The School of Greatness - 875 Speak With Your Heart and Create a Big Life with Cleo Wade
Episode Date: November 13, 2019LOVE THYSELF. Our wounds often rob us of the life we were meant to live. Many of us live with pain and regret. It becomes a vicious cycle. We have the power to break the cycle. You deserve to heal. Y...ou deserve to love yourself. It is possible to move through life as a healed person. There is no reason to live in pain. Your best life is waiting for you. All you need is the courage and commitment to make it a reality. On today’s episode of The School of Greatness, I talk about what it takes to heal yourself, love yourself, and empower others around you with “The Millenial Oprah”: Cleo Wade. Cleo Wade is a best-selling author, artist, mentor, activist, and poet. Her work reflects her spirit and her belief in the power to create change through self-love, commitment, self-care, and social justice. Cleo was named one of America’s 50 Most Influential Women by Marie Claire. She sits on the board of The Lower East Side Girls Club, The National Black Theatre in Harlem, as well as the advisory board of Gucci’s Chime for Change. So get ready to learn how to heal yourself and love deeper, wider, and bigger on Episode 875. Some Questions I Ask: How do we start to heal a wound? (3:55) How do we get to a place of deserving and feeling worthy? (10:20) What are the ingredients of a big life? (14:40) How does someone deal with self-doubt? (22:00) What’s the most significant trauma you’ve had to overcome in your life? (27:37) In This Episode You Will Learn: Why everything is a habit. (2:20) That no matter what we’ve been through, we deserve our healing. (5:00) The importance of allowing yourself to have your dreams. (11:30) The difference between an opinion and a belief system. (22:00) How to prepare for moments where you’ll need self-care. (25:00) How individuals dealt with someone being violent, disrespectful, or uncivil towards them during the civil rights movement. (35:45) Why men need to learn how to share their emotions. (40:00) If you enjoyed this episode, check out the video, show notes and more at http://www.lewishowes.com/875 and follow at instagram.com/lewishowes.
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This is episode number 875 with best-selling author Cleo Wade.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro-athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Rumi said, your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all the barriers
within yourself that you have built against it. Welcome to this episode. I'm very excited. I started learning
about Cleo Wade on Instagram and just was really attracted to her message, her poetry,
and the energy she put out into the world. And if you don't know who Cleo is, she's a poet,
a writer, activist, artist, and the author of the bestselling book, Heart Talk, Poetic Wisdom for a Better Life.
She's been named one of America's 50 most influential women
by Marie Claire, 100 most creative people in business
by Fast Company, and the Millennial Oprah
by New York Magazine.
Her new book, Where to Begin, a small book about your power
to create big change in our crazy world,
is out right now
and available wherever books are sold.
And in this interview, we really dive in about the first steps to healing deep inner wounds
and how you can start to process them yourself.
The importance of intimately understanding your belief system and how it can guide you
through challenging times.
system and how it can guide you through challenging times.
Cleo's top ingredients and non-negotiables for living a big life, a magnetic life, the powerful distinction and relationship between self-love and self-care, and Cleo's thoughts
on toxic masculinity and what we can do to understand it better.
That and so much more.
I'm pumped.
And if you're pumped,
make sure to share this out with one friend today.
You can text a friend by copying and pasting the link on Apple Podcast or Spotify,
or just use the link lewishouse.com slash 875
and share this with one or two friends right now.
Say you want to learn what they think about this episode,
if it supports them
in their life and hold someone accountable and hold them high through sharing this powerful wisdom
that Cleo talks about during this. And if this is your first time here, I'd love to hear from you.
I'd love for you to let me know at the end of this interview what you thought,
your review on this message, how it supported you, and what you
want more of. So make sure to leave us a review at the end over on Apple Podcasts and share us
your thoughts. And without further ado, let me introduce to you the one and only Cleo Wade.
Why do we stay in situations, whether it be a relationship or a career or whatever? Why do we stay in situations, whether it be a relationship or a career or whatever?
Why do we continue to do something, whether it's a healthy eating lifestyle choices?
Why do we continue to do something for so long that's a slow no,
as opposed to just quickly deciding like after a few months, this isn't working for me.
This isn't working out.
I don't want to weigh the pros and cons anymore. It should just be like, yes or no. Why do we stew over this
for so long? Yeah. But I think it's because we, A, we don't have the practice of seeing of action
that honors our path and our journey. Right. So what we were talking about earlier is like,
you know, the bravery to speak up instead of stew in something. But it's mostly because we've just cultivated a habit of stewing in things or
sitting and swallowing our words rather than speaking up. And what does it look like to just
create a new habit that says, every time I think that something's wrong, I'm going to say, I think
that that's wrong. If something hurts my feelings, I'm going to tell the person it hurts my feelings.
And we just don't have a lot of that role modeled in our culture.
Most of us didn't have a lot of that role modeled in our family lives. I mean, I think we're all
much more familiar with passive aggression than we are with active emotional expression.
And so I think that we have to create the template that the next generation can inherit of what the best possible habits look like for us to have well-lived emotional lives.
What's that template or what are those habits?
What are the core habits you think that everyone, if we started doing these things, a few things, it would make our lives that much better?
You know, there's this poem in my new book, Where to Begin,
where I basically wrote that I was like, everything's a habit.
