Unlocking Us with Brené Brown - Brené with Ashley C. Ford on Storytelling, Truth-Telling, and Liberation
Episode Date: May 19, 2021In this episode, I’m talking to writer Ashley C. Ford about her new memoir, Somebody’s Daughter, and how it is written for everyone who walks into a bookstore and feels like they can’t find a bo...ok about themselves — and there are a lot of us looking for that. We talk about the writing process, the truth-telling process, and how connecting the two can be liberating not only to us but also to others. Our conversation is not just a story about her life, it is a story about life and what connects us to show us that we are not alone — and that we are braver than we know. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, everyone. I'm Brene Brown, and this is Unlocking Us.
Before we get started with our podcast conversation today, I wanted to give you an update about our summer vacation.
I will be taking off from Unlocking Us from June 2nd to June 16th.
We will be back with Unlocking Us on June 23rd with a five-part summer series. It's like a sister
summer series. I'm going to be doing a five-parter with Ashley and Barrett on the gifts of imperfection.
So time to dust off that thing, or if you've got the new, the 10th anniversary edition,
get that out. We're going to go through the guideposts together. We're going to talk about
what we've learned. I think,
Barrett, is it still your favorite book? Yes. So we're going to do a five-part sister series on the gifts. We're nervous because we're like, is there going to be a special hand sign for like,
we've crossed a boundary or we shouldn't share that? Yes.
Barrett's saying yes or should be.
So off from June 2nd to June 16th, back on June 23rd with Ashley and Barrett
on a five-part The Gifts of Imperfection summer series.
I'm taking off from May 31st to July 5th
for Dare to Lead, a little bit longer of a vacay.
And I'm going to be back on July 12th.
What the hell?
I'm going to be back on July 12th
with a two-part
solo series called The Hardest Feedback I've Ever Received. As Barrett laughs, I thought I'd share
that with you because we always talk about how to give feedback and we need to receive it.
But then, you know, how do we not hot potato it when we get it, which I can do sometimes.
These short summer breaks are going to be followed by an incredible remainder of 2021.
Lots of great conversations, interesting guests, some solo episodes. So grateful that you're here.
Let's get on to, oh my God, this conversation. I am talking to Ashley C. Ford, one of,
I don't know, just whenever you say, you know when there's that person that you
know, and whenever you say her name to someone else, they go, oh my gosh, she's my favorite
person. She's just one of my favorite people. So Ashley has written a memoir called Somebody's
Daughter. It's coming out. The launch date is June 1st. And we talk about hard things. We talk about what it really means to own've had about what it means to really grab the pen,
walk into the story, own it, and write a new ending. Ashley C. Ford, it's a hell of a conversation. And you can shop new styles during the Macy's Fab Fall Sale from October 9th to October 14th.
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I just don't get it.
Just wish someone could do the research on it.
Can we figure this out? Hey, y'all. I'm John Blenhill, and I'm hosting a new podcast at Vox
called Explain It To Me. Here's how it works. You call our hotline with questions you can't
quite answer on your own. We'll investigate and call you back to tell you
what we found. We'll bring you the answers you need every Wednesday starting September 18th.
So follow Explain It To Me, presented by Klaviyo.
Before we get started with our conversation, let me tell you a little bit more about Ashley.
Ashley C. Ford is a writer, a host, an educator who lives in Indianapolis, Indiana with her husband, poet and fiction writer
Kelly Stacey, and their chocolate lab Astro Renegade Ford Stacey, hyphenated name in case
you're going to do any formal invites for Astro Renegade. Her memoir, Somebody's Daughter,
is published by Flatiron Books. It'll be out June
1st. Ford is the former host of the Chronicles of Now podcast. She is co-host of the HBO companion
podcast, Lovecraft County Radio. Seasons one and three of MasterCard's Fortune Favors the Bold,
as well as the video interview series Profile by BuzzFeed News and Brooklyn-based news and culture TV show 112BK.
Man, she's everywhere.
And that's good because we need her everywhere.
Ashley was also the host of the first season of Audible's literary interview series Authorized.
She has been named among Forbes Magazine's 30 Under 30 in Media,
Brooklyn Magazine's Brooklyn 100,
Time Out New York's New Yorkers of the Year, and Variety's New Power of New York.
All that is Taru. She is incredible, and she's with us today. Let's jump in.
Hello, Ashley C. Ford.
Hello, Brene Brown.
Oh, man, just seeing your face.
I get to see her on Zoom.
It just makes me happy.
That's mutual.
Vice versa.
I'm very happy seeing your face today and mine, because to be perfectly honest, you're
not guaranteed the opportunity to see your face every day.
So that is true.
I say that when I wake up in the morning.
Thank you for another shot at this.
Absolutely. I got to start by saying that somebody's daughter, your new memoir, blew me away.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's a chance that I'm going to cry starting now.
Me too.
So we're just going to be crying together again.
Again. Laura Mays heads up the
podcast for us and we read everything together. And I get this call at seven something this
morning and she's like, oh God, where are you in the book? I'm like, stop. Cause I'm almost there.
Don't say anything. She's like, it's so good. Her writing is so amazing.
Oh my goodness. Thank you so much. Thank you for saying that. Thank you for reading it.
There's so much of who I am in this book that I'm trying to connect, I think, with other people through sharing that and connect in a sense of shedding a certain sense of shame and hoping that doing that for myself encourages other people to do it for themselves because it's better.
It's just it's better.
And that people are taking the time to read the story of someone who for a very long time didn't
think they had a story to tell. That gives me a lot of hope, not just personally, but for people.
