much healing to do of the damage to me from 35 years
of abandonment of self, degradation of body, disregard for my own well-being,
like, there is so much healing.
That's a long time.
I was deep in the pain in this thing for a long time, right?
So there's a lot of amends that I'm making to myself about things I'm sorry that I made
myself do in order to get love approval, validation, and acceptance.
And so the amends process for me is like, we're not going to do that now.
I'm not going to make you go do that.
I will take care of you so that you don't have to
degrade yourself so much so that somebody else will.
But there's a lot of healing I have to do with people who I harmed.
And that's been a really long process
because the immense process is difficult
when these kind of actions hurt people at such a profound level.
And so there's a lot of delicacy in terms of like,
is it even safe for them if I approach?
Is this a person who ever wants,
to hear my name again.
Like, I did the worst thing to this person.
Like, do they even want to, you know, so there's a lot of, like, there's a lot of healing.
I think of it as, like, healing a wetlands, you know?
It's like these heavy metals that are in there take a long time to get out.
And I don't want to rush.
I don't have a deadline on that process.
Like, that's an open-ended process.
So that's where I'm at.
The amends, you know, it's a case-by-case thing, right?
Like, when is it a living amends?
When is it appropriate?
and in the best interest of everybody to directly approach somebody,
like, it's hard to know.
It's impossible to know.
When those harms are severe and cut deep, you know,
sometimes it's better to leave them be
and to just, you know, kind of change your behavior going forward
or, you know, write a letter to them that you don't send
or, you know, just treat other people, you know,
in a manner befitting your recovery.
Like, it's a hard thing.
It's really hard.
But when it's unresolved, it also makes it more difficult to move forward and release the baggage.
And so you're still somewhat connected to those feelings of guilt and shame that surround it.
But when you take dating off the table and you can no longer, you know, export or externalize, you know, how you feel about yourself upon, you know, the opinions of others, you're in this rare place of solitude where you're, you know,
you can do that work and you can begin to exercise self-care.
And that gets into this really important piece around self-love,
which is like something I still, like so many years later,
I struggle with so deeply.
It feels so cringy, the whole prospect of it all.
Because deep down, I still harbor all of these negative emotions
about myself that creep up and start to infect my relationships.
And there's a whole terrain that still is out there
for me to, you know, travel.
I try to avoid using terms self-love and self-hatred
because self-love can feel really cringy
and self-hatred is so dark
and I just think of it in terms of friendliness
and non-friendliness.
Like the thing, the way I'm speaking to myself in this,
I can like do a little assessment and be,
the way I'm speaking to myself right now is very friendly.
It's not even about loving.
It's just like, this is unfriendly.
like I would never speak to a friend this way
I would never degrade a friend this way
is this a friendly moment or an unfriendly moment
do you know the story about the Dalai Lama
and Sharon Salzberg the meditation teacher
have you heard this story? I don't think so
so when the Dalai Lama came to the West
for the first time through California
and it was probably in the 70s 60s
early 70s I think I don't have the exact date
but nobody really kind of knew who he was
He wasn't this huge global figure yet, and some people, I'm going to guess, around Esselin, brought him, you know, like in that sort of circle, like people who were philosophers and thinkers and meditators.
And they had a kind of summit, and they brought him and invited various therapists and thinking people in academics to meet this kind of obscure Tibetan monk.
And Sharon Salzberg, the great meditation teacher who teaches a lot about meta, loving kindness meditation, was in the room.
She was a young meditator, and she had the opportunity to ask him a question, and his English was very poor at the time, and she said, what is the traditional prescribed within your lineage? What is the traditional prescribed cure or treatment for self-hatred? And he had to talk to a translator for 15 minutes before he even understood the question. He kept thinking he was hearing it wrong, because he kept saying, who's the person that you're having a conflict with?
He kept coming back and being like, who's your enemy?
Who's the one that you're in trouble with?
And they kept saying, like, me.
And he's like, but that, you're your own enemy.
That doesn't even make any sense why you would be your own enemy
because you're the only one, like you're you,
why would you be an enemy to you?
And he was bewildered by this question.
And then he was even more bewildered when he sort of took a survey around the room
and was like, does everyone have this?
Like, is this a thing?
Like, is this? And everyone's like, every Western hand was up. And he was, as a person of compassion, he was devastated. And he said, his exact quote was, I used to think that I understood the mind, but I find this very, very disturbing. He came away from that. And his sort of approach toward the West was, we're going to have to start with this. Because this is not okay. And this absence of a sense of a sense.
of just inherent, your sovereign right to feel friendly toward yourself has been so violated
and decimated in this culture that we think it's natural to hate ourselves when it's actually
the very, very furthest thing. So it's, that's where I sort of start with, with people, you know,
and where I start with myself. And the way that I see it now on a sort of cosmic level is I believe
that my little soul spirit that came here to come to earth school that god or whatever or the
great mystery gave this one to me like i don't know totally what's going on here but i know that i'm
not you i mean i know we're at one level of world one but in this duality like you're having a
totally different experience over there than i am like so there's a rich guy there's he's in there
and then i'm in here and i'm in here talking to you but like this one was in trouble
to me to carry through this experience of Earth's school.
And I like now the way I think of it is they must have thought I could take care of it,
you know, or they wouldn't have entrusted me with something as sacred as a soul, right?
So now the way I see it is like all the rage and resentment and fury that I felt at Ray and many
other people where I'm like, you abandoned me.
like you betrayed me we had a contract you were supposed to take care of me you know and it's like
good guess and a totally innocent misunderstanding like this is mine to carry through this world right
and I'm just learning how to do this I'm just learning so I'm just learning how to look in and be like
are you all right in there how can I serve you what do you need like how can we I can see you're
suffering this little one is suffering in here and one of
when I was going through withdrawal and having those nights where that addict voice that's trying
to get me what I need is like jonesing and being like, we need to get someone here, you know,
what I was saying out loud in my bed. And this is, I also remember having this feeling like,
I'm so glad I'm alone. I'm so glad I'm living alone so that I can do all this stuff that would
look very weird to someone, you know, like flopping about PTSD, shaking, talking to myself,
comforting myself. I'm like, I'm actually really glad that I've got this container
of this house that I live in
where I'm not pulling anyone into this drama
with me. I'm actually in the
crucible with myself and the
only people here are the ones who need to be here
which is like me and God. And I would
just say out loud
I would say to her
I know, I totally know why you want
that. It makes so much sense.
I know your whole story
and I know why
you want me to get someone here
and I know what you think you're going to get out of that
and you're not wrong.
Like, that would actually be a fix for tonight.
Like, it would work.
It always works like all drugs.
It's like it would.
You just, you play it out to its conclusion.
You play the tape out, and it's like, and then I would just say to that part, like, do you remember all the other times we did that?
And do you remember how it always ended?
And it always ended worse.
So we're just going to not do that.
And I was watching this division in me.
Like, this thing was trying to run away from me.
And it was like, I don't trust you to take care of me.
I want to go find someone else.
And I'm like, I get why you don't trust me.
You shouldn't.
All I've ever done is abandon you.
But it's like I'm in parenting school at the Y
learning how to take care of you now.
And I'm not going to always be great at it,
but you are my priority now.
And even if I'm not always a great mom,
like I'm here.
And I'm not going anywhere.
And I'm not going to let us bring someone else in here
because that actually ends up harming us.
And it's okay if you don't like that.
And it's okay if you feel like that's enough.
and I don't care if we're up all night doing this.