So whether that's listening, not listening,
loving well, loving badly, gratitude, ingratitude.
And then at the end of the poem, it says,
which of these habits are worthy of this life
that you most certainly get to live only once?
And then in that, I think we know what the best habits are. I think we know that loving well and
listening and being grateful and being respectful and seeing people, I think we know that those are
the habits that build a peaceful life and a peaceful world. And I think that what ends up
happening is kind of what we were talking about earlier. Things happen in our lives. These things
happen that create unhealings within us or traumas within us. And what does it look like for us to
heal those wounds so we can close those wounds? And that doesn't mean the scar isn't there and
that we don't have to maybe still be gentle
in how we move through the world
because the injury still shows itself.
But it does mean that those wounds
are not getting in the way of us developing the habits
that we deserve to have in our life.
Wow.
How do we start to heal a wound
if we feel like we're so broken
or it's such a traumatic experience or it's so painful?
How do we start to heal something that's so deep and painful?
You know, I think the first thing that everyone, I hate the word should because I always say I don't should all over each other or never should all over yourself.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. don't shit all over each other or never shit all over yourself. But I think that the first thing I
would encourage every single person to do is know that you deserve your healing. So if you can wake
up in the morning and say, what am I going to do with this one big life? And how am I going to get
there? And what do I know that just because I'm here, because I'm a living, breathing human organism in this time and I am not an accident, what do I deserve?
And I think if you can put healing on the top of that list, I deserve to heal my wounds.
I deserve to move through this world as a healed person, not just for my own journey, but because healed people heal people, just like hurt people
hurt people. We always hear the phrase, hurt people hurt people, but we never add to the
phrase that healed people heal people. And so even if I'm having trouble understanding how to know
that I deserve my healing, I'm sure I can at least try to wrap my head around knowing that my children deserve
my healing or the person I love deserves my healing as well. And so I think that to know
that we deserve it and then to say, okay. And then I think that our healing starts to tell us what it
needs from us. So I think when we say, I deserve this, I honestly think the parts of you that you'd silenced for so long with the, I don't deserve this. I'm not worthy of this. I couldn't possibly
have this. I think when that chatter disappears, a new chatter arises within us that's like,
you know what? First, you might want to make that phone call. Second of all, you might want to take
that space for yourself. Third of all, maybe just stay in tonight and and and take a bath and have some time to yourself don't don't
over commit to everything right or maybe it's maybe it's time to ask for help on this and i
think that i think that we can prescribe a lot of our healing or at least ignite a kind of yellow brick road
that leads us to the tools and the spaces and the places that can cultivate our healing.
Yeah. Wow. So the first thing that you think, how do we get to a place of deserving and feeling
worthy? Is it first step heal from the past or heal from the pain in order to feel
worthy? Or can you feel worthy and lovable and deserving if you haven't healed the past?
I think that we have to first say, I deserve this, I'm going to do it. I deserve this,
so I'm going to put all of the work into it that it's going to take, and I'm going to change my life so that I can have this.
Because we live with the past.
I don't know that we just reconcile it and it stays there.
I think that it is something that stays with us, and it either drives us,
or we can tell it where its place in the car is, and we drive it.
And so I think that it's,
that's a way that we take control. And I think that even if you have to fake it till you make
it by starting to just say, you know, I work with mantras a lot, obviously. And so even if for me,
I might have, the mantra might be there before the belief system's there, but the mantra might
drive the belief system, right? So, you know, sometimes if I'm having trouble with something like self-forgiveness, right,
which is one of my favorite definitions of regret is, someone said it was, regret is
just when you are focusing too much on decisions you made while you were still learning.
And even if, and whenever I have, you know, struggles with like, you know, regret or self-forgiveness,
they're like, I can't believe I thought that five years ago.
I can't believe I said that two years ago.
I can't believe I didn't do X, Y, Z when I was this age or that age.
I'll have a mantra that I use all the time,
which is if you are grateful for where you are,
you have to respect the road that got you there.
And respect is a really interesting space because I didn't say like the road that got you there. And respect is a really interesting
space because I didn't say like the road that got you there. I didn't say appreciate the road
you got there. I didn't say anything. I didn't try to lawnmower over the hard parts that informed a
lot of the decision-making of our past, right? I was like, respect it. Because respect does not
mean you agree with it. Respect
does not mean that you're rooting for it or championing it, but it is saying that like,
you're here and I'm here and I'm going to just hold space for you to exist in the world and do
what it is you do. And I'm not going to dismiss you and I'm not going to try to cover you up and I'm not going to try to invalidate you or pretend that you're not or try to kind of, you know, if you're not,
if your head's not in that space yet, I do think developing the mantra that is like, you know,
as simple as waking up every day and saying, I am deserving of my healing.
And saying that every day for a hundred days until you believe it. And I'd love to talk to
the person who could do that for 30
days and it wouldn't impact some way of how they're rewiring what they think they are and are not
deserving of. Yeah. You talked about self-forgiveness. Is that something you practice often? Do you feel
like you make a mistake and you have to do it over and over? Or is it a one-time thing and you're
forgiving yourself of everything in the past or daily actions?
One of my girlfriends then said to me, I asked her how she practiced self-care.
