Unlocking Us with Brené Brown - Brené with Brandi Carlile on Music, Mysticism, and Broken Horses
Episode Date: April 7, 2021Brandi Carlile is a singer, songwriter, performer, producer, activist, and author of a new memoir, Broken Horses. We talk about everything from the politics of middle school lunch tables, to the pursu...it of complicated faith, to the tyranny of fitted sheets. This is a conversation between two people, meeting for the first time, and yet, somehow, it feels like we’ve been friends forever. 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.
You can already hear me smiling because in the episode today, I am talking to one of my
favorite people in the world, singer, songwriter, performer, producer, activist, author,
Brandi Carlile. She's got a new memoir out called Broken Horses. And we talk about
everything from hard stuff growing up to the tyranny of fitted sheets. This is a conversation
between two people who somehow feels like we've been friends for decades. I cannot wait for you to hear this episode.
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I probably don't need to tell you a lot about Brandi Carlile,
but I'm going to just because I want to read all these incredible things.
She is a six-time Grammy Award-winning singer, songwriter, performer, producer, and activist.
She is known as one of music's most respected voices.
Brandi was awarded Billboard's Women in Music Trailblazer Award, CMT's Next Woman of Country Impact Award,
and she's received multiple recognitions from the
American Music Association Honors and Awards. She's also part of the Grammy-winning group,
The High Women. Adding to this incredible career as a musician, she has written a memoir called
Broken Horses, where she tells her story, really opens up about the events in her life that have
shaped her music and how her music
has shaped our lives. And I have to say that I wrote one of the endorsements for the book because
I got to read an early copy. And every now and then, storytellers come along who tell stories
with such depth and fearlessness that you don't just see them, but you see yourself in those
stories. And this is that book.
Brandy's also the founder of the Looking Out Foundation. It was created in 2008 with Tim and
Phil Hanseroth, often known as the twins, who have been playing with her from the beginning.
Looking Out amplifies the impact of music by empowering those without a voice with varied
initiatives, including campaigns focused on children in conflict, war child, the IF Project, fund racial justice campaign, fight the fear,
looking out for the hungry, and more. To date, they have raised over a million dollars benefiting
children whose families, communities, and schools have been torn apart by war through their 2017
Cover Stories project. Overall, they've raised $2 million for grassroots
causes. Brandy lives in rural Washington State with her wife, Catherine, who if you've ever
seen Catherine take over Brandy's Instagram, it is not to be missed. They have two beautiful
daughters, Evangeline and Elijah. I hope you enjoy listening to this conversation, one one millionth of the amount that I enjoyed
having the conversation with Brandy. Just a special, special time together.
So first, let me just say, welcome, Brandy Carlisle. I love you. We'll just start there.
Something subtle. Oh my God, I love you so much. Thank you. I love you more. That's all I'm going to say. I have so many things I want to ask you and understand and so many things I want your
thoughts on. So I'm just going to start with the big question. Tell me your story. Walk me through
your story. Baby Brandy, just 10 minutes, 15 minutes of your story. And then we're going to dig in deeper because we're going to talk about Broken Horses, which
is your memoir, your book.
But I want to hear from you.
Tell me about Brandy, the story.
Well, I was born in Washington State, first in a place called Berrien, which is kind of
a suburb of Seattle, to parents that grew up there.
Really, really young parents
who just decided to get married because I was on the way. Very charismatic, exciting, interesting,
poor people. And I was the first grandchild on both sides of the family. So I had a lot of
attention from grandmas and grandpas and stuff, and a lot of attention from grandmas and grandpas and stuff and a lot of attention from my charismatic parents. And I got sick as a young child. I got meningococcal meningitis at the age of four, turned five in the hospital. I almost intact. I had my faculties and I had some trauma from it
that I had to overcome and sort of just heal my brain and stuff. But from that point on,
faith and mystery and resilience were hot topics in our household. And I almost think that from there, my childhood became very kind of
Glass Castle, Captain Fantasticky, you know, with a lot of principles and ideals and wild theories.
And right around that time, my mom lost her father really young to ALS, which we called
Lou Gehrig's disease. And her father was a country music singer with his parents and brothers. And it sort of trickled
down to my mother after his death and became thematic to our family and to my childhood.
And my mom was really nervous about the music thing. She wasn't a natural entertainer, but
my brother and I, and I think
even my sister to a certain extent were, and she became really excited about what it was doing for
us and almost was kind of vicariously enjoying performing more through her kids than herself.
But my father started to develop a significant drinking problem because of the time we were spending at karaoke bars and clubs. And we moved
out to rural, I'm talking rural, no stoplight Washington State, and developed Southern accents
and became country music singing, strange, impoverished, exciting family of five.