Like, I am not leaving you.
And I think the thing that I have always most needed to hear
is I don't care if we're up all night doing this.
I am not leaving you.
You cannot exhaust me.
You are not too much for me.
And I'm the only person.
I now believe I'm the only person in the world
who I am not too much for.
Like, because it shouldn't be anybody else's job to do that.
Like, that's too big a job.
They have to be doing that for themselves.
They've got their own, like,
neglected abandoned kid in there who needs them, who they would abandon if they tried to do that
for me, right? So it never should have been anybody else's job. But I didn't know that. And I couldn't
know that until I knew it. It's not dissimilar from the way, again, like back to creativity,
like the idea that you talk about like, oh, the negative voice, the self-defeating voice, like we're
going on a road trip. You can come, but you know, you got to sit over there and if you pipe up,
you're going in the back seat,
like you're not allowed to, like, raise your voice.
Like, you know, I love you and, you know,
you can, I'm not abandoning you.
Like, you're part of me, but like, there's rules, right?
Yeah.
So good at setting boundaries around that.
But here we are.
This is the same situation.
It's just that you have to cleave off
a deeper part of yourself
that you have a harder time disassociating with
or letting go of, right?
The wounded child that needs care,
that you're,
that you've got bottled up in here
like the negative creative voice
that's easy for you
you know but this is the tough one
but on some version it's like Russian nesting dolls
like this is just the same thing right
yes that's so well put rich
exactly
exactly and Raya used to say
there's always a I mean I think it's a common recovery
phrase but there's always a trapdoor under every bottom
like just when you think you've hit rock bottom
it's a trap door and you can always go lower
but there's also always a ladder
of ascension you know you can
always evolve higher like you can always your soul can always be sort of more polished and I think a lot of
sort of the journey of life is like you start to get rid of that you know the external things that
you've been using to not go to the bottom of the bottom of the bottom of the thing and when they're all
gone then it's just you and the little creature at the bottom of the hole you know who when I met her
frankly looked at me and had no hope i mean she looked to me she had the thousand miles stare
of a 10 tour of duty soldier and and i was like what do you need for me and she was like
you will always abandon me you will always abandon me you'll always choose everybody else's
comfort over my safety always you'll always people please your way into destroying you'll
always give everything that's mine away to everyone.
Like, I can't count on you for anything.
And I was like, you're right.
You're right.
Let me see what I could do about you.
Let's start over.
Like all these things though,
they track back to childhood wounds and traumas.
I'm sure you have some awareness around,
you know, how this pattern originated
and what locked it in.
Beyond 12-step, are there other healing modalities
that have been helpful, like internal family systems.
I mean, there's a panoply of like stuff out there.
Yeah.
IFS has been great.
I would say for me, the two modalities
that I think have actually given me transformation,
because everything helps,
but I don't think helping is quite the same
as having a transformative awakening experience
where you feel like you're actually being changed.
Say more about that.
So I did talk therapy for probably two and a half
decades and it was helpful. It was helpful. It was such a band-aid. It was so helpful to go in there
and talk about my problems and have somebody compassionately listen, but I didn't stop doing those
things, right? I didn't. Some people, it may actually transform. So for me, it was almost like
a methadome clinic. It's like, I'm going to go get a little bit of love and connection with this
person that's going to be able to keep me alive for the next week until I go get another. But I don't,
you know what I mean?
using the therapist to like meet your addictive need.
Yeah, the validation.
You'll be a kind of temporary mommy for me, you know, and comfort and understanding.
And then these little awakenings where it's like, oh, an epiphany, I understand more,
but I would go out and do the same thing again, you know?
So the two things that I feel like are the only two things that for me have actually made me not do those two things again, those things again.
One is 12 step and the other is Byron Katie's work and self-anquiry and the four.
like that works really well.
Right.
It's called the work, right?
It's called the work.
I don't know that much about her stuff, but...
I find it to be really, that it creates radical transformations of thought within my mind.
It asks me to have a really open mind and to be able to sort of ju-jitsu flip my beliefs where
all of a sudden I kind of physically can't believe that anymore.
It has something to do with basically just challenging everything you believe is true, right?
Like, what if it's not true?
Your negative thoughts.
Yeah.
to ideas and identity.
Is that right?
Yeah, a good one would be Rea abandoned me.
I'm in that belief and I'm suffering enormously
because I'm in that belief.
So anyone would agree with it.
Like anyone would have looked at her,
like checked out on the couch,
spending money on cocaine with the needle in her and be like,
sure looks that way.
Like I could definitely get a consensus of people to back me up on that.
But what that work would do would be to ask me to dare to have an open enough mind.
to, I can always go back to the belief later,
but would you sit in meditation
and ask these four questions of this belief?
And the first one is, is it true?
That Ray abandoned me.
And the answer to that can only be yes or no.
So you have to really think about it,
like, is a true she abandoned me.
The second question is,
if the first answer was yes,
the next question is,
can you absolutely know that it's true?
And that's where the ego starts to kind of like
disintegrate like a slug
when you put salt on it
because it's like, well, I can't absolutely know much.
You know what I mean?
Like, it looks true, it feels true, but like, it's absolutely, like, it starts to introduce
this possibility of doubt to this belief that I'm hanging my whole life on.
And then the third question is, how do you respond when you believe that it's true?
I'm a victim.
I'm enraged.
I have to go find someone else to love to make up for what I lost with her.
You know, I'm sick and suffering in pain.
And who would I be without that belief is the fourth question.
And it's like, if I didn't have the belief that she abandoned me, I would be free from that
rage and then you do that the really cool jutsu part is you take the original belief
and then you try to find three opposites of it and you try them on she always says try them on
like a pair of shoes and walk around in it and just see how that belief feels so with that belief
rea abandoned me an exact opposite would be i abandoned me that actually when i try that on and walk
around in it it feels more true it's like oh wait a minute that actually kind of feels like
like I did that
like I agreed to go by all those drugs
I made you into my higher power
I enabled this
or Rea abandoned herself
like that also
feels very true
she abandoned her recovery program
she abandoned her highest ideals
she abandoned her integrity
it depersonalizes it
where suddenly it's like she didn't do that at me
she was just doing it
like she was just an addict having a relapse
it wasn't personal to me
like if I wasn't there
she'd be yelling at a tree
you know what I mean
She was just in her own experience.
And so you start to take these beliefs
and have the, I love an open mind.
So that's why I think I really love that.
Like willingness is an open mind.
Like when God said to me,
are you willing to put this thing down
and just come in with no understanding?
Are you willing to be in a beginner's mind?
Are you willing to be in a don't know mind?
So her work helps me with my like fears and resentments
throughout the day of like I've got,
you know, because all addiction comes from,
fear and resentment.
And when those ideas are challenged and you feel an emotional charge,
obviously that's when there's something there to explore.
Yeah.
The resistance is because whatever that idea is,
no matter how much it's leading you in the wrong direction,
it is doing something for you.
It's fulfilling some sort of need that needs to get understood
and deconstructed and filled in a different way.
It's crying out to be liberating.
you know that's how I see it because like a free mind an open mind a soft mind isn't getting like
I'm thinking of like a snag in a river you know like the like a free and open mind is just sort of a
river flowing and then there's like a bend and like a giant log sort of just gets snagged and then
like all the other logs start hit I mean we've seen it so many times in nature which is like
just hooked on that thing.
And so those like deep endemic beliefs,
those self-hating, self-abandoning, betraying beliefs
are like these snags that I just keep getting caught on.