And she said, I practice self-care through self-forgiveness.
Because she said, if I can forgive myself for who I was two minutes ago, two years ago, or 20 years ago,
then I can even get to the bottom of what I need to take care of myself
in this moment. And so I think that self-forgiveness is something that's ongoing and is a series of
check-in points, right? So I think that you'll sit there and be like, oh, I thought that I got
really far in the self-forgiveness part of this thing. But, oh, I see I still have some lingering, triggering thoughts there.
So I need to forgive myself in those spaces too.
Or, you know, like we were talking about
just our triggers in general.
You know, something new could trigger in us
something old that we have, you know,
kind of forgiven ourselves for,
but that doesn't mean that it, again,
it stops existing just like our past, right? We live with our past. We don't,
it doesn't get to just be in a drawer over there. Right, right. You talked about big life a couple
of times. If you could bake a pie that was called big life, what would be the ingredients that you
would throw in for us to be able to actually make the cake rise or the pie rise and everything come together?
What needs to be in there?
What's a non-negotiable for a big life?
I think that it's different for every person.
But I do think that it's really allowing for yourself to have your dreams and not just... Allowing yourself to
have your dreams. Yeah, because I mean, think about how many of us have a dream as a child
and then bury it for 20 years. I mean, I did that with poetry, right? I went to poetry summer camp
when I was six or seven, And then I didn't start writing
a poem again until I was in my twenties. And now I get to do that for a living. But if I had to
really reflect and have in therapy and being in community with my friends and my partner, I'm like,
that was always my dream. It's just that I buried the dream because I didn't think that I was worthy of the
dream or I didn't think the dream was possible because no one was telling me how to achieve it
because I didn't even think that I was capable of carving out the space for the dream.
And so I think that for anyone to have a big life, I don't even think you have to dream big by any means, but I do think you have to know that no matter what the dream is and what my imagination tells me is possible in this world
to be a driving force for how I move through this world.
Then I think you start cultivating all the things you need for your own pie,
and I just can't wait to sit at the table with you and your pie.
You talked about how when people stop stuffing their emotions or how they feel,
that's when they can start to really move forward in the life in a more
powerful way my current girlfriend does an amazing job of telling me in any
moment she doesn't like something how she feels and she and at first I was
like whoa this is like a lot just because she just said it's so quick
right I don't like this I don't like this. I don't like this. I like this. And at first I was taken aback, but now I'm like, I really like this because she says it and she moves on.
But you're a Midwesterner.
I'm a Southerner.
It's the same thing.
We have just grown up in our blood history in a way of being like, that's nice.
Okay.
And then there's so much of that that can be so cultural too.
I mean, when we were talking about that, I was like, yeah, you know, we've seen passive aggression our whole lives.
Or silent treatment.
Yeah.
But how often did we just see like pure guttural, but still kind and respectful emotional expression?
I have no memories of seeing that combination of emotional
expression happen regularly ever in my childhood or life. It's sad because I feel like, I don't
want to generalize this, but I feel like for the most of the men that I grew up with in the Midwest,
and I traveled around, I played sports in a lot of different teams in different states in the
Midwest, there were very few men who would actually sit down with you and say, I'm going through something
challenging right now. Like this is, I'm really struggling with like my body image. I'm struggling
with my relationship. I'm struggling with my insecurities. We don't really even have those
conversations. And a lot of that lack of emotional ability to communicate, I feel like creates a lot
of the anger and the explosions that you see in the world over the last, you know, forever,
but over the last few years, it's becoming more obviously public. And for me, it's just sad that
we've never been given the tools, really. I wish they taught these tools in the classroom, but they don't.
Can you imagine if school taught you about healing, forgiveness, emotional intelligence?
Emotional intelligence at all, yeah.
It would be incredible if we learned how to deal with the humiliation of failing a test or being bullied.
If we learned how to deal with those things as opposed to how to memorize, it'd be incredible with how people could heal moving forward.
Or how to, like why failing a test doesn't deserve humiliation in the first place.
But we also come from these environments that inherently teach us emotional unintelligence,
right? Because that's incredibly emotionally unintelligent to feel
humiliated by failing a test. Because as we know from being adults in the real world,
you never really, winner you lose you, the winner you learn. And that's it. And then all of these
spaces where we attach embarrassment or humiliation around failing, it is a delusion. It's just not real because anytime you've gained information that
will help you to navigate your path, you've won. And so it doesn't matter if the critics have
slammed something or the company didn't work out the way you thought it would or whatever it is,
all of those things are what built the
toolkit that allows for you to keep going. Yeah. I always say failure is just feedback.
It's information that helps you move forward in the next part of your life. You work a lot with
women and young women and you inspire a lot of women through your work and your message.
I'm curious in your mind with all the work you've done with women,
what is the thing that, for women that don't believe in themselves,
what is the thing that holds them back from actually having belief, self-belief,
that they are capable of their dreams or the right relationship or the right career?
What is the thing that holds them back from believing in themselves more?
I think it's actually the things that hold us back or hold us up are our belief systems, right?
So if you have an opinion about something, right, that is new.
If that golf course just went up and you were like, it's so beautiful and the trees are so amazing,
and that's my opinion of it.