The last time you were on the podcast, we were talking about the Hungry Hearts anthology.
And I asked you a question where we start the podcast all the time, which is tell me
your story.
Your story, it was like reading a movie.
It's a unique experience.
The last time I really felt like I was reading a movie was when I probably read Circe, my
Madeline Miller.
Yeah.
Oh, I love that book.
Yeah, that's how I felt.
So I'm not going to ask you about your story because your story is in the book.
And I want to ask you a different question.
Yeah.
A question that I would hate probably for anyone to are a writer of great power and eloquence.
Tell me the story of owning becoming a writer.
Wow. I fancy myself a smart person, a smart woman. And I was having a conversation with a therapist in college. And I was talking
about the fact that I had written something for a class and my professor really liked it and
told me that maybe I should continue working on the story that I had started under her instruction. And this counselor said to
me, well, what do you think about that? And I was like, oh, you know, I'm not doing that. First of
all, I was like, Black people don't do that. Okay, we don't sell our business. We don't embarrass
our families or our parents by revealing to the world what happened in airing our dirty laundry.
And this counselor said to me, our dirty laundry? Like, is that your dirty laundry?
Like, did you put the dirt on the laundry that you're worried about sharing? And I was like,
well, no, if it was me, I'm okay with talking about what I've done because I want people to know or I feel connected to people by talking about my mistakes sometimes, where I've messed up and where I've gotten better.
And the counselor said, well, if it's not your dirty laundry, then why do you have it?
If it's not your dirty laundry, why is it in your basket?
Oh, man.
And I was like, huh? And I had to think about that a lot. And then they asked me the question
that really messed me up, which was essentially, he asked me, why don't you deserve a story
that's just your own? And-
Ruthless.
Yeah. Yeah. I needed that at the time. And I couldn't come up with good reasons.
And I try to think of myself as a reasonable person. And the evidence of the way I was able
to connect with people through writing was all around me. And it started to feel like to deny it was to choose to believe something that is evidently wrong.
Why would Roxane Gay, who was my friend and a writer I admired at the time, even before she became my mentor, who had reached out to me about my writing and about how much she liked it,
why would she lie to me? Why would this person reach out to me to say these things
if they weren't true? And I would come up with reasons in my head, right? Oh, she feels sorry
for me, or oh, she wants to encourage a young writer. And I could come up with so many excuses for why I was not who I very clearly was,
or that I wasn't good at doing what I very clearly had some talent for doing. And the evidence
would not bear out. The evidence that that was true, that I was bad, that I shouldn't do it, that I couldn't do it,
it never showed up. It never showed up. I tried and people heard me, people read me,
and they liked it. And lying to myself about that wasn't making any part of my life easier.
So at some point, I had to sit back and go, okay, if that's not working,
it's time to try something new. Because you're not going to stop writing.
Writing is a thing you're always going to do. You're not going to stop. So if you're not going
to stop writing, then you need to be willing to be honest with yourself about what happens when you write,
how it affects people, how it affects you, and the potential for who and how it could affect
someone next. And there's a responsibility in that. And I didn't want to deny that responsibility.
I didn't want to abdicate my responsibility, not to share my story.
But if I'm going to share my story, and it's going to connect the way it connects,
then it's my responsibility to own that that is the truth, and to walk and work like that is the
truth. I guess. Sorry, I ramble a lot, but that's pretty much it.
I'd call that a lot of things, but not a ramble. It wouldn't even come up as an option.
You touched on something really hard, which I want to ask you about. I have to say that I fell madly and deeply in love
with little Ashley in the book.
Me too.
Did you?
Yes. Ooh, okay. We're not even there yet, Ashley. I realized in the writing of this book,
especially in the starting writing of this book, that in the first drafts of the way I wrote about myself as a child was not the way I actually felt.
It was the way I thought other people saw me, which was pretty weak, sensitive, troublesome, burdensome, all of those things.
I wrote about myself that way. I wrote about my
childhood that way because that's the way the adults around me often made me feel, not all the
time, but often made me feel. And as I really started to think about these stories and look back, I started thinking, how would I react to a kid now
who behaved that way? I used to be a nanny, loved it. And those boys,
I nannied these two boys, Charlie and Wilson. And those boys would do things that didn't make sense,
that were all over the place, that were big and loud and just
wild. And I loved it. I loved it. I loved watching them. I loved being with them. I loved where their
minds would go. I loved the little strange and funny things they said. I loved it so much. And I started thinking, was I very different from these boys
as a child? I used to say wild things like that. The reason almost why it fills me up with so much
joy to hear this kid say something weird is because I know I would have said the exact same
thing when I was a kid. So how come adult me can look at this kid and think, man, that's so funny, or that's so cute.
And it seems like none of the adults around me were able to do that in my direction.
And as I thought about that, I just kept thinking, oh, wait, I'm the adult now. I'm the adult now.
And I can sort of love that child part of me, the way she deserved to be loved then,
the way she wanted to be loved then. And I can give her that now, like even in the book,
as I write these stories, it's like, I want to write them clearly and I want to write them truthfully. But I felt like at times I was having conversations with
myself as a child off the page, sort of saying, I know that this happened and I know that this
was the reaction to it, but that was kind of funny. Don't you think that was kind of funny?
Don't you think it was actually kind of funny for you to say
that? Because I'm actually laughing inside about it. And almost feeling like that part of me
opened up back to me. Wow. And was kind of like, yeah, you want to hear another one?