And once I'm caught on them,
I have no choice but to act out the way I act out.
Like if I'm trapped in this belief of Rea abandoned me,
I have to go find someone who's not going to abandon me.
Like I have to.
Like if I believe that, like I have no choice.
And of course I'm going to go do that.
And if I retreat to wait, oh, I abandoned me,
Now, I love the, one of the definitions I love of sobriety is sobriety is the restoration of choice
because addicts have no choices.
It's like, you've got to do this thing.
You're so compelled.
So it's like, well, now I actually have a little bit of space where I can decide how would I like to respond here.
I mean, that's a good way of putting words to the fear that a lot of people have around 12-step recovery,
which is this idea of surrendering to a higher power, this notion that you're,
you're giving up, that you're relinquishing any agency over your life. It's a very, you know,
confronting, threatening prospect that, that is short-sighted in that it doesn't, it doesn't
fully comprehend the liberation that occurs when you kind of let go of all these attachments
and turn it over and really develop this spiritual connection. I mean, truly, like, that is,
you know, this is the, you get your diploma in Earth school
when you realize that there is nothing,
there is nothing more important than your divine connection.
Like, it's really, that's it, right?
And we struggle so much and try to figure that out
in all these material ways that lead us astray
when all we want to do is kind of go home, right?
And it's so hard for us.
Like, you know, and I fight it toothed, tooth and we try to make so many other things
are home.
And it's like, my surrender's conditional, like, yes,
but like I'm still, I still need to live.
like, you know, over here is where, like, I'm in control of this.
And the idea of relinquishing control, like that notion that maybe you're not in control.
Like, that's where all the juice is.
Like, that's when you open the portal to all the good stuff.
And it's so difficult to make that leap, though.
There's a line in the book.
I actually did a little illustration of it that you don't want to surrender because you're afraid of losing control, but you never had control.
all you had was anxiety.
It's the illusion.
All you had was anxiety.
You know, there's the other line that says, like, when you give up control,
you're giving up something you never had in the first place.
Like, you're just giving up this dream of this thing that you never had.
When I work with Sponsees and they're having trouble with steps two and three,
which are the, you know, made this decision to turn our will and our life over to the care of a higher power
and came to believe a power greater than ourselves, those ones,
especially people who have a lot of religious trauma,
which I'm extremely sympathetic to,
where those concepts can feel really, really super-threatening.
One of the things that I invite them to do
is that they get to write, I ask them to write an essay to,
they get to create, it's like a build-a-bear,
you get to create your own higher power.
So write down what the qualities,
it's almost like the qualities you would want in a partner,
what are the qualities that you would have to have
in a higher power to surrender to them?
Like, because it's not going to be to the God,
you can't surrender to the God you were taught
is judging and hating you.
Like, you already hate yourself.
Like, you already hate yourself so much.
You already judge yourself so much.
Like, that's not going to feel good.
So I'm like, just, you get to create your own HP.
Let's go.
And they're like, you can't do that, can't you?
I'm like, totally you can.
And why would a loving, mysterious God,
not take whatever form it needed to take for you to find it, right?
So it's interesting because usually the first thing they have on the list
is unconditionally loving, especially love addicts.
You know, it's like, I need a higher power who thinks I'm absolutely perfect as this wreckage that I am right now.
Like, that's where it's got to start.
Like, I can't have a God coming in here and shaming me.
Yeah.
I can't.
The other idea that's helpful for people that come in with that kind of baggage and resistance to anything spiritual in any regard because of their religious background or whatever is to just say kind of what you said earlier, which is there's wisdom in these rooms.
Like a lot of people have faced and overcome things that you're struggling with right now.
And one of the choices you can make is just to make the group consciousness your higher power.
And that is a higher power at work, you know, certainly being channeled through those people.
And it just grounds it and makes it a little bit easier to make that leave.
Yeah, I love that.
The group, that's the GOD equals a group of drunks.
Isn't that what they say?
That you make that your god, the crew.
I also love, there's a couple questions I've heard, which is like, can you imagine, and it's just a hypothetical, that there might be an intelligence in the universe greater than yours. And you don't have to know what it is, but like even looking at like the ocean tides, I'm not doing that. And it's a very intelligent system, the way it's working. There's like a beauty in an order that might be smarter than me. Like it might be, like could it be? Or as my,
brain, the highest intelligence in the universe, which doesn't even make sense, especially looking at how
badly I've done managing my life, right? Like, you can just take that as an example. Like, if I'm so
smart, why do I keep driving myself over a cliff, right? So could it be possible that there's an
intelligence in the universe? And you don't even have to name what it is or know what it is. And the
second question is, if the answer to that is yes, and if it's possible, could it be possible that it
cares about you, that you're part of it, like you were created unto this. And if it's possible,
you don't have to know, but is it possible? And then third question is, if it's possible that it cares
about you, can you imagine a possibility that it might want to be in communion with you? Which brings
us back to creativity and this idea of ideas in the ether that want to be in communion with you.
And is it possible that it's trying to communicate with you? And that if you ask it to communicate
with you at will. And if you ask it to help you at will, is it possible? Or are we going to stick
with your brain is the highest intelligence of humor? And it's got all the answers as evidenced
by the wreckage of your life. Pete Holmes has a pretty funny bit about this. Have you heard this one
where he talks about nothing? You know, like if you ask people what happens when you die,
nothing nothing happens and and reconciling that with the idea that you know before the big bang
there was nothing you know so if it's nothing well then that's god you're just calling it nothing it's
something you know like right it all leads back he does it in a brilliant you know way that's hilarious
so great it's like a mental like gymnastics to like get around the language and rob bell has said
beautifully you don't have to call it god but that doesn't solve the problem of what the hell is going on
Liz, what is going on?
Like, what is going on?
Earth school, I think.
I mean, I think that's what's going on.
I think Earth school is going on.
And when you look around what we've been able to see yet of the universe,
it doesn't appear there's anything else that we've found yet that's like this.
Something very special is going on here.
This is a very special place, this planet.
And consciousness seems to be a very special thing.
And the Buddhists say that it's a very precious thing to have a human life,
even with all of its suffering.
I have not always felt that way.
I've often felt like, check please.
I don't care for it, no thank you.
Zero out of five stars.
But the Buddhists say, like,
your chances of being born in human form
and having the opportunity to have this spiritual experience on life,
they're so glancingly slim.
They're like, it's the same as the chance of a turtle
that lives at the bottom of the ocean
that only comes to the top of the ocean
once every hundred years,
coming to the top of the ocean for a moment
and its head coming up in a ring
that's floating on the ocean
like those are the odds
which actually biologically is true
when you look at sperms and eggs
it's like the odds of that one
like inseminating event
are so like what are the hot
they're like astronomical
you know and and so
you're being offered
and invited but not forced
to have an interesting
interesting experience here and show up for it.
Like, let's show up for it and see what happens next.
One of the things that you talk about is this idea of like purpose anxiety, right?
Because when you talk about that preciousness, then that trickles down into, okay, I'm here.
You know, I have a certain amount of time.
What am I going to do with it?
Let's get to work.
And there is a cultural pressure out there that I think really makes people feel lousy
about themselves, where they feel like they have to, like, what is my purpose?
What is my thing?
Like, I'm falling behind.
I don't have it.
I don't know what it is.
So I'm less than as a result.