And I came in here and was just like, well, you know, actually all the fertilizer they used for that is da-da-da-da-da-da-da,
and I had a whole environmental argument for why this is so bad for the planet,
which I don't have.
I know nothing about golf courses.
Sure, sure.
I could probably sway your opinion a lot because perhaps you didn't spend a lot of time.
You know, yours is just like, oh, I saw it.
I thought it was nice, right?
Right, right.
If I came to you and I gave you 30 data time, you know, yours is just like, oh, I saw it, I thought it was nice, right? Right, right.
If I came to you and I gave you 30 data points on, like, why it is bad,
I'd probably be able to sway your opinion.
Sure.
Right?
Your belief system, I could spend three days with you trying to shake down your belief system.
So your belief system being, I'm not worthy of love.
I'm not worthy of real love. I'm not worthy of good love. That would take me, to sway or put
even a dent in that, would take me as long as it took you to build that belief system in the first
place, right? And that's why I say that our belief systems either hold us back or hold us up.
And so I think that first we have to decipher, you know,
what's an opinion and what is actually something in my belief system, right? So I remember once,
this is like 10 years ago, I had this probably horrible guy I was dating. And one of my best
girlfriends, Sade, said to me, I was, you know, and as we have in those relationships where you
just go back and forth and the ones that are really, I always say it's the ones that almost are reminiscent of how someone's like addicted to a substance.
Yeah.
If you have that kind of push and pull and toxic and talking, not talking, like restricting yourself of the person or the thing, you know, going, whatever.
you know, going, whatever. And I was saying to her about saying something to her about, you know,
but I just like, you know, really still want to be with this person who is treating me horribly.
And she said to me at one point, she goes, you know, Cleo, like she goes, there's a part of you that believes you belong with this person who doesn't treat you right. She goes, so stop trying
to think. And I, so stop trying to think.
And because I said to her, I was like, but I don't want to be.
But I just feel like obsessed with trying to be in this relationship.
And I don't know what it is.
And I'm sitting here, you know, being 20.
I was like, oh, it's a soul connection.
I was like, I have this connection that's deeper than logic.
That's what I'm sitting here thinking.
And she was like, you don't have a connection that's deeper than logic. She was like, you're trying to solve the wrong problem.
She was like, your belief system says I don't deserve a love that's treating me well or I
couldn't be happy if I wasn't with this person. That's what you need to work on. She goes, you
don't need to work on how do I get over feeling this way about this guy or trying to be in this relationship or not.
She goes, she's like, work on like where your belief system is failing you. And so a lot of
the times when, whether I get to talk to young women, young girls and boys, men, I was like,
what is like, what, what is your belief system doing for you? Like, does your belief system
hold you back from your dreams and healthy
relationships and healthy living and feeling powerful in this world? Or does your belief
system hold you up and say that whether those things manifest or show themselves today, tomorrow,
or yesterday, I believe in my power to have them. I believe in my capabilities.
So the belief system is something that holds us up or holds us back.
How does someone start to overcome self-doubt?
Do they have to map out all their belief systems and start analyzing it?
Or what's a process for eliminating self-doubt so we can make better decisions
that are quick yeses as opposed to long noes?
so we can make better decisions that are quick yeses as opposed to long no's. Yeah.
You know, I think that we have to have a practice, right?
You know, I think that people are always like,
the question probably I get the most is people will be like,
just like a quick question, like how did you like get to self-love?
Or like how did you like find self-care?
And I was like, I don't have self-love and I don't have self-care.
You practice them. And so in that I spent, I have enough intimacy with myself to listen to,
okay, what goes into that? And what I always say about self-care and self-love is that,
you know, if self-love says, I love you, self-care says, prove it. So self-care is how we prove how much we love
ourselves. Interesting. So tell me a practice for like a week that might be a self-care practice
for you that proves that you love yourself. What's some of the things you do?
Say my mantra for the week is, I love myself more than my anxiety.
I love myself more than my anxiety.
Prove it.
Prove it, right?
So I sit down on the plane.
I start having the full anxiety of like whether,
I don't know why I always say this.
I'm like, it's like, you always want to cry on the plane.
You always want to have like anxiety in the plane. And why?
Like, even if you don't have the fear of flying,
and so anxiety starts to creep in, right?
Anxiety comes in the form of negative self-chatter that is overwhelming, right?
And so what is the kind of self-care mantra for those moments?
How do I show my self-care in moments of self-attack?
Anxiety and stress.
Right.
And so first, I remember my first mantra,
right, which is that I love myself more than my anxiety. And then in giving myself care in those
moments, I say, okay, I love myself more than my anxiety, so I'm going to breathe through this.
I love myself more than my anxiety, so I'm going to remember that this is not me. This is something
passing through me so it can go out the same door it came in. And if I need to say that to myself
over and over again until these feelings that are overwhelming me start to lessen, I'll sit and do
that. Or if I, how do I show myself care? I'm going to call Simon, my fiance, and say, you know, I'm having these feelings.
I'm having these thoughts.
I obviously know they're not true.
And I think if I can talk it out in this moment, it will help me, right?
As opposed to stuffing it.
Exactly.
And so, and if for other people, the care could look different, right?