Yeah. I don't know how else to describe it. It's like it became a conversation.
And I just like being able to have that conversation with the child
version of me, sort of, it made me more relaxed. It made me a little bit funnier because I was
able to tap into the part of myself that was a little performative and love to be silly and love
to put on a show, something that has always been true for me, but I've always
had weird shame around and not known why I had that shame. You go back and you listen to your
child self and you're like, oh yeah, I remember how that was taken from you. I remember how slowly
over time, the part of you that would jump up and dance and do the scene from the movie in front of
people, how that part of you got smaller and smaller and smaller as the people around you
dismissed you over and over and over again. Or shut it down completely.
Or shut it down completely. And I'm sorry for that. I know I didn't do it to you.
But I'm sorry that that happened to you. And you're gonna be okay. And it's weird. I always
thought that was a bunch of bullshit, to be perfectly honest, that you talk to your inner
child. I'm like, what? I'm 34. What inner child? And it wasn't bullshit. Having those conversations with myself, I'm like, oh, I get to be all of it.
All of the best things I was then, I can be right now.
Wow.
That's powerful.
I wish I'd known that the whole time.
I'm digging into these things because I have rarely seen anyone do this as beautifully
as you've done it, especially going back to childhood and going
back around trauma and going back around hard things and hard choices made by people we love.
Yes.
Was there a stark moment or was it a collection of moments where you're like,
shit, this little girl that I've built on the pages is the projection of me through adult
eyes? Or was it a big aha or just a collection of ahas? It was definitely a collection of ahas,
especially because of the way I wrote the book, which was very much in pieces and in sections,
just the way my brain worked in forming it. And so I'm working really hard on one section,
and I know I'm going to get back to these other sections, but they're in still kind of a rough
place. And I realized, looking at the sections that I had spent the most time with, that the
more time I had spent on those sections, the more compassion I was able to offer everybody in the scene,
including myself. Okay, wait, I want to stop you there. Everybody in the scene. So I have to say,
do you think about it that way? Because these vignettes read like a series of movies to me.
Yeah. Did you think about it that way?
I did absolutely think about it that way. The way I battle that part of my brain that would
say things to me like, Black people don't write memoirs, girl, especially Black girls. And if they
do, they don't write it about their childhood. And if they do write about their childhood,
they at least have the decency to wait until their parents are dead. You know what I mean? Yeah do I really believe that the kindest person in a
room is the person who is least likely to tell the truth about what they've dealt with and where
they came from? Wow. Is that actually true? What a question. And it wasn't. It wasn't true. What?
Wait a minute. Can you ask that question again for us? I would say is the kindest person in the room
also the person least likely to share about where they came from and who they are? Is that the
kindest person? Does that make that person the kindest person in the room? No, that person is
the most dangerous person in the room. I agree. I agree. And ultimately, what I came up with was that I wanted to be fair. I just wanted to be fair to everybody. And being fair meant no heroes and no villains. You read the end of the book, some people are going to come out looking better than others in the end. But nobody is purely a hero and nobody is purely a villain. People have their own things going on. People are dealing with
their own tough, complicated lives. And I thought that is the most accurate story I could tell.
And I wanted it to be really accurate. That's what's accurate. Because I know that people will
read this book and that some people will feel very sorry for the child me and they will feel like the childhood I experienced
was steeped in tragedy.
And I don't look at my childhood that way.
I don't think that would be the truth of my childhood.
I think that there was tragedy.
I think that there was a lot of shame,
too much silence, too many secrets, absolutely.
But there was also a lot of fun and there was a lot of laughter and there was a lot of But there was also a lot of fun. And there was a lot of
laughter. And there was a lot of joy. And there was a lot of support. And all of those things
existed at the same time. God, like life. And it was so hard. Yes. And I wanted to write a book
about my life. When I said I wanted to write a book that told a story about my life, I wanted
it to tell a story about life. I didn't want it to tell
a story that was just tropes. I didn't want to tell a story that would just be familiar to the
common denominator. I wanted a story that looks like life and my life, because even if my life is not the most interesting, the most tragic, the most hopeful or exciting,
my life is so worth telling about. My story is so worth sharing. And there are just too many
points of identity or experience or circumstance that I didn't see written about enough.
And I don't want another person who meets me in those points of identity or experience or
circumstance to walk into a bookstore and feel like they can't find a book that just tells them
they're not alone in that place,
that they're not the only one who dealt with that.
It's got all the feelings. There's such a fierceness about the book. There's an equal
parts tenderness. But man, the two words that came to mind as I was reading, generous
and unapologetically messy.
Yeah, absolutely.
Just like my brain.
We have so much research now about how when we look and evaluate trauma,
the trauma of secret keeping is often greater than the trauma of the event itself or the series of
events. We know that. And we know that writing our way, we're going to talk about Roxanne's piece on
writing into the wound in a minute, but we know that writing is one of the most profoundly
powerful ways of healing trauma. And folks that write about their trauma, even in limited amounts,
you don't have to write a memoir, but just write about their trauma, maybe just for themselves,
the health indicators, the healing indicators, the correlations are so much more positive.
But there always comes a sticking point. And I'll tell you what it is. And this may be something
we've already touched on a little bit,
but I want you to speak to it explicitly because, man, it's rare that I've seen someone do it like
you've done it, which is I cannot truthfully share my story because it implicates people I love who have done me great harm?
Yeah. Yeah. This is sometimes a hard question for me. And it's going to continue to be a hard
question for me for a few different reasons. And I'll say in the case of my mother,
this is not a book that my mother would have wanted me to write.