Because the more you talk about how precious this life is, I think that that can like turn
the volume up on that feeling of like, well, how do I fit in here? And am I anything if I'm not
special in this particular way? Yeah, Americans can contaminate anything. Yeah. We took preciousness
and turned it into purpose theology. Like you have to earn that preciousness by achieving
something, you know, or leaving an impact or changing the world. The problem with that,
and again I think there's an innocence in that belief
but one of the problems with that is like when do you know
you've done that enough
especially in a culture where nothing is ever enough
because you and I both know
people who appear to be at the very top of that purpose game
and when you're in their company you're like
this person's not well you know
like you can feel that they're not well
and they're nailing it
like they're just extremely anxious
in a much nicer house than I will ever have
You know, it's not work, it's not even working, that purpose-driven thing doesn't even seem to be working for the people that it's working for.
And the anxiety's not gone, you know, despite the tremendous accomplishments.
Like people with tremendous accomplishments kill themselves all the time.
So do people with no accomplishments.
So it's not, it's not that that kills you.
It's just that it doesn't seem to answer that deeper question.
And, you know, there's a story that I think we've all been told in a million commencement addresses about
this idea that you've got this unique spark offering and it's your one job to figure out what
it is and then you've got to monetize it and then you've got to bring it to other people and
you've got to have a legacy like you've got to be remembered after you know all of this to me just
sounds like the fears of the ego like am I important am I special did I earn my right to be here
did I waste my time should I have done more did I save enough lives did I leave a long enough
legacy. Did I make enough of an impact? You know, all of this is like ego, ego, ego, ego,
ego. Whereas the preciousness that I feel like I'm speaking about doesn't need any of that.
It just is. It's intrinsically precious. It is sovereign in its preciousness. It is precious
whether you're living under a bridge wearing a garbage bag and screaming at people when they walk
by or like running the world it there's something happening that is extraordinary which is that
you're here and so the thing that I'm always when I teach like I ask people to forget about purpose
like when I teach workshops I'm like I hope you didn't come here to find your purpose because
I'm not going to help you I'm not going to help you because I actually want to help you kind of let
that go and see if you can replace it with presence, which I think is just an awareness
of awareness.
Like, I have no idea what's going on here, but it's objectively very interesting.
You know, and even the really horrible worst moments are objectively interesting.
I mean, even when Rayo was diagnosed, I remember there was this tiny little awakened part of my
mind that was like and I put it away really quickly but there was a recognition where I was like
this is interesting like this is the person who I can't live without this is a one person like if
if God had come to me and said I'd be like you can take all the rest of them like all of them
they can all come they can all go you know like this is the one that you can't take this is the one
that you can't take this is the one that I can't live without and they're like okay we're going to take
that one. And even in the grief, there was this teeny little thing, was like, that's interesting.
Like, that is really objectively interesting. Like, oh, because lots of times you think you have
your purpose and then life will teach you otherwise. Like, my purpose is to be this tremendous
parent. Like, I'm going to be this great parent. And then you fail. Like, you have a child
who, what Rob Bell always goes, everyone's got that one kid.
It's like you got one that it worked with
and then you've got one that it just doesn't work with
and then maybe they spend their entire life estranged from you
and maybe they spend their entire life blaming you
and you're like well this is interesting
because I totally thought
like so much of my life is things where I'm like
I thought I was going to be good at this
you know I thought it was my purpose to do this
and maybe it wasn't you know
and Leonard Cohen has a beautiful
line in a documentary about him where he said
you know one of the great sufferings
that we often have is this feeling that there was some mission that we were supposed to do
and we failed at it and he said but maybe and he then went and lived in a monastery for a ton of time
and meditated on it until he came away with like but what if there's a deeper mission which is
to fail at it and what if it was never yours you know you took on the mantle and the assignment
that this is what you're here for and and the sort of punchline is apparently not
right like apparently not and what if just sitting in your shared humanity of the wreckage of your
expectation is actually the portal to joining us here in our shared humanity like welcome to your
family here we are like we all thought we were supposed to do something you know and like even now
like we're supposed to save the planet like maybe not I don't know like I don't know like I
I can't, I'm, like, I don't know.
And I feel like we're failing at it, but like, are we supposed to do?
Like, I don't know.
So just being present to whatever is, there's a line I love that Byron Katie says,
whenever I argue against reality, I lose, but only always.
So a lot of my purpose anxiety in the world is about like,
I want to imprint myself on the world in this particular way.
And reality's like, no.
I share that.
I share that.
I mean, first of all, you know, that's beautiful what you just shared.
And I think highly advisable and actionable in this moment that we're experiencing.
Like, there's a lot of crazy shit going on right there.
It's very easy to get dysregulated or caught up in your opinions or are inflamed, you know, around your attachment to certain ideas.
And it feels like that is a pathway to equanimity and compassion for yourself and other people.
And I think that we need that right now.
You know, in my earth school classroom at the moment,
like, you know, all of what you said
is, like, kind of coming up for me right now.
Like, I, I just have this serious spinal surgery
about five weeks ago.
And I'm being forced to, you know, stop and slow down
and just be with myself.
And it's sort of like COVID lockdown,
except with physical pain and, you know,
not being able to move your body.
Like, I'm here at work, it's fine.
but not being able to kind of do the things
that make you feel like yourself.
And I'm very good at like outrunning anything
that makes me feel uncomfortable
and hiding in my work or just, you know, kind of escaping.
Like I like what I do and it's, and my life is good.
Like there's not like any kind of chaos happening
or huge problems, but I do have a lot of self-awareness
around this need to like be seen invalidated
that's driven by this notion that love is,
transactional and needs to be earned through achievement and, you know, approval and accolades
and all that kind of stuff. And obviously, that's a hedonic treadmill that leads nowhere. And I don't
want to, you know, be a victim of this striver's dilemma. The solution to it is being with myself
and not being able to move or escape, you know, this discomfort, but to actually sit with it and
cultivate, you know, this presence with that discomfort as a teaching tool to like learn a
different way, to let go, to realize like whatever attachment I have to the meaning of who I am
or what I do or this notion of purpose. Like it's all, these are just constructs, you know,
that we create and adorn with meaning that create more suffering. And for as much as, you know,
my behavior traits have led me to a certain privileged place in the world.
They are also the Achilles heels that are in the way,
obstructing my connection with a higher consciousness
and a deeper sense of meaning and greater connection with other people
and more intimacy and all these other things that I sort of am too quick
to kind of shove aside as optional and I'll get to it when, you know,
I have more time.
but now you know what was that you needed more time yeah you know what I mean done and done
let's let's ground him yeah yeah yeah you're being held in from recess right
at school like you're not allowed to go out there on the plate yeah I can come out and talk to you
but then I need to go back and think about what you just shared with me there's a bedouin line I think
that says the only thing that belongs to you is anything that cannot be this is interesting
to say in California at this moment,
but anything that cannot be burned in a fire,
lost in a shipwreck or stolen by pirates,
and that doesn't leave much,
including your own body.
So what belongs to us, I think, is actually,
like if we start to what does belong to you, then,
also I think is the answer to like, what are you,
which I think is also the answer to what is God.
It's like the thing that cannot be lost in a shipwreck,
the thing that cannot be burned by fire,
the thing that cannot be stolen by a pirate,
what is that thing?
And the Ramanah Maharashi used to tell his students
the great Indian sage and teacher,
he was like, there's two questions.
It doesn't matter which one you use.
He was just like, your choice, dealer's choice,
I have the solution for you.
It's just in you get to pick.
You either spend your life meditating on who is God
or you spend your life meditating on who am I.
and just sit and keep asking that question.
Either one of them will get you to the same place.