If it means that like, like oh i've got to take
my medicine for that or oh i've got to take you know i am i have one of my mentees i always give
out these um kind of lavender balms because i always carry them in my bag so in case i ever
have anxiety somewhere i'll put a little lavender oil in my hand i'll rub it together and i'll take
five deep breaths yeah and i always tell you know my the young girls in my life i I'll rub it together and I'll take five deep breaths. And I always tell the young
girls in my life, I'm like, if you have just one small ritual in your bag with you at all times,
it's a way to gift yourself care. Then you're just that much closer to feeling a little bit better
about whatever it is that's ailing you. I don't care what it is, but if you can at least know how
to take five breaths to yourself as a gift, then you're way ahead of the curve on self-care in any other way, shape, or form.
Because we also have to recognize that self-care can't always cost a million dollars, right?
Right, right, right. Not doing massages every day and trips to Hawaii.
Exactly. Self-care is a deep breath. Self-care might be organizing your finances.
Self-care might be a walk. Being out your closet. Self-care might be one thought, you know, that
just says, this is what mothering is going to look like today. And that's okay. And so self-care might be, this was enough today.
And so I think that in those moments, for me, by no surprise, because of my work, I
obviously mostly work with words and how I think that they have the power to create these
belief systems and create these connective moments of self-care and self-love.
And they're just really easy to
practice on the go. So I find that working with words are so helpful because you can always,
you know, you can keep a little mantra in your bag or in your wallet or wherever,
and you can always turn to it. It's always free. It's always there. It's always accessible.
Yeah. What's the biggest trauma or pain that you've had to overcome in your life that took the longest amount of time to start to overcome?
You know, I think that growing up in my childhood, you know, my parents divorced when I was six. And I just grew up around so much substance abuse in different forms from pretty much all of my family members.
And I really got to see the way that that—I, A, got to see the way that we learn to cope so early on with the toxic behavior that that creates.
And then—and so, I mean, I used to think that, like,
I haven't had anything really horrible happen to me.
And I remember once my therapist was like,
no, you literally just built such a high tolerance.
You have such a high tolerance for the pain that can occur in life.
He's like, because you had to be your own therapist as a child,
and you had to be your own therapist as a child or, and you had to be the mom, your own mom. And you had to, you had to learn to show up for yourself and self-soothe
in those ways that he's like, that is just how you cope and how you move. And so it's always,
it's always hard for me to kind of pinpoint one exacting moment because I think that in my own journey,
I'm still really getting to the bottom of it, you know? And I was saying one day to,
I remember having this like really amazing breakthrough where, because one of the things
like I don't really get like angry or I actually, I get angry, but I don't show anger or like admit
anger really readily. And so I remember one day going
through a breakup and I had gone on this long walk with my friend, Lisa. It was so interesting. We
like went, you know, you lived in New York. So we went, we walked from the East village across the
like Brooklyn bridge to go have lunch all the way through Brooklyn to the Williamsburg bridge. It
was the longest, or it was like a pilgrimage. That's an experience. Yeah.
And afterwards, I think it was such a physical exertion that when I got home,
I was like, yeah, I'm actually pissed about the way I got treated in that relationship.
Whereas I really rationalized why everyone did their best in the relationship,
which sometimes you just do because you're so therapized too, you're able to be like you understand why and how everyone gets to
their decision making space
and then all of a sudden you're just like yeah
but I still have to feel these things along the way
and I remember when I was in therapy
that week I said to my therapist
I was like you know
I didn't realize that
you know because I grew up with an explosive
family I grew up with
a family that loses their temper really easily.
And I felt even at an early age that it was unhealthy to speak or talk to someone in that way or in that tone or with those words.
And I was so sensitive to it.
And I really never wanted to be that way, right, Which is really interesting now to think about that I
use words for a living to create peace and calm. And I said to my therapist, I was like, you know,
what I realized is that I hid anger or the idea of like how anger manifests for so long
that it started hiding from me back. And so I was like, I actually, it's not that I don't want to be angry now or see the
value in anger. Cause I do think anger, especially in women is important, but I couldn't find it.
You couldn't get angry. It was just hiding right back. I'd hit it for so long that it was,
it was used to playing hide. It was used to me. Hide. Exactly. It was used to playing hide and
seek. Right. So it was used to saying like, no, no to playing hide and seek right so it's used to saying
like no no I hide from you so like so you don't get angry yeah so no so now I'm actually like
getting really good at it yeah you're like screaming like I don't like you yeah no but
now I'll just be I'll I'm a little bit more um and I actually think it's from having so many
young teenagers in my life it's really interesting because you, to anyone who's never mentored or had young people in their life that's not their blood relatives, if there's anything you want to do that's just as beautiful for you as it is for another person, it's certainly that.
so in such a place where everything is so simple that I swear I get some of like the best advice ever because they're so, they're so plain about everything. So if you, you know, they'll say
something, they'll be like, they're like, yeah, we're just like not into her because she's fake.
And I'll be like, no, but sometimes we as people, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And
they're like, like, yeah, but it's just fake. Right. And, and one of my, one of the girls that
I'm close with said to me one day, she was like, I was saying something about, I was like, yeah, but it's just fake, right? And one of the girls that I'm close with said to me one day, she was like, I was saying something about, I was like, yeah, I was like, you know, it's hard because she's asked me about someone in my life.