How old were you at this point?
I was probably sixth grade, so 11, 12. I was singing at a place called the Northwest Grand
Ole Opry. I was covering Patsy Cline and Tanya Tucker and singing with my mom. And
it was out in that single wide trailer up the hill that I started to realize that I was gay and that I had a complicated
understanding of what my adult faith would look like and came out of the closet and started being
Brandi Carlile. That's the long and the short of it.
I was talking with Laura Mays, who runs the podcast for us, and we prep and read the books together.
And it was hard for us not to cry when we were talking about this book,
about your new book, Broken Horses. I'm going to read what I wrote about it. I got an early
copy and got to write an endorsement for it. And I think this is true. A good storyteller
tells you about their life. A great storyteller tells you about their life.
A great storyteller guides you so deep into their heart that you actually end up seeing yourself.
You're one of the most gifted and generous storytellers of our time.
Broken Horses led me right into your heart and right into my own. That's just true.
Well, that would make sense. I mean, you've had a profound influence on me.
I feel a kindred spirit with you as a writer and a speaker and a leader as well.
And your words have been a significant part of my journey.
So it's such an honor to hear that from you.
And it's an honor to talk to you.
Well, thank you.
And I feel the same way.
I just have to say the book, there's something I want to get under in our conversation today that I've never been able to articulate or name about you that is so defining to me when
I think about you, when I think about your writing, when I think about your songwriting,
when I think about your music.
So let me just start asking some questions, and I want to try to get into it a little
bit.
Cool, man. Yeah, I think it'll be fun. And I've got a couple of beefs with you that we need to talk about. So I know you're not afraid. I know. I'm into this. First of all, I love your
grandma. And so you're getting better. And she asked you what you want. And your answer is,
what's your answer?
A full size rainbow bright doll and a giant tomato.
You got to know what you want, Renee. I mean, you got to know.
So you say you got to know what you want and don't hesitate to ask for it,
or you won't get it. Be ready to seize every opportunity. Everyone is a potential resource,
especially your grandma. This is filed under Poor Kids Survival 101.
And it remains true today.
Are you good at asking for what you need and want?
Yeah. Yes, I am.
God, I love that. Does it come from that place? Is that where it comes from? So I tend to ask for what I want. I think that there are like celebrities polka dotting the United States that see my phone number when I'm calling and say, don't answer.
It's Brandi Carlile.
She's going to ask me for something.
But I revere, I love that because I have found in my work that if we don't ask for what we
want or need, it's not that the want or need goes away.
It just metastasizes into resentment or grief or hostility.
Brandi Carlile is drinking out of a mason jar. It's like a milk. It's just so good. And I'm
drinking a Topo Chico. I wish I had a Topo Chico to give you. It's like I make up that you don't have a lot of use for
lugging around resentment. Is that true about you? Yeah, I don't have a lot of use for lugging around
resentment. I'm not sure if I really understood that about myself until after I wrote the book,
but I can just generally empathize. And I don't want anyone dragging any resentment around about me.
And they're certainly justified in doing so in many, many different situations.
So one of the coolest things that happened after reading the book was that Elton John
read it.
When you read the book, you're going to see I'm obsessed with Elton John.
Yes.
You're listening to this program and you read this, you're going to see I'm obsessed with
Elton John deeply.
And he read the book and he called me in the first words out of his mouth where no one's ever betrayed you. Oh my goodness, no one's ever betrayed you. And I really thought
about it. And I guess I totally agree. I don't think anyone ever has betrayed me. Or if they did,
I don't look at it that way.
Say more. I mean, that's something.
What do you attribute that to?
I love faith, just an abundance of human kindness.
I just feel that my life has been really lived kind of out loud and exposed in ways that
I'm able to see both sides of the coin.
But also, I've just been really lucky. I've just had
special, special people come into my world. Let's talk about that for a minute, because
I can't decide whether I'm on board with that or not.
Can we acknowledge that we're both ones on the Enneagram?
Oh, yeah, we totally need to acknowledge that.
For anybody that's listening. Totally. So I'm not sure whether you just through
grace and faith floated into an ecosystem, a constellation surrounded by good people.
You strike me in everything I've read, including the book, but just watching you,
you strike me as someone who builds around you the family you believe you need and deserve.
Yeah, that I need and deserve now. Yeah.
Yes. I do that.
You do that, don't you? Yeah. Yeah, my dad.