It doesn't matter which way it's like both paths lead to each other.
You're going to bump into God by asking who am I
and you're going to bump into yourself by asking who is God.
And that's the thing that that's all you have.
Like really? I think. I think.
And I think the reason I feel like I know that to be true
is when I remember that, my whole nervous system is like,
Oh, thank God.
Are you able to like...
Thank God, I don't have to go.
I don't have to go hustle.
Then I'll go out and hustle until I forget.
Can you marinate in that consciousness
and, you know, kind of stay present with it
throughout the day?
Or do you just have fleeting glimpses of that?
Or is it like a practice to always try to return to that place?
I couldn't for a long time because my shame was in the way.
I think that was the biggest thing.
Like, I couldn't sit still because I was in so much shame.
And like, so anytime I tried to sit still and meditate, all I felt was shame, including shame that I can't say still and meditate. But but then below that like multiple sub-basements of shame where like my mind would just come out with a parade of horrors of like all my shortcomings and failures and disasters and your garbage person and fraud and you're, you know, I mean like just it was like it would feel like hell to me to sit quietly. And I think 12 step.
really has made it easier for me to meditate
because I'm sort of like at this point
with the transparency that comes in recovery,
it's like bring me one of those things,
those horrors that I did.
Let me take it out of the sub-basement,
bring it to the room,
tell a bunch of people about it.
You know, like one of my friends and I in the room,
like one of our rules is once a week we call each other
and we're like, this is the thing I don't want anyone to know about me today.
So I was like, let's take this thing out,
show it to someone,
like let them sit in a loving presence for me
while I reveal this
the world doesn't explode
because they now know this
awful shameful thing
and then I'm going to show it to God
and God's like I know
you're not telling me anything new
and then I'm going to take it to my sponsor
and it's like did I do
something that was horrible
like did I do something that was wrong
did I do something that was hurtful
did I do something that I need to
immediately fix and not manage, but like take accountability for.
So instead of just stewing in this constant, you know, like half of eat, pray, love in the
India section is just me describing how much I hated meditating.
Because I was suffering.
Like I was just, it was just like watching the worst movie in the entire world.
It's like a life review in heaven where your life is awful and it's all your fault, you know?
And it's like, here's another thing you did.
Here's another thing you did.
And it was horrible.
But now I'm like, oh, there's a thing I did.
and then I'm like, oh, you're right, I did do that.
Like, that's kind of the way to defeat that shame.
It's like when the devil comes knocking, you invite them in for tea, what's your worst?
Like, show me the worst thing I did.
I'm like, wow, I acknowledge that I did that.
I'm going to share that thing that I did with somebody.
Then I'm going to take it to my sponsor and be like, how do I make an amends for this?
And then that thing doesn't have any power over me anymore.
So just doing that, like, so steadily over the last six years.
Like, I just wrote an amends letter yesterday to somebody that I harmed.
like 35 years ago
that's like in one of my sub-basements
and I'm like I think it's time
to reach out to this person
and it's like a long ongoing process
so the more of those I do
the less power
that awfulness has over me
and then I can sit
for a really long time
and just be
and when I do that
and I get really quiet
and I sit there for a long time
what I hear is I love you
I love you I love you
that's all I hear
which is all I've ever wanted to hear
which is what I was doing all of this
out here to try to get people to say.
Right, but you're getting the real shit now.
I'm getting from the well that doesn't run dry.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Raya was modeling that level of truthfulness all along.
Like it's sort of breadcrumbs there, right?
Like that was something that was very attractive about her.
Like just her past didn't own her.
Yeah.
Because she had learned in the rooms that like honesty will set you free.
Like the idea that by sharing with another person,
you know, in the construct of 12-step
or otherwise, like there is a freedom
that comes with that, where that thing
that you've pushed down
and are so afraid to share and feel like
if you shared it, the world is going to collapse
because the world is not a safe place
and you're a hyper-vigilant person
and you're scanning the room
and you know where everybody is.
God forbid, nobody gets hurt.
God forbid they know this, right?
Right.
And then you find out like, oh, nobody cares.
And actually other people relate to this
and all of that energy and shame and guilt was for what?
Yeah.
And it's the contrary action because, you know,
one of the lines that I say in the book is that
there's these series of famous letters between Bill W.
And the founder of A.A. and Carl Young.
And in it, one of the things that Carl Young says is like,
you know, the hunger for alcohol is a sort of low-level spiritual hunger.
What it's sort of semi-adiquately doing is giving,
a person a sense of a connection with the divine
probably because the shame drops away
right it's like I don't have to think
I don't have to know who I am anymore I can check out
and now I actually feel good because I'm not
you know until the shame
the next day is even worse right
but but he said without a connection to the divine
the average person cannot resist
I think his exact line was like what the medieval people
rightfully called the devil
and I find that line like really interesting
and one of the things that I said in the book is like
if Satan existed, and I didn't grow up with a Satan concept, so that doesn't mean a lot to me.
But like if Satan existed, he could scarcely do better in terms of like creating misery
than to talk inside your mind and feed you this like ticker tape of you're the worst,
you suck, it's all your fault, if anyone knows this, they'll hate you, you are uniquely fucked.
you are like uniquely broken
nobody will ever be able to understand you
you deserve relief
you deserve relief from this
you should go get relief
by any means you deserve to get relief
by any means necessary
and don't tell anyone I said this
like the big thing is don't tell anyone I said this
like this must be kept in a chamber of secret
so I'm going to torment you from within
but you're not allowed to say that I exist
you know and so the counteraction to that
and I think why 12 step for all its fault
and it's not for everyone works so well
is because it's like, oh, that's what we're going to lead with.
You're going to raise your hand and be like,
here's what I did, you know, like here's what, you know,
and what I've found what I love about the rooms
and I know you get this is like the laughter.
Yeah, everybody loves it.
Like instead of it being like this horrible thing,
everyone's like, hi, yeah, me too.
And then I had a good idea, you know,
and all of a sudden it's like the power is drained.
Because it's connection.
People, the facts of our experience are different,
but there's the shared emotional availance of it all.
So even though somebody's telling a crazy story,
it's like very different from your story,
but you're like, I know what that feels like.
Yeah, I can totally get that.
I have my version of that in my life.
And so things are funnier than they actually are
because of that.
You're like, I know this.
Yeah.
You know.
It's so comforting, right?
And you're right.
Ray had that, and she was great at it.
And that was what was so beautiful to me
because I was doing, like every word of my mouth
was a press release.
You know, it's like, I've got to, like, get the wording on this right, you know, so that, like,
people don't set upon me with pitchforks and, you know, it's like, stay safe, stay safe,
stay safe, stay safe.
Like, that was the drumbeat.
And she was just like, eh, let's just throw it out there.
But the flip side of the, I'm a piece of shit consciousness is to be able to simultaneously
also believe that you're the fucking best.
Oh, yeah.
You know what I mean?
Like, there's a superiority complex, you know,
built into that that is, I think, unique to the addict, the ability to hold those two counterpoints
at the same time.
Well, that's the ego.
It's like, I'm best, I'm the worst.
It doesn't mind being the worst as long as it's the most something.
Like, I'll be the most, right?
Am I, did I win?
Did I win the worst?
You know, do I get a trophy?
Am I important because I'm the biggest piece of shit, you know?
And I had a sponsor very early on who I used to love because I would call him and I would like,
share these safe, self-hating feelings that I was having.
Like, I'm like, I'm so shamed about this,
and I'm so embarrassed about this,
and I don't know what to do about this.