And I was like, you know, it's hard to have some friends that you feel like just aren't that happy for you.
And you just wonder why they're not happy for you when you're happy.
And she goes, oh, she goes, fake love is the worst.
She goes, fake love is worse than no love at all.
Wow. And I remember being like, but those words are all so simple. And so what's really been
amazing is I think actually having the influence of these young girls in my life because they're
like, this makes me mad. This is fake. They call everything what it is. And that has actually
helped me so much to be like, yeah, I'm pissed about that. And it's as simple as that. And that doesn't mean that I'm going to live pissed about
it forever or that I'm, and I don't have to be afraid of being an angry person or I can still
have anger without displaying it in a way that's unhealthy or disrespectful to another person,
which I think was my fear as a growing up was that I never saw anger expressed in a way that was healthy.
Healthy.
And so, you know, just like boys are never allowed to express emotions
in ways that are healthy, right?
So when you were saying earlier, you know, we can't say, like,
I'm feeling weird about this or my body image, this or da-da-da.
You don't have that space.
It's not acceptable.
It's not acceptable.
I mean, it's probably becoming more acceptable now.
And I'm assuming there's some cultivation in families, hopefully.
But I think if boys had that, I'm not making an excuse for men who have lashed out in negative ways.
Yeah.
And I could probably say 99% of a lot of those guys who hurt people probably didn't have the space to express their feelings.
And so that becomes the next way to express through anger.
There's this, in Where to Begin, there's this section of essays in the back that I wrote.
And one of them I called on John Lewis's work.
And he was saying that whenever they would in the civil rights movement prepare to go
to a march or prepare to go to anything and he was like you know he's like i would into someone
spit on them or was disrespectful of them or violent towards them he goes how we would remain
in non-violence is to always imagine them as a baby oh wow and he was like because if you can
imagine someone as a baby he goes then you can start to be like, well, what happened?
Did the environment go wrong?
Did the influences go wrong?
And then he said, and then what does it look like to never give up on another human being?
It's really like if there's any one part of my book you should read, it's that essay.
It's so good.
And I always think about that when it comes to toxic masculinity because before there was
masculinity there was boyhood right so if we can be like where was this person in their boyhood
and then what happened like what what were all the times where i said don't cry don't be this
and all those acts like a man don't be a girl don't be a wuss or whatever yeah meanwhile if a
young girl is crying she's like let it out or do you need to talk about it?
And then for young boys, we say get it together.
And so, of course, we're going to sit here and approach them with completely different emotional landscapes, right?
So one of the things I always think is fascinating is when we're younger and if a young girl's dating, you know, if she's a freshman
and she's dating a sophomore, they'll be like, well, of course you can do that because girls
are more mature. Why? There's nothing genetic. Listen, like men biologically have, might have
bigger bodies or whatever. So there's plenty of arguments you can make for why men and women are
different, right? And because they are physically, right? Maturity is not one of those things. There's not a certain amount of part of a woman's brain that
is more apt to be mature than a man's. Why do we cultivate that women are more mature than men?
And in that, we're telling men that they don't have to be mature by a certain age.
that, we're telling men that they don't have to be mature by a certain age. And we're telling women that they have to overcompensate for men, which allows for them to stay in that space.
And so there's so much unhelpful storytelling in how we raise kids and the narratives we give them.
And I think that if we can actually heal the storytelling for boys and girls, then boys will just have the spaces to have those conversations and have a practice of having them and have a practice of healthy emotional expression.
It's funny.
Yeah.
When I went on, I wrote a book about masculine vulnerability a couple years ago.
And when I went on my tour, would ask the honest is usually about 50%
women would come 50% men would come and I would ask everyone I would say if
you're a woman in the room raise your hand if once a week you get together
with another female friends and talk about body issues work challenges
insecurities fears uncertainties of the future, you know, challenges with friends.
And almost every girl would raise their hand, like at least once a week.
And I go, keep your hand up if you do this every day at lunch with your girlfriend.
And almost everyone had their hand up.
I said, okay, for all the guys in the room, raise your hand if once a month you meet with
at least one guy friend and talk about your body issue challenges, your insecurities,
your fears, your relationshipurities, your fears,
your relationship challenges, your stuff at work. And in a real way. Like I know men who will talk
about, they won't talk about body image, but they'll have a weight loss challenge with a group
of friends and they're like, yeah. And they turn into a competition. That's actually the only way
that they can feel that it's appropriate for them to express what they're feeling about their own
bodies. Right. Yeah. And I would ask, I would ask men and I was like, if you do this once a month
and maybe two or three guys out of hundreds would raise their hand and I'd be like, you're part of
a church men's group that plans this once a month. It's like a planned time to do this. And most of
them were like, yes, like a church group church group and so for me it's like imagine
as a woman never talking about your feelings never having a girlfriend to call on and say I'm really
going through some challenge right now do you have a moment never saying how you truly feel about
a relationship body issues insec vulnerabilities, sharing your shame. Imagine your whole life never being
able to talk about it. And I'm not saying like it's people's responsibility to share this with
other people. But, and I try to reflect that back on the women. They're like, I wouldn't want to
kill myself. I'm like, imagine how men, a lot of these men who do harmful things in the world,
not every guy, but imagine the amount of internal pain
they feel because they're lashing out in these ways, whether it be sexual abuse or shootings or
marches, whatever it be in a negative way, like imagine the pain. And again, I'm not justifying
anyone, but when we can change the narrative and the story, like you said, for young boys and young
girls to grow up in a different way, I feel like there's going to be so much more love and healing
and communication and peace to just be able to talk about these things
with one guy friend, a couple buddies.