But it is not a book she would have stopped me from writing.
And it might be a book that she never reads.
Yes. interesting place to be because I've noticed that when people ask me questions about my family
and how they might react to the book or how loved ones might react to the book,
those are really hard questions to answer mostly because the dynamics of my family do not usually
reflect the normal dynamics of what other people would think of. Everybody comes with their own
ideas of what a mom is like, what a dad is like, what aunts and cousins and grandparents are like,
and how they involve themselves in your life and how you involve yourself in their life and all of
that. And a lot of those things just do not describe my family dynamic. My mother and I
are on good terms. I love my mama. My mama loves me. But I don't have and have never had the kind
of relationship with my mother where we talk very often on the phone or in many other capacities. So it's this thing where I know that she sees
things happening about the book. We have talked about the fact the book is coming out. I've told
her if there are things in there that you want to talk about, I'm so open to that. We can have
those conversations, but I have to be okay with the fact that my mom might just kind
of pretend this book doesn't exist. She might just pretend it doesn't exist, which will be hard,
but she's really good at it, let me tell you. And in that case, if that's what she needs, I don't need her to read it or like it or even be proud of it.
I don't have that kind of relationship with my mom where I feel this want for her
in this place of my life. And sometimes I feel really bad about that.
Do you? Yeah. life. And sometimes I feel really bad about that. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. I feel really bad about that
sometimes because I've seen what it's like for other people in both directions, right? I've seen
what it's like when I couldn't call my mom, like that thing. And I've also seen it where it's like,
my mom won't stop calling me. You know what I mean? And everything that's in between.
In between. Yeah. When I wrote my first book, I had a really difficult conversation with my mom won't stop calling me. You know what I mean? And everything that's in between. Yeah. When I wrote my first book, I had a really difficult conversation with my mom.
And she said, here it is. You raise your kid and they become a shame researcher
and write about growing up. And I said, yeah, because shame was probably
the parenting tool of choice in my house growing up.
Yes.
And my house was hard and very much, I guess, by today's standards, probably lots of trauma.
Yeah.
I didn't know during the time.
I knew it was hard, but I didn't know.
I didn't know.
Right.
And I remember really wrestling with it and talking to a therapist at the time. And she asking,
what do you need from your mom around your work? And I said, I don't think I need anything.
And she said, okay, that's the only answer that's going to work. So that's good. And I said,
if she reads it and she's pissed, that's okay. If she reads it and she's proud, that's okay.
Most likely she'll read some of it and be proud and pissed. And that's okay. If she reads it and she's proud, that's okay. Most likely she'll read some of it
and be proud and pissed and that's okay too. Yes. But I will tell you that even how many
hundreds of people, Ashley, I've interviewed where we've talked about shame and they won't
even write the truth of their story in their private journal or tell their therapist
out of fear that someone may think poorly of a parent. And for me, when I read the book,
I just didn't see good people and bad people. I just saw people. And I saw rage. And I didn't
see an emotion that I have not experienced. Does that make sense?
Absolutely.
And unfortunately, I did not see an emotion that I had not experienced
in the midst of probably an important parenting moment that I fucked up.
I'm sure. I'm sure. And I think that that's sometimes what's hard for me in these
conversations. Going back a little bit to my mother, is that I recognize that I've written
about these really hard and traumatic things and moments that I've had with my mother. But I also
am so aware that my mother is not alone in a way that she is not. I don't think my mother
always understands that her mistakes and her missteps, acknowledging them is not to
encompass her in the mantle of bad motherhood. It's actually quite common. I don't want to say normal. Normal to me seems
like things that should happen and common are things that just do.
That's a great distinction that we don't use enough. So say that again.
Yeah. I think that normal are things that should happen and common is just things that do
often happen. And so normal, I think when my mom, I think she looks at the community that we grew up in and
the other parents she knew. And it's like the way I raised my kids was very normal. And for me,
it's hard sometimes to have that conversation where it's like, mom, it was common. A lot of
the kids around me were dealing with the exact same thing. Absolutely worse, slightly worse,
maybe slightly better. But for the most part, we're all dealing with the same thing. I get that. But it was just common. It wasn't normal. It never felt normal
to me. I accepted from a very young age that I would be hit, but it never felt normal to me that
I was being hit. Ever, ever, ever, ever. That comes across in the book. My husband and I have had this conversation
and I thought it was normal, not common. I thought it was normal, but I was not tough enough or I was
that bad. But in the page, you can tell there was some subtext. So little Ashley, it was,
these folks are losing their minds. This is like,
I'm the only okay person here. It felt like that sometimes. Where did that come from?
I don't always know. Sometimes I'll be honest, I think it was TV. Oh, the combination of TV and
books. I was always watching TV or reading. It was just a lot of media consumption. And I'm also,
as a kid, I was very quick to pick up on patterns. I pick up on patterns very, very quickly.
Me too. Yeah.
And you start to notice certain things in movies or in episodes. you notice formulas. You notice the way that things are working out.
And in your mind as a kid, what happens in books and TV, the morals of the story are that they are what life is supposed to look like.
They are what life should be.
And in movies and TV and in most of my books, parents got mad at their kids all the time,
but they didn't hit them, not in books and TV.
And also, I picked up on the fact that I wasn't supposed to talk about the fact that I got hit.