And he would say, are you thinking about yourself?
Like, he would just say like,
oh, it sounds like you're thinking about yourself,
are you thinking about yourself?
And I was like, yeah, I'm thinking about yourself.
He's like, well, that's not a good idea.
Yeah.
You know, he's like, how about you do some service?
Anybody you can help today?
Like, let's break that.
The antidote to self-obsession.
Yeah, like, is there a newcomer you can talk to?
Is there somebody, you know, is there like an act of kindness you can do for another human being?
Or do you just want to sit here thinking about yourself?
Yeah.
Well, because that's out of thinking.
It's like it's doing something for you.
It's like feeding your dopamine or whatever, like nourishing that notion that you're the worst or whatever.
There's a weird dysfunctional comfort in that.
Yeah.
Well, it's the line they always say is, I'm not much, but I'm the only thing I ever think about.
Right.
And that's the beautiful thing about being another bozo on the bus.
You know, like, I mean, when I first came in, I'm like, I'm a public figure.
I can't be in this 12-step room talking about these absolutely shameful episodes of sexual, romantic, and ethical degradation that I both committed and allowed myself to receive.
People are going to go to page six about this. They're going to tweet about it.
They're going to, you know, and my first sponsor was like, you're actually just another bozo on the bus.
Like you're not Elizabeth Gilbert here.
Nobody actually really cares here.
They're here to get their own recovery.
Doing this thing here in L.A.,
like I can tell you that the well-known people
that get well and stay well
are the ones who get over that whole thing, you know?
Yeah.
And the ones who don't are the ones who do get caught up
in that narrative.
Yeah.
It's got to be hard though.
I'm sympathetic to that.
Like, I understand that fear.
Yeah.
But there really was a reckoning moment.
Especially when you can't, you struggle to trust people.
And especially because I think you mentioned at the beginning,
I feel like sex addiction and especially anything having to do with sex and love addiction for women
carries the same stigma now that like being an alcoholic would have carried 40 years ago.
Yeah, I think you're right about that.
And that's why people don't know about any of these programs because it's like, for shame.
You know, and that's another reason why I, with counsel from my sponsor,
made the decision to be open about it.
Because it's like, well, if somebody's going to do, I'll do it.
You know, like, I'll do it because everybody already knows everything about me.
You know, like, I've already, like, made it a habit of telling everybody everything.
I don't have a partner to embarrass.
Like, my family's pretty hands-off, so they don't care.
I don't have kids to embarrass.
So, like, why don't I do it?
Like, I'll talk about it.
And then if you hear something that I'm saying that reminds you of yourself,
then you can go look into it and know that it exists.
That's the way I feel about it.
But there are traditionalists who would say that that's a violation of the tradition, you know, not sharing, you know, publicly about these kinds of things. And I understand the reasons behind that. But and we all have our different line with that, you know, and I never quite know where to land on that. But I generally err on the, you know, kind of the liberal side of it because, you know, for the very reasons that you said, like there are people out there who are suffering who either aren't aware about this at all.
or have an affiliation or a mental construct of it
that's based on television or movies or something like that.
And I think it's important to humanize it.
And I think especially when it comes to like SLA
and the things that you're talking about,
like this is uncharted territory for a lot of people.
Yeah. It's interesting.
I actually nerded out the way I love to
and did a deep dive into what the founders had to say about this.
Oh, really?
Yeah, because there is a lot.
I mean, and there isn't a consensus on it in the rooms.
I mean, this is a real inside baseball recovery stuff,
but there are, people get really heated about it.
And there's, there have been articles in the New York Times about it.
Is it okay? Is it not okay?
You know, people are like, it's an anonymous program.
It's right there in the title.
You know, and for me, it's like, well,
I would certainly never blow up anybody else's anonymity.
But I don't see anywhere where it says that you have to,
you're not allowed to identify yourself as an addict.
And there's also to consider that when all of this stuff was created,
you would lose your job if you were an alcoholic back in 1935.
you would be shunned from your community.
It was essential that there was no discussion about this outside of the rooms.
And yet, Bill W. wrote a couple of really interesting essays about this very topic.
And I was like, what Bill got to say about this?
And his position was you should talk about it all the time.
You should always talk about being an addict.
And you should always talk about being an addict to his found recovery
because you are a beacon of hope for people who need to see that there is a population.
possibility of healing from this thing that has dogged them forever. But you don't have to get into
the specifics of naming your program. You can say, I found recovery in a 12-step program that deals with
alcoholism. You don't have to say, I found recovery in AA. And his reason, which I thought was really
subtle for that, was if somebody, like, if somebody hears that, they'll go find it. But he also
said, if you, if someone dislikes you, he's like, we have to save the rooms from people's
personalities. He's like, if somebody dislikes you and they hear that you're in AA and they need
AA, they might not go to AA. But if you just say, like, I was sick and now I'm well and I found a 12-step
program about that, he was like, talk about it, write about it, put it in the papers. Like, everybody
should know about that. Well, the other thing they're afraid of is if it's a well-known person and,
you know, they're just going everywhere talking about it and they're in early sobriety and they
relapse or they relapse later like that, that, you know, casts a shadow on the viability
of the program.
Suddenly it's like, oh, that doesn't work.
It doesn't work.
Because this person didn't work.
And these things come in waves as somebody's been around for a long time.
Like every couple years, there's a sort of zeitgeist moment in the press where it's like,
this doesn't work and here's the new thing.
I've seen, like, you know, so many versions of that.
But what's stuck around, this miracle where all these people who can barely get along have
somehow figured out to create this thing that has thrived across the globe. Like, it's really
insane. For almost a hundred years. I mean, it is a miracle. And it's free. What I always say,
it's like, where else can you stumble into a room full of strangers, broken, penniless, alone,
desperate, not knowing where to go, who to turn? And this group of people will take you in
and hold you and help you
and ask for nothing in return.
It's incredible.
That's the part that's so interesting to me
is the asking for nothing in return
because so much of my relationship history
has been transactional.
You know, like I'm going to earn your love, attention,
validation, and acceptance
by huge acts of service or overgiving
or, you know, I'm like,
we're going to make sure that I get you locked down
And my first sponsor, I used to bring up gifts.
Like, I mean, that's my giving gifts to people is my love language, but it's also my
manipulation language.
It's a sort of a thin line where it's like, I'm going to give you this thing.
So you love me and don't leave me.
And I remember her saying, like, I don't need this.
You know, like, it's very sweet that you gave me this necklace.
I mean, now I think it's so, like, if one of my sponsorsies was like, here, I gave you a, like,
I'd be like, honey, it's not what we're doing here, you know?
Like, that's not, this is the one place that that's not what we're doing.
here. And as your sponsor, I think that's what I tell my sponsor's now, like, actually,
and I remember my sponsor saying to this to me and it didn't make any sense where she's like,
I'm getting much more out of this than you are taking you through the steps. And I was like,
that can't be true. You're giving me all this time for free and dealing with my shit. But now
that I have sponsorsies, I'm like, oh yeah, this is such a gift to be able to do this.
How has this affected your creativity and your output?
Like, you've opted out of like a lot of drama
and a lot of, you know, energy kind of placed in the wrong direction
and you've replaced it with your engagement
with the program or recovery and things like that.
But there's a lot of headspace that is now freed up.
I've written three books in the last six years, which is crazy.
Wow.