Not like having a beer, watching the game, doing a fitness challenge,
but really talk.
I think it would be a game changer.
So I'm trying to create the opportunity and the facilitation
for more men to do that because I think it'll be really helpful for everyone.
Yeah.
And I think that if men are their most honest with themselves, they want that.
They want it.
They're starving for it.
So how do we also say that what you want, you deserve?
Ooh.
What you want, you deserve.
Ooh.
And what you want is something that is right.
You know, how do we say to somebody, like, yeah, you're right?
Like, think about even when someone's like, you know, I'm from New Orleans, and so, like, something that's just like a street term is being like, yeah, you're right.
And, like, it's such, it's just like an external validation.
You're just like, yeah, like, look at her. Yeah, you're right. Sure. And to just say to someone, yeah, you're right. And like, it's such, it's just like an external validation. You're just like, yeah, like, like, look at her. Yeah, you're right. Like, and to just say to sound
like you're right, this way you're feeling is like, is right. Like going after exploring why
you feel that way and what has gone on in your life that has built these things in you is right.
If we can give that to men, I think that the sky's the limit for all of the ways that we
can dismantle not even just what emotionally blocks us between genders, but politically,
socially, economically, like, you know, gender and race, it manifests in everything.
Yeah, yeah, I hear you. This is powerful. I got
a couple of questions left for you. Okay. Tell me. This one is called the three truths. I ask
everyone at the end of this question. So imagine it's many years away from now, but it's your last
day on earth. Okay. And you get to pick the day. You're 500 years old, 100 years old. It doesn't
matter, but it's the last day. Depending on the technology. Right, exactly.
And you have achieved every dream that you personally want, right?
You've lived your life fulfilled.
You've got the family, the relationships.
You've done the work that brings you a lot of joy and fulfillment.
You've impacted people.
You've done everything you can do.
Just imagine.
But for whatever reason, you've got to take everything you've created with you all of your body of work your books your
Content everything that people have access to your words. They no longer have access to but you get to leave behind a
Piece of paper and a pen to write down three final truths of all the lessons you've learned from childhood to 150 years old
Of all the lessons you've learned from childhood to 150 years old, from being a mom to a daughter to a mentor, a leader, a creator, but you can only leave three lessons behind to the world.
What would those truths be for you?
Golly.
I think one of them would probably be what you're worried about usually isn't worrying about you.
That's a good one. I think the second one would be you deserve your healing.
And I think the third one would be,
I think the third truth would be more of a question.
And it's actually, I love this so much, I made it the last poem of where to begin the last it's the last page of the book and it says if all of your
dreams came true would they just change you or would they change the world dream bigger and
wider and deeper and so i think that you know how deep and wide and big are you willing to go with what you have to bring to not just your life but our world?
That's big.
Those are great.
I don't think I've heard that combination.
So those are powerful.
Thank you.
Thanks.
You've got a book out right now.
Yes.
Where can they get the book?
And what will the book provide for people when they dive in?
My new book is called Where to Begin.
And I really specifically made this book
for the exact moment we're living in.
I did not think I'd write a book this year.
I mean, Heart Talk just came out last year.
What does you know from writing a book?
It's a lot of work.
It's hell.
It's a lot of work.
It's hell.
I'm working on the third one right now.
It's a lot of energy.
It's energy.
It feels never ending.
And it's one of those processes where it's weird.
Because don't you feel like when you're writing a book, you suddenly go from being like,
I feel like I live in the space where it's 20% done for 80% of the time.
And then all of a sudden, it's like there's only 5% left.
But you feel like it's never going to be finished for almost the entire time you're working on it.
And then all of a sudden, you wake up and you're like,
wow, there's only this one chunk left.
And so I really didn't think
I was going to write a book this year at all.
And when I was on my tour last year between doing,
I tour two and three times a year,
mostly to do community building,
create community building spaces.
And the one thing that people kept saying to me
at every freaking stop was like, when they'd ask me a question, they'd be like, how are you dealing with anxiety? Or how do you deal with the news? Or how do you deal with the rear politically? And at the end of every sentence, they would say, especially now, or especially during these times.
so much that I was like, I think I have to write something for especially during these times.
And so that's where I actually put my mantra for anxiety in this book. I put this kind of one long form poem I have called Where to Begin in this book, which is just about being able to
know that you deserve a moment to have calm and replenishment, but to do it in a way that allows for you to also get
back into the world, not hide from the world. And so this book is, I say that this book is like a
resting place when the news and the impeachments or all of the things in our world that feel like
the kind of like partisan political commentary is just stressing you out or overwhelming you, or you literally just feel
like you're going crazy, this book is kind of a resting place that's going to allow you the space
to claim your calm, feel okay, feel like kind of a fundamental sense of okayness, and then encourage
you to still be a part of getting to our solutions because we do need all of us. And you can get it
literally wherever you buy a book, Walmart, Target, Amazon, any local bookseller. Amazing.
Yeah. It's funny. I had Marianne Williamson on and she was like, I told her, I was like,
I feel a lot of peace because I don't watch the news. Yeah. And she's like, you need to watch the news.
You need to know everything that's going on.
I was like, I don't know if I agree with that.
I was like, I can understand what's happening.
Someone can tell me.
But just like you said, like listening or watching someone on TV talk about all this stress,
it's not going to bring you peace by watching it over and over again, by being upset constantly.
So I love that you're helping people create communities,
create healing, create peace.
But also one of the things that I wrote about in this book
is a media diet.
Yeah, and social media diet and news diet.
Yeah, exactly, all media.
So what does it look like to have a media diet
that is in favor of your mental health and emotional health?
And I think that a big part of that is understanding the difference between news and commentary.
So what we're struggling in living in the 24-hour news cycle is that the news has happened once or twice in the day.
The commentary is what makes things to accelerate.
And the more they talk about it because they want you to tune in,
they talk about it as if it gets worse and worse. And I think that it's very anxiety provoking.
And so I think that for anyone who says, I struggle with balancing getting information and
kind of having peace and peace from the culture of 24-hour news cycle. I say to them, listen,
there's probably about five to six people you can follow that you just trust for information. And make sure you stay
informed because being informed helps us to vote. It helps us to understand why and who and what we
are rooting for and why things make sense and why things liberate some people,
oppress other people.
It's being informed is not the same thing as watching our news, trust and belief.
So what does it look like for you to also create a media diet that says, how do I stay
informed?
Yeah.
And how do I do that in a way that allows for me to have emotional and mental health?
Yeah.
I tried to go on it the last few years.
I've gone on a five-day trip where I leave my phone at home.
It's the scariest thing ever because I remember the first time I did it a few years ago.
I went to Hawaii and I left my phone in the apartment.
And I was like, I don't even know how to function going somewhere without
having I have to print everything off I have to ask for directions to go to a gas station I didn't
have GPS I was like I don't even remember my hotel was at the car rental place I was like what am I
doing but I went to Hawaii for five days alone and I felt so much peace without having my phone
yeah and just being in nature and like reflecting on everything
as opposed to checking or obsessing over something.
So I really recommend the diet 100%.
Even like one day a week diet.
Yeah.
Or at night.
Something that's like just creates space that, you know,
we live in the age of having our phone in our hands all the time
is creating a space of constant disruption.
So we're constantly disrupting ourselves. So what does it look like? You know, and peace
doesn't, you know, it's hard to cultivate peace if you're constantly being disrupted. I mean,
think about even if you're, listen, if you were saying like, I'm going to just take five minutes
on my couch alone, right. To just like have a peaceful moment. And I was just like, Hey,
Oh, asking you a question every 10
minutes you'd be like why are you disrupting my five minutes of peace right and that's our phone
all day long so there is no way to really have a big level of peace without a big um level of
claiming the space for peace to be possible so true well clearly I want to acknowledge you for
the peace and the joy you bring so many people. I've been following your work for a while, and I really love the way you approach community, connecting to yourself, reclaiming your peace, understanding people, compassion, forgiveness.
Everything that you work on, I really admire and respect the work that you're doing because you're helping so many people.
So I want to acknowledge you for that.
People can go get your book right now.
They can follow you on social media.
You like to hang out on Instagram the most or where do you?
Yeah, probably.
I'm pretty much on Instagram.
Yeah, okay.
Because I can just take a photo of my notebook.
And then just post it.
And then just post it.
It's so funny.
I always have people be like,
we'd love to like for like a tech magazine
wants to interview you about like user acquisition or something.
I was like, I literally have no idea what that means.
Oh, it's a photo?
And I was like, I literally post a photo of my notebook and I've been doing it for five years and that's my strategy.
Amazing.
I love it.
I love it.
Well, my final question is what's your definition of greatness?
Oh, my gosh.
I think my definition of greatness would have to do with how much you're able to give right I think
that if you are in a place of you know nothing feels more great than when you're able to give
to yourself nothing feels more great than when you're able to give to your community nothing
feels more great than when you're able to give to your community. Nothing feels more great than when you're able to give to your world.
And so I think that whenever you're connected with generosity of spirit,
then I think you're channeling your highest level of greatness.
Yeah.
Cleo, thank you so much.
Appreciate it very much.
Thank you.
Amazing.
I hope you enjoyed this episode, my friend.
And it was so powerful to learn about these things, about healing, about self-love, self-care,
about the non-negotiables for living a bigger life.
And if you enjoyed this, please let me know.
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reason. And no matter what part of the journey you're on right now, whether you're rising to
the top, you're just getting started, you're somewhere in the middle, you're confused.
icing to the top. You're just getting started. You're somewhere in the middle. You're confused.
Remember that Rumi said your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all the barriers within yourself that you have built against it. You've got a lot of love inside of
you, but sometimes we've got barriers, walls, traumas, experiences, memories, hurts and pains that hold us back
from cultivating that love.
And just know that you were born with love
and you have love within you.
And always remember that.
I love you so very much.
I appreciate you.
And as you always know,
it's time to go out there and do something great. សូវាប់បានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបា Outro Music