That if I said something casually, because I had accepted that it would happen,
and I would say something to another adult, they'd be like, oh, what'd you do today and stuff? And
I'd be like, I got a whoopin'. I would say something like that. Or my mom got mad and I
got whooped. I got hit with the belt or something. And I would just say it. And my mother would get
so angry with me for telling these people that that had happened to me. And I was confused about it because I'm like, wait, so it's supposed to happen. But I'm not supposed to tell people it's supposed to happen because it makes you look bad when I tell people that you did what you were supposed to do. I needed things to line up. I liked patterns. I liked things to make
sense. And nothing about my mom hitting me made sense. I couldn't ever make it make sense. I could
accept that it was my fate, that it was my circumstance, that I had no control, but I absolutely could not make it ever feel like,
yeah, I deserve this. Like, yeah, this is right. This is what she should be doing.
I started in Catholic school where we got hit.
Yeah.
Yeah. And then I went to a big public high school in kind of the country in Texas where
you could choose detention or swats.
Right.
So hitting seemed at the time, I used to think, are we going to read about this one day?
Like we read about Charles Dickens and think what the hell was going on back then?
Like something seems off.
I think we will.
I think we will too.
It seemed very ubiquitous, I guess, at the time.
I'll tell you something that I loved about this book.
I've seen it in memoirs that don't go back to
childhood, but rarely have I seen a memoir where a writer can take you into the secret world
of their child self. You had a big world that you lived in that had nothing to do with where
you lived. Yes. Yeah, absolutely. The living mostly in my head, the daydreaming. Yes.
All of the symptoms of ADHD and PTSD. Yeah, I got them.
Do you think that's what that is? I mean, because I loved this world full of sunrises,
and I loved this world that you took us in.
I think that there's always, despite the performative parts of my personality,
which are more just, I'm a theater kid, not like performing life. But I think that that came from
the fact that I had that inner world where I was constantly building characters and plays and so many things.
When I talk about reading books and watching TV a lot as a kid, I was always doing those things
in tandem. Also, I'd read a book, I'd watch a movie. I'd read a book, I'd watch a movie. I'd
read a book, I'd watch a show. And you watch these worlds that are out there or you read about these worlds that are out there and so much of experiencing them is filling in the blanks for yourself.
Yes.
Because even on TV and in movies, they can't tell you a whole story.
There are things you have to infer.
There are things you have to create for yourself.
So even in the watching and the reading, you have to be creatively
involved in some capacity. And I just ran with that. I thought that I could play any character
on TV. I thought that I could be friends with any character in a book. I really, really did. And I was not a lonely child. I was surrounded
by people. I was emotionally lonely. Physically, I was constantly surrounded by people. But I
always had, despite my sensitivity, I had just a little bit of energy to give others. And I
replenished myself by going into this world in my head so that I could come back out and be around my family, be around my extended family, my classmates, my friends, whatever it is.
In order to come out and feel safe to be out there, I had to create something in me that felt like a safe place to go when the outside didn't necessarily feel as welcoming.
That makes sense.
And my home was often the place that felt least welcoming,
even as it was the place where I spent the majority of my time.
So if I was going to end up in situations where I had to be in a room because company was there,
whether or not I was very interested in
the company or not, it was useful to be able to go to slip back into this place in my head
and the moments where I didn't have to be on so that I could get the fuel I needed
without having to ask for it. Because asking for it would have been too much.
The worlds that kids create in the best
and worst of circumstances are beautiful places, I think. I agree. And you know, Brene, one of the
things that I'm kind of just realizing is that so much of the media I consumed as a kid was about
adults who needed to reconnect with their inner child. I think about movies like
Hook starring Robin Williams, where he had no access to any of the magic of Never Never Land
until he could remember his child self. He had to be able to reconnect with the child,
the Peter Pan inside, in order to fly, in order to
eat, in order to nourish himself, in order to explore. All of that, so much of what we consumed
as kids was either about the fact that kids sometimes have to be really strong and resilient,
like in Don Bluth movies, like Only in Before Time, or The Great Mouse Detective,
all of these movies that were essentially about, this is the kind of adult you turn into
when you're disconnect from your child self, when you disconnect from your childhood,
you turn into Cruella. Okay, that's what happens when you-
Cruella DeVille is the result of this.
Cruella DeVille, right? And I didn't want to be Cruella. I didn't want to be Scar. You know what I mean? I knew
that one day I was going to grow up. I knew I had to grow up, even though I didn't really want to.
And I thought a lot about what kind of adult I wanted to be, because so many of the adults
around me didn't seem to think about that very much.
And they also didn't seem to think about how their actions actually affected kids.
And I couldn't get that out of my head.
So are you saying the adults around you, it was clear that they were not making conscious
choices about who they wanted to be and how they wanted to show up?
Yeah.
They felt really reactive.
Reactive.
Yeah.
And that was really hard for me as a child.
And I didn't have the language for it then.
But I knew that there was something that felt chaotic in a way that made me feel unsafe.
Yes.
Not chaotic in the way that everybody's family gets a little bit chaotic.
The laundry isn't always going to bit chaotic. The laundry isn't
always going to be done. The dinner isn't always going to be on time. There's not always going to
be enough money to get everybody what they want or even need. That's true for a lot of families.
But in my family, it seemed like there was a lot of people who had given up on trying something new or trying to do it differently.
And I just didn't want to forget. I truly didn't want to forget that there are always ways to do
something new or try something differently. Two-parter.
Okay. But I want to ask at the same time.
What was your intention when you started the book? And now that it's in my hands,
and getting ready to land in other people's hands? Has your dream for the book changed
from what the original intention was? I want to start by saying traditionally,
I do suffer from a little bit of low self esteesteem, low self-worth, working on it every day.