I mean, not that that should be a measure of anything other than,
wow look what happens when all of this energy like I've had a hole in my boat that I've been
like I've been simultaneously rowing the boat and bailing the boat out and I'm actually really
proud of myself for how far I got rowing with one arm you know while simultaneously bailing out
the boat but like stepping out of the drama cycle as you just mentioned with sexual and
romantic engagement it's like I got two arms to row now and it's like whoa this is this is
This is wild. I mean, one of the beautiful definitions I heard of addiction is addiction is giving
up everything for one thing and recovery is giving up one thing for everything. And my everything
has gotten so big. And it's not just the creativity, but this is the one that kind of a little
bit breaks my heart. Like I've always had great friends and a lot of friends. But my relationships,
This is my central kind of like flagship relationship, whoever it was, whoever I had taken hostage.
At the moment, whoever I had decided was like that person at the center of my life.
The amount, the sheer amount of energy that I poured into that was so enormous.
And now when I'm not doing that, I look around and I'm like, I had these incredible friends.
Like I've got these decades-long friendships that I had been just nominally.
attending to for my entire life wonderful people like loving extraordinary people and it's like
it brings tears to my eyes I was like you were there the whole time like you were there like I was
sending you a Christmas card once a year and we could have been doing this like we could have been
having this amazing generative creative really fun incredible friendship like community existed
you know creativity existed God existed like it's like all this other stuff was there that was being
blocked by my one thing because that thing was like the thing I was obsessed with and fixated
and now you could take it all the way to the river hopefully explain explain what that means the title of
the book so my partner rea was a new yorker i mean she was a Syrian immigrant raised in
Detroit but identified as a new yorker and particularly a new yorker on the lower east side and
she had this operative metaphor for describing her friendships and she said there's you got your
fifth avenue friends so she would look at a map of new york and be like
right here in the center is Fifth Avenue.
So your Fifth Avenue friends are the people
that you're completely superficial with.
And it's professional relationships,
and you know, you've got a sort of mask on,
they've got a mask on,
you know they have a mask on,
they know you do,
you don't want to take the mask off.
You know, you're acting a certain role.
And then you go to like a little farther east,
and you go to your fourth and third avenue friends,
and you start to let them see you a little bit more.
And there's a little bit, like the mask starts to come off.
And then you get to your like second and first avenue friends,
and now there's intimacy.
Like they know about your history, you know about their history.
Maybe you went to their wedding.
Like you've met their family.
You start to see behind the public persona.
And she's like, but it's not until you get to your Avenue A, B, C, and D friends,
your alphabet city friends.
Those are the people who have been in the shit with you.
And they know everything.
Like they know they were with you through your divorce
and through your breakup and through your addiction
and they dropped you off at rehab.
and like they know all the stuff you know and they love you anyway and maybe you've had problems
with them you've had fights with them you've had to make up like you've seen them they've seen you
and then she's like but if you're really lucky because after Avenue D there's just the highway
and then there's the river she's like once in your life if you're very lucky you might have an
all the way to the riverfront and that's just makes me cry again to say it but she was always like
you're my all the way to the river friend like we're going to go all the way to the east
river together, which means you will see everything.
Like there will be nothing withheld, and they know you.
Like they know you at the depth of the deepest depth that you can know somebody.
And she was always like, you're my all the way to riverfront.
And I took so much pride in it.
And then when we found out she was dying, we started calling her death the river.
So on the day she found out she had terminal cancer, she said, I want you to walk all the way
to the river with me.
And God help us, I did.
Because as I describe in the book,
if you've ever walked all the way from Fifth Avenue
to the East River, it's not very nice walk atop.
It's a lot better than it used to be.
Like back in the day, though,
it's like you're going through projects,
you're stepping over drug dealer.
Like, you're walking on needles and crack vials.
There's dog shit.
I mean, like, the closer you get to the river,
the more intense it is,
you've got to make it across the, you know,
across the highway.
You've got to find the overpass.
And then you get to the East River
and it's the East River.
Which is like you don't exactly want to jump in the East River, you know.
So it's it's harrowing.
Like the book has been described to me as harrowing.
But I think that true intimacy is.
You know, like really allowing yourself to be that known, I think is a bit harrowing
because we're difficult, humans.
We're difficult and we're full of contradictions and dangerous and unreliable and beautiful and sublime
all at the same time.
Yeah, if you want the beauty and transcendence
that a relationship can deliver in the best way,
you've got to walk past Avenue D
and, you know, like maybe step on a syringe or two
along the way, you know.
Yeah.
Now it's all gentrified.
I think didn't they just down it?
Not at all.
By the East River also,
there didn't that new park, like right on the river,
just open right now, it's all nice.
I'm still picturing the housing projects are still there.
You know, like the abandoned parts of the city
are still there. The power plant is there. Yeah, that weird power plant. You know, that everybody
who lives over there has to breathe. And I remember one time, I don't know what I'm thinking of
this, but when Ray got cancer and they put a port in her arm at one point so that they could
be able to inject her with chemo drugs and not have to just keep taking a port in and out. And
this was before she had her big drug relapse. And we walked out of the hospital and she was like,
her eyes were shining. And she's like, dude, you know what I could have done with this back
She's like, she's like, I can't freaking believe they do this.
She's like, I could put anything in here.
They let her leave the hospital with it in it.
They let me leave the hospital with a port in my arm that I could stick a needle with anything in it.
She was like, like, like, she was kind of like tweaked by it.
She's like, I could put Jack Daniels in this.
I could put anything in this.
I could put like, I could shoot anything I wanted right into my veins so easily.
She's like, it's great.
And I remember we were up in Midtown and like, she'd just come from chemo.
And I was like, if you had to find heroin, you know, now, after 18 years clean, how long would it take you?
And I just remember her whole demeanor change. And she just like, she looked at her watch. She did this like, really like wolfish kind of look at her watch. And she's like, and she's like, where are I wait? She like clocked the street. She was on and she goes, 15 minutes. 15 minutes. I could be on Avenue D. I know exactly where to go. And she said, all I would have to do.
do is point to this. And I was like, whoa. And now that I understand how easy it is to be swept
into addiction, there's a chapter that I have in my book called You Will Have 30 Seconds to Save
Your Life. That's about the vigilance, and this is a good use of my vigilance, the vigilance
and the awareness that I have to keep as I move through the world to not be like I could get that
in 15 minutes. Yeah, my question to you is, how long would
to take you in a crowded room walking down the street
or in New York City to like identify 50 meters,
like who that person is who's gonna just light you up
and fill those needs and do all the things
that you want them to do for you,
like to go right back to that place.
We're getting a little older, first of all.
So it might not be quite as easy as it used to.
I mean, this isn't about me blowing my horn in any way.
It's not hard for a woman.
You know what I mean?
like you simply must agree to make your body available to somebody and there will be somebody
who will happily do that you know so it's not it's not like you don't have to be like a math
I don't have to be like a master seductress like you just have to be like you know just raise your
hand and be like I'm already or anybody you know like someone will so it's not it's not hard
you know I think it's it's not hard it's not hard for any addict to find the thing um the hard
thing is to not do that, you know, that's the thing. And the hardest thing, I think, is to not
see, is to be able to see where you're setting yourself up, where you're in dangerous territory,
you know, where you are not putting yourself in dangerous circumstances. You know, for an alcoholic,
that might mean like, I don't hang out in a bar. Like, I'm just not going to do that to myself.
I'm just not going to put myself in that circumstance.
When you think of that younger Liz in Bali on the Epride love train, you know, doing the meditation
and, you know, dip in your toe into spirituality, when you reflect back on that time,
were there lessons imparted to you then that you feel like you're only learning now?