With a shit ton of intention, right? Now, yeah. My dad actually pointed this out to me when I
told him I was thinking about writing the book. He does not say very much. He is a man of very few
words. And he said that around the time when I was a teenager that I tried to be baptized and it didn't work out for me, that he noticed that the way that I recovered from that was pulling in people close to me for affection and affirmation and acceptance and trying to create islands of misfits.
And that he noticed me doing that right away after that. And that blew my mind that he observed that
because then I started thinking about it and realizing that, yeah, I do do that. And actually,
that might be what my career even is. I don't know.
Crowded table?
Yeah. Very crowded.
Yeah. That baptism story in the book is heartbreaking and heart-affirming
all at one time. Can you tell us a little bit about that story?
Yeah, I came out of the closet really young in a small town and in a family that had never met a
gay person, including me. I'd never met a gay person at that point. I didn't have a girlfriend.
It wasn't like a movie. You know, it didn't happen all at once. It was
a complicated, tolerant, side-eye kind of existence.
And one of the places that I sought acceptance for some reason was in my Southern Baptist church that my brother and I had started going to independent of our parents.
And my dad was, he was alarmed.
It bothered him.
And he always told me, which these are his words, not mine.
Baptists are mean. Baptists are mean. He's like, they're going to turn you on your head. Baptists
are mean. And I didn't feel that way. And I'd gone to church camps. And for anybody that's
a Baptist or has been involved in sort of the Baptist version of their faith, you would see
that there's a lot of public accountability, a lot of calling you up front and making you
renounce and accept things. And that's what a declaration of being ready to be baptized is
in your adolescence. And I did do that. I went to the front of a church and I asked to be baptized
and I was applauded, which I love, and spent a week in kind of baptism training and going to lunch with the pastor.
And on the day of my baptism, the small town I lived in, a lot of the people from the town turned out and my folks turned out, my parents' friends.
And my parents were going to come begrudgingly because of the baptism.
The main thing, they didn't want to go. But when I got to the church,
the pastor, who knew me, knew everything about me, my hair was about an inch and a half long,
and I wasn't eating meat. So it was pretty clear that I was like on the lesbian path, I think at that age, asked me if I practiced witchcraft or homosexuality, to which I looked
at him blankly. And I was like, you know, I'm gay.
And he told me then and there that he couldn't baptize me, even though my family was already
seated in the church. And I had to run out of there. And that was like a movie and run back home
and try and collect myself and the pieces of my faith and make it make sense out of that context.
Did that feel like a betrayal?
You know, it's so funny because that's the one thing I think of, but no one other than me
saw his little face. No one other than me saw that he was wrestling with his own complicated
indoctrination and his own shame and his own fear of telling me that.
And there was nothing arrogant or legalistic about it.
It was a hard day for both of us.
And I don't know who he is now, but I don't think I felt betrayed.
I think I just felt rejected.
You write about him in a way in that story.
He's not a villain in that story, the way you write it.
He's not a villain to me. It's a bigger problem than him.
It's a bigger problem than him. And you wrote it that way. You really did not dehumanize him at all in that story.
And there was such an opportunity to do that. It's really not who you are, is it?
Not anymore. No.
What do you mean by not anymore?
I mean, I think I was probably like a little bit of a sociopath in junior high school,
like every other awful- That's like developmentally appropriate, right?
Awful little trash kid, you know? I often say that like when my kids get to like junior high school age, I'm going to
go, great news, we're going to go backpack around Europe instead of going to junior high
school.
But I'm going to have to let them walk the gauntlet just like I had to.
Yeah.
I mean, yeah.
I've got a 15-year-old and a 21-year-old.
And for me, the hardest thing about having a kid in middle school is the wounded
middle schooler who still lives inside me. Do you know what I mean?
Yeah. Why are we that age perpetually somewhere in there?
Somewhere inside of me is a sweaty palmed Brene holding on to a cafeteria tray with nowhere to sit.
Same. I want to go back there and just grab your hand and sit next to you.
Yeah, me too. Like Brandy and Brene table.
Yeah. That's what that should have been like.
Yes. And Elton. We'll invite Elton and Glennon and Joni and yeah.
Because they all have that tray.
They all have that thing.
You know, that's what brings us here, I think.
Yes.
Yeah, I don't trust someone without the tray.
Same.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah.
You sing to the people with the tray.
Yeah.
Yes, I do.
But it's not out of altruism.
It's just, that's what I know how to do.
That's where I'm the most comfortable.
I love this quote, by the way.
Two thirds of the way into the book, this is what you say.
By now, you're noticing my ability to find and create family anywhere.
Tell me about the twins.
The twins?
My brothers, they live here on the compound. We met about 20 years ago.