Same.
But it's in there.
And I definitely started this book with the dream of it being accepted into a small literary press and maybe having a strong thousand print first run and having my first little book that was, I did that.
I created it and I wrote it.
And now, as Oprah would say, I've had to learn to dream a bigger dream for myself and for
my book.
And I really can't help, oh my gosh, I cannot help but hope at this point that
this is a book that when that weird kid is in the library a lot and the librarian notices them
and notices the kinds of books they're checking out or the books they won't check out but will stay in the library and read.
Because librarians notice everything.
In my dream scenario, this is a book that the librarian would offer that kid and would say, I think you should read this.
That is my dream, is that that would happen.
It's beautiful.
I think a lot about just, it's the transference.
I've gotten so much from books.
Just so much of me is made up of the stories I was able to read and share and hold even in myself.
And the idea that my book could be that kind of book now, that my book could be the kind of book that somebody doesn't necessarily find the answers to the universe in or even the answers to themselves, but where they do find themselves,
finally, just a tiny reflection of the thing that they thought was unknowable or unseeable
about them, or maybe something that shouldn't be seen. I hope it means something to them
that I've gone through this process to be able to rid myself, truly rid myself of the shame that wouldn't allow me to value those parts of me and those parts of my story.
And it has been so hard and it's still hard, but it feels so good. And if they think even for a second, that might be good for me too.
Even if it's not my book that gets in there, even if it's just the book that starts the thought,
even if it's the book that compounds the thought that is already started.
Yeah.
What's better than that?
That's it. That would be it, right?
Nothing else feels better than that.
I've had a lot of success in a lot of different kinds of ways. Nothing feels better than that.
I can say that definitively. That's when you feel the most alive, right? Yes. Yes.
Hello, I'm Esther Perel, psychotherapist and host of the podcast Where Should We Begin,
which delves into the multiple layers of relationships, mostly romantic.
But in this special series, I focus on our relationships with our colleagues, business partners and managers.
Listen in as I talk to co-workers facing their own challenges with one another and get the real work done.
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that mini-golf might be the perfect spectator sport for the TikTok era.
Meanwhile, a YouTuber in Brooklyn found himself less interested in tech YouTube and more interested in making coffee.
This month on The Verge Cast, we're telling stories about these people
who tried to find new ways to make content,
new ways to build businesses around that content,
and new ways to make content about those businesses.
Our series is called How to Make It in the Future, and it's all this month on The Verge Cast, wherever you
get podcasts. I want to read something to you from the book. Is that okay? Yes, absolutely.
It's some advice that your mom gave you. I just find it to be profoundly helpful for me personally. Yeah.
She asks you what makes you happy.
And you wanted to give her a true answer.
So what you say is, I like making things, art, stories, I want to write.
I wondered if she knew when I said I wanted to write that I meant I wanted to write about me, about us, about everything I saw and believed and thought I might know.
She let out a breath. Ashley, you're the only person who has to live in your skin and wake up
with the consequences of your choices. That's why you can't let other people make the big
choices for you. You have to do what it feels right to do. And you can't let anybody stop you.
I heard her stifled smile again. Not even me. Yeah. Yeah. That's my mom.
Powerful. That's my mom. It's powerful. My mom, I think probably our biggest disconnect is that she thinks the best thing she has to give me is getting out of my way.
And I can't change that belief for her.
And I'm no longer at a place where I try to change that belief for her. And I'm no longer at a place where I try to change that belief for her.
But it's sometimes so nice and lovely knowing that even if I wanted something different,
even if I wanted something more, she really is giving me her best. That's undeniableeniable god and what liberation there is in knowing that
it's like taking off the heaviest chain to just be able to accept my mother for who she is
accept the love i have for her the way it is and to sort of let go of the fantasy of who in my mind who I wish she had been
but the older I get the more conversations I have with people I know people I love people I even
just meet the more I realize that if I had gotten what I wanted, it still wouldn't have been perfect.
And she'd still be in the book.
And you know what? That is the damn truth. And that is the truth about your book.
That's the truth about my book. And what's really hard is that'll be the truth
about the books that my kids might write.
Oh, yeah.
God dang it.
Oh, my goodness.
I think about that a lot.
If I were to have children, if I decide to have children, which I go back and forth on a lot,
they're going to have something to say about me too.
Oh, yeah.
And accepting that.
It's interesting because having to learn how to love my child self has also led to me coming to a place where I'm like, I think I also have to love and forgive my mother in order to be able to love and forgive myself if I'm going to be a mother.
And I should at least practice the compassion with her that I would want to have for myself.
And that's helped me a lot.
You're killing me.
I'm sorry.
You're killing me.
I just have to say again, just for listening, Somebody's Daughter, a memoir by Ashley C.
Ford.
It is as real as this conversation and you will be invited
in. Before we get to, I had to have new rapid fire questions for you because you've been on before,
but I'll have you on a hundred times and change those questions a hundred ways,
just to be able to keep talking to you. Tell me, what does this book mean for your dad?
Now my dad, it's strange because in that direction, it's almost a weird
opposite. My dad is just super proud of me and really wants to read the book because the book
for my dad is an opportunity to get to know me that he is not ever going to have otherwise. There's just so much time
missed between us that being able to read my book for him, being able to hear about
what my childhood was like from my perspective, I think it really scares him in terms of the emotional factor of having to reckon with why in some cases
my life was the way it was and my circumstances were the way they were and how he affected
that those circumstances. But my dad is always a little more excited to get to know me than afraid of what I have to say.