Yeah, and every bit of it was necessary too.
You know, like there's a common question that I'm sure you've heard a billion times where
interviews will say like, what would you have told your younger self if you could?
and I am left with no answer
but do everything you're going to do.
Like do everything you're going to do.
All of it, you have to do all of it.
You have to do all the great stuff
and you have to do all the horrible stuff
because otherwise I don't get to be here.
Like this is all of that is what's going to create
where we are now and where we are now is good.
So yeah, I mean, and I think
I'd glimmers of it.
You know, I had glimmers of it,
but I don't think I believed
that I mean and I felt God
I've always loved God
I've always kind of believed in God
I've always sensed God
I've always loved the wonder
and the mystery of what I call God
but I've never trusted God
not for a minute
it's like I love you
your work is great big fan
I'm gonna control this
I'm gonna control this
so I think I didn't
well I felt that I'd had
I did have beautiful spiritual awakenings
in that journey as like I'm still
driving this car and that's you know mixed results that's why it's a practice of constantly
turning it over and turning it over again yeah and again and again I love that the
Tibetan Buddhists call meditation remembering that's their translation for
meditation they don't have a word for meditation it's just remembering practice you
just sit and remember what you forgot.
Right.
And some of us need it.
We're all one.
Like I said, we're all just trying to get back home, right?
We're trying to find our way.
And addicts, I think, are fundamentally spiritual seekers.
They're looking for something.
They're trying to fill that hole.
They're doing it in wrongheaded ways.
But they're very committed and intent upon finding answers, right?
And, you know, the gift of bottoming out is that then you're blessed
with this opportunity to redirect that energy in a healthy way.
And a lot of people don't get that.
Well, I have a funny experience.
Like, I totally identify.
Every addict doesn't matter what it is.
Like, if you're an addict, you're one of mine.
You're one of my people.
Like, I could sit on any meeting, you know, and be like, oh, yeah.
Like, I don't do that.
You know, I don't, I'm not a gambler.
But I could sit in a gambling meeting and I could get recovery listening to people talk about
their recovery from gambling, like 100%.
because I know what it feels like to think that you can get this thing somewhere.
You know, here's who I don't get.
People who don't feel like they're on fire with questions, you know, people who are just like,
who did you do, do, do, like kind of walking through life.
And I can never tell if they're like great saints or just super checked out.
Like people who are like, the new Toyota Camry is nice.
Yeah.
You know, and you're like, I'm looking in their eyes.
I'm like, do you not hunger?
Do you not hunger?
Are you not like, are you not baffled by this?
Are you not like?
And they're just like, blap-da-b-da-pud-da-pud-pid-pid.
And I can never tell like, like, what's it feel like to not have your head on fire?
What's it feel like to not be famished for experiences?
What's it feel like to be satisfied?
Like people who appear to just be satisfied are a marvel to me.
Like, I'm like, how are you just hanging out?
Yeah, I mean, it's either a Buddha consciousness or it's completely, you know, it's complete distraction.
or repression.
And I can't know.
Yeah.
So I'm going to assume Buddha consciousness because it's a more generous interpretation.
But like that, that's what I don't get.
I get addiction.
I just, I don't get, I'm good.
Like if you're not going to the extreme, like how are you a lot, you know?
You know, people who like live in the town they grew up in and they're like, I like it here.
You know, and I'm like, did you not want to go see the other stuff?
I mean, God bless those.
Did you not want to like, go, like, I know it's incredible.
Like, and meanwhile, it's like I'll probably end up back in where I grew up and
like, after all that, I just circled around and came home.
You did do all those things to do what that came naturally to that.
With the guy who just never left, you know.
Who's like, oh, good to see you.
I knew you'd be back.
Yeah, exactly.
Who's the teacher, Liz?
Exactly.
I mean, that's why those people are mysterious to me because I'm like, I don't understand.
There's a, there's a, there's a Irish guy that I met there at the ashram who was
deep on a hard spiritual journey and he said he went home and he was trying to tell his father.
His father was like a sheep farmer in County Cork who was like ninth generation on his land
just living in this life of routine and he, this kid was just a seeker and he'd spent his
entire life traveling the world and he came home to visit his dad and he was like telling him
about meditation and about India and about chanting and his dad's just listening and like
staring into the fire and he's like, Dad, you got to try this meditation. It gives you a quiet
mind, dad, gives you a quiet mind. And his father said, I've got a quiet mind, son.
Yeah. But my friend didn't. And when you don't, I think you have to become a seeker. I don't
have one either. You know, so I have one now more than I've ever had one. But, you know,
it's an arcade in here. You too. Welcome to the asylum. You're the best, Liz. I love you.
I love you too.
This was fantastic.
I could just talk to you.
I could do this every day with you.
Oh.
You're amazing.
You've inspired me in so many ways over many, many years through not just your books,
but your example, the way that you show up, your courage to be as honest and as vulnerable as you are.
And this latest chapter is just a whole new level of that.
It's really beautifully written, and I think it's going to help a lot of people.
people. So thank you for that and keep doing your thing. Yeah, I'm always like, I'm always
here to support you. I'm such a massive fan. I just have a huge place in my heart for you and
feel very connected to the mission that you're on. Thank you. And I to yours. Let's keep going,
huh? Thanks. Final thing. Is it true that you met Adam Skolnik in Bali during that E. Pray, Love
situation? Is that fact or fiction? Not only is it true. Adam is in E. Pray, Love.
He is? Yes.
I did not know that
That I didn't know
He is in E pray love
Like a news flash
Yeah
It's true
All right
Please just tell this
PostScript story quickly
My friend and yours
Yeah
Adam Skolnick
I met in Ubuid Bali
in 2004
And we became friends
And he came to my
34th birthday
Part 35th birthday party
Which was held
At YAM
The Healer's house
And he's got a couple
lines in the book
and we've been friends ever since.
I didn't know that he had lines in the book.
And do you know for when he was,
he's obviously very happily married man now,
but when he was a young single man,
a very good calling card to get women to like him
and trust him was to say that he was friends with Liz Gilbert
and that he's a character and he pray love.
How many dinners did you dine out on that one, buddy?
How many dates?
I plead the fifth.
All right.
Next roll on.
This is going to be explored.
that's it for today thank you for listening i truly hope you enjoyed the conversation
to learn more about today's guests including links and resources related to everything discussed
today visit the episode page at richroll dot com where you can find the entire podcast archive my books
finding ultra voicing change in the plant power way if you'd like to support the podcast the easiest and
the most impactful thing you can do is to subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, on Spotify,
and on YouTube, and leave a review and or comment. And sharing the show or your favorite episode
with friends or on social media is, of course, awesome and very helpful. This show just wouldn't be
possible without the help of our amazing sponsors who keep this podcast running wild and free.
To check out all their amazing offers, head to richroll.com slash sponsors. And finally, for
podcast updates, special offers on books, and other subjects, please subscribe to our newsletter,
which you can find on the footer of any page at richroll.com.
Today's show was produced and engineered by Jason Camello.
The video edition of the podcast was created by Blake Curtis and Morgan McRae with assistance
from our creative director, Dan Drake, content management by Shana Savoy, copywriting by Ben Pryor.
And of course, our theme music was created all the way back in 2012.
by Tyler Piot, Trapper Piat, and Harry Mathis.
Appreciate the love, love the support.
See you back here soon.
Peace.
Plants.
Namaste.