They're twin brothers, the Hanseroths.
They're very cute, very talented, very hardworking, painfully positive,
like over the top positive, overly positive.
And we met and started traveling the country together.
And they were older than me, super handsome. I was like playing in bars and restaurants and busking. and they were older than me super handsome I was
like playing in bars and restaurants and busking and they had a record deal like they were like
if you can imagine the coolest people of the cool people you don't get the idea that they ever had
the tray they think they did they say they did but I mean I look at them and I just worship them so I
can't really imagine that awkwardness coming from them. But like, I went all in, I had been
collecting crap guitars. I had like 14 of them with broken necks and broken headstocks. And I
used to tell people I was a luthier even though I barely knew how to change the strings on a guitar.
I was like, I'm going to fix them all if they're going to be. But they were just art. And when I
met the twins, and we sang together for the first first time and I heard the complete chord of our three-part harmony, it reminds me of when I first heard Crosby, Stills, and loaded every single one of those guitars in there.
Drove to like a pawn shop place called the Trading Musician in Seattle.
And I traded all my guitars in for two microphones and an Evo.
And I invited the twins over and I said, I didn't tell them I'd sold all my guitars because I didn't want them to think I was as broke as I was.
But I gave them each a really fancy microphone.
And sure, Beta S87 to be exact.
And I was like, here's your microphones.
If you join a band with me, I swear to you, like we will make it.
You can quit your day job right now.
We're going to do this.
And they just kind of laughed and they were like, OK, all right, kid. Yeah, let's do this. And that's what happened. Okay. I want to stop here and I want to try to
weave, and I'm only doing this with you. I don't do it very often during the podcast because most
people are like, oh my gosh, she's lost her freaking mind. But you're a natural born weaver
of different things. You take disparate things and weave them into stories, right? I want to read this quote to you from Paulo Coelho's The Alchemist. Have you ever read
The Alchemist? No, I have it on my table because it's Tim and Phil's favorite book. That's how
witchy you are. You are shitting me. No. Okay, so this is so weird because right before the podcast
started, I asked Barrett, who works with me and my sister,
to find this quote for me.
Because the twins had a premonition about meeting someone that they would
connect with and work with.
Am I putting it right?
Meeting someone, completing the triangle.
And they didn't know what it meant or why I had been with them for as long as it was.
And it was separate. Okay. And so then you hock all your guitars or trade them all in for the nice mics.
And there was that word that I've been trying to figure out about you. And the only thing I can
figure out about you in my head, and this is the researcher part of me that I can't turn off,
is this quote from The Alchemist, which is so weirdly the twin's
favorite book. Intuition is really a sudden immersion of the soul into the universal current
of life, where the histories of all people are connected. And we are able to know everything
because it has all been written there. Wow. It certainly feels that way.
Yes. The word that maybe I'm looking for you at such a pinnacle level is you are a very intuitive
person to me and very integrated. And by integrated, it means you have not orphaned the hard stories of your
life and just live out of this kind of creepy positivity. You are yes and. You are heartbreak
and joy. You are tragedy and triumph. Grit, grace. Do you think that's true about you?
I don't know if I could think that was true and have it be true at the same time.
So I don't know.
It's disarming.
Oh my God, that answers it right now.
What?
Okay.
Are we recording this?
Oh my God.
What did you just say?
I said, I don't know if I could think that it's true and have it be true
at the same time i can't talk anymore why mother of pearl
because that is the answer that's the answer for the question if the answer is yes. About a year ago, two twin brothers in Wisconsin
discovered kind of by accident 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.
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Okay.
Is this your grandma that says this?
There is nothing more real or more practical in this universe than mysticism.
Remember that. And it's usually sitting right smack in the middle of grief. Is that you or
your grandma? Me, but I found that with my grandma for sure. You found it with your grandma. So
there is nothing more real or practical in this universe than mysticism, remember that it's usually sitting
right smack in the middle of grief. Help me understand that.
I think that you do understand that because, as you know, Daring Greatly is an important
book to me. And when you talk about the disengagement divide, when you talk about
compliance versus consequence, when you say that faith minus vulnerability equals politics
or worse, extremism, faith minus vulnerability is the antithesis of faith to me.
Amen.
And I find that my faith comes from doubt, just like answers come from questions
and healing comes from grief. And it's something you can't know unless you feel it at different
times in your life. And I feel like you know what I mean, because you just do. I have goosebumps from head to toe.
I do understand it because I believe in the power of mystery.
I do.
I believe.
I mean, I'm a person of deep, deep faith.
But I'm not interested in a faith that is