And that works out for us really well.
Because even when he doesn't necessarily like what I have to say, or when he is nervous about what I have to say,
he pushes through that as much and as hard as he can so that he can meet me.
And that is how he tries to connect with me now, which is nice.
I've never really had anybody come into my life in such a way that it's like, I just want to meet you where you are.
I just want to meet you where you are.
And so having that has been interesting also for me. So I plan
on after everybody's vaccinated, driving up to where my dad lives and giving him the book in
person. I don't want to mail it to him. I want to hand it to him. And we will see how he feels after he reads it and finishes it. But I almost
thought of this book when it comes to both my parents, it's sort of like an opportunity to show
my mom, in a certain sense, what growing up was like for me, and also to allow her to know that
I see her. Yeah, That I do see her.
And I think on the other end with my dad,
I wanted him to have the opportunity to know what he missed.
Yeah.
And how his missing affected my life.
And I don't know that I could have sat
and had a conversation with them
that would be more clear than just handing them this book.
That's not why I wrote the book, but it's a pretty great byproduct in my estimation.
Yes.
So I look forward to my dad reading it and I want to be able to talk to him about it.
And that's why, because he'll talk to me about it.
My dad will read it and then he'll want to talk about it.
Yeah. Talk to me about it. My dad will read it and he'll want to talk about it. My mom, I will always be open for the opportunity to talk with her about it. But I leave that up to her. That's her choice and I'm good with it.
I was rereading Roxanne Gay's piece, Writing into the Wound, which is a short story essay on, is it scribbed or
scribed? I think it's scribbed, right? I think it's scribbed. Yeah. She wrote Writing Into the
Wound, Understanding Trauma, Truth, and Language. And there was something that struck me, something
she says about writing about trauma and writing our truth in our story. She says, we share our
stories. We try to find the right words. We try to be truthful and fair to ourselves and our story. She says, we share our stories. We try to find the right words.
We try to be truthful and fair to ourselves and to others. We try to be free. There is no pleasure
to be had in writing about trauma. It requires opening a wound, looking into the bloody gape
of it and cleaning it out one word at a time. Only then might it be possible for that wound to heal. And I just want to say
thank you because it was healing for me. And I think the truth telling in somebody's daughter
is so rare and soulful that I have no doubt that a librarian will hand this book to
a 12 or 13 year old girl, our boy, who's maybe hiding what they're reading in the stacks and
taking home something unrelated. Yeah. Because I did that 100 times a year in school.
So thank you for that.
Thank you.
And thank you, Roxanne.
Yeah.
Thank you, Roxanne.
Thank you.
All right.
You ready for rapid fire?
Nope.
But let's do it.
Let me just put it this way, as we're both like wiping our eyes at the same time.
You have two choices.
Okay.
You can spend a couple more minutes with me on
the rapid fire questions or just FYI, Ashley is preparing to go camping with her husband,
Kelly, which made me laugh so hard. That's love y'all. That's love,
camping. So you could go get ready to camp
or you can answer some questions. You know what, Brene? We should answer these questions.
It's really important. I think it's really important for us to get to these rapid fire
questions. It might take all weekend. It might. And if it does, I'm sure he'll understand. I'm sure. I'm gonna say, baby, Brene needs me.
And he's gonna be like, no, I don't accept that.
Fill in the blank for me. And don't think that these are the ones I asked you last time. We got
all new hard ones. Okay, I'm ready. I'm ready. Fill in the blank for me. Your purpose is? My purpose is to live this life as much and as well as I can.
Dang. What makes you laugh the most?
What makes me laugh the most is people with really dry senses of humor
when nobody else heard the joke but me.
And you know what?
Little Ashley liked that too.
Yes, she did.
Yes, she did.
Way before her time.
Absolutely.
I think it was all the nighttime Golden Girls that really did that to me.
You love some Golden Girls.
I do.
I do.
It's in my DNA at this point. Okay. He loves some Golden Girls. I do. I do.
It's like it's in my DNA at this point.
Okay.
When you can go somewhere, like COVID wise, where are you looking forward to going?
Where do you want to go?
If you could go anywhere.
I want to go back to the Lake District in England and visit the home of Beatrix Potter. I would so go with you.
It's amazing. I've gone one other time. I went in 2016 and it is my dream to go back to the Lake District, which is basically Beatrix Potter
land. And it's nothing but sheep and literary references for miles and miles and miles.
If I'm really good the rest of my life and die and go to heaven,
that's where I'm going.
Somewhere just full of sheep, rolling moors, and literary references.
And B&Bs with extremely deep bathtubs and five-star restaurants attached to them.
Oh, God, Jesus.
It's wild.
It's exactly the kind of vacation I want.
I want to walk among the moors with the Herdwick sheep. And then I want
to go learn more about Beatrix Potter, who I think is amazing. She's a badass feminist from the word
go. Yeah. Yes, absolutely. Don't let the bunnies fool you. Okay. What is your go-to karaoke song?
Oh, You Ought to Know by Alanis Morissette. Sorry, I can see you singing it. It would be
fierce. Okay. Yeah, I lose it. In my dream vacation with you, when we go to the Lake District,
there's going to be a karaoke bar. Okay. Yes. All right. What's a song that you would risk
life or limb to turn off the radio when it comes on? Oh, this is hard. I like so much music.
I don't even think about what I don't like. Is there a song I really, really don't like? Oh my
God. Actually, yeah. There's this song by this guy named something James, James something. And it
came out years ago and it's called You're Beautiful.
And it's like, he sings in this falsetto voice like, you're beautiful. Like it's really,
I don't know. And I don't like it at all. On the opposite end of the continuum. Okay.
You're going to need to really explain your Kenny Loggins thing to me.
Come on.
I can't.
I love him so much.
He is the sultan of soundtracks.
He just, the melodies, the smoothness of his voice.
He's the king of yacht rock.
Oh, yacht rock.
It's really like him and Christopher Cross out here battling for like,
oh, Michael McDonald. Would you put them in there? I will put Michael McDonald on his own into Yacht Rock. But I will put Michael McDonald with the Doobies into Yacht Rock. But Michael
McDonald on his own is pretty much Blue Eyed Soul. That's it. Yeah. He's well into the Blue
Eyed Soul situation. But when he's with the Doobies, which by the way, the Doobies are coming here this summer, and I'm pretty sure Michael McDonald is going to be with them.
So you might catch me out in the crowds this year seeing the Doobies.
But Kenny Loggins' thing specifically comes from a fascination of childhood situation where I had a hard time getting to sleep.
And his tapes helped me get to sleep. But then that just
grew into this fascination. In my mind, I think he became like a father figure. So much of his songs,
especially his lullaby albums, are essentially a parent singing to their child. And the songs that
he chooses are all a parent singing to their child. The songs that he writes for those albums are him specifically singing to his children. And so I would play these albums and feel like somebody was singing to me and cared that I was scared at night and would sing me to sleep. And I just never got over it. Eventually, it became less of an emotional thing and more of a, this guy rocks, actually.
I just really love his music.
I love Danger Zone.
I love all his albums.
I listen to the Vox Humana album.
Nobody knows Kenny Loggins has a Vox Humana album.
I do.
That album is fantastic.
And I listen to it all the time.
You are deep into Kenny. I do. That album is fantastic. And I listen to it all the time. You are deep into it. I am.
If we went to a karaoke bar, you did Alanis Morissette. Do you think you and I could pull
off a duet of This Is It? We could absolutely pull that off. We could also pull off Whenever
I Call You Friend, which is his duet with Stevie Nicks. Oh my God. That's a good one. Okay.
Yes. Yes. What's one thing you're
really excited about right now besides camping? Not camping? No. I am really excited about the
virtual tour for my book. I am really excited about the people that I'm going to be talking to on that virtual tour.
I'm really excited to be able to answer questions from readers who read the book, which is something
that with the pandemic, I was so worried about, like, how is that going to work? I want to be
able to connect with my readers and being able to finally do that and have the book finally be out and have
those conversations, which are going to be challenging and beautiful and brutal at times,
I'm sure. I'm just ready for it. I'm really excited for that part. I'm excited for the
conversation part. Ah, it's going to be good. Okay. What's one thing you're deeply grateful for right now besides camping?
I'm really grateful for the fact that I am not required to feel good about myself to have good things in my life.
Because I haven't always felt really good about myself.
And I don't always feel really good about myself right now. But I always
have such good people around me at any given time that I don't have to feel good every minute of
every day. I got good people who can sometimes feel good for me and help me find my way back.
That's enough, man. That feels amazing.
That's a gift.
It feels like a gift.
Yeah. All right. We asked you for five songs you couldn't live without for the mixtape.
I've really, really loved your mixtape. First song I came to say without crying, Gentle on My Mind by Glen Campbell.
Yes. Call on God by Sharon Jones My Mind by Glen Campbell. Yes.
Call on God by Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings.
Yes.
If I Could by Regina Bell.
Yes.
This Is It by Kenny Loggins featuring Michael McDonald.
Always.
And On and On by Gladys Knight and the Pips.
Yes.
This is your writing challenge.
One sentence.
What does the playlist say about you?
Ashley C. Ford. The playlist says that I'm down for a good time.
And I think a good time is a real time. Oh, God. Boom. Boom. Go back to the first question. When
did you know you were an eloquent and powerful
writer when she gave me one sentence for her mixtape damn that was good wow it is always just
such a privilege to talk to you i appreciate you being on the podcast again mutual it's so mutual
bernie thank you for having me thank you for being encouraging and supportive. It means the world and. We love our indie booksellers. So make the extra one second effort
to buy it from an independent bookseller
because if you're like me and you need to order it
and have it delivered in 30 minutes
and then it sits on your nightstand for six months,
eh, that supports some indie bookstores.
You can find Ashley online.
Her website is ashleyc4.net.
Her Instagram, I laugh because I followed her
on Instagram for a long time,
is at smashfizzle, S-M-A-S-H-F-I-Z-Z-L-E.
And Twitter is at ismashfizzle.
Okay, don't forget,
we're gonna be taking a couple of weeks off.
You can find all the links to Ashley Ford's book
and her playlist, everything you need
on BreneBrown.com.
Just click on the podcast link and it'll take you to everything you can imagine.
I'm grateful for y'all.
Stay awkward, brave, and kind.
Unlocking Us is produced by Brene Brown Education and Research Group.
The music is by Keri Rodriguez and Gina Chavez.
Get new episodes as soon as they're published by following Unlocking Us on your favorite podcast app.
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Discover more award-winning shows at podcast.voxmedia.com.
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You head to the Brasserie, then the Terrace.
Cocktail?
Don't mind if I do.
You raise your glass to another guest because you both know the holiday's just beginning.
And you're only in Terminal 3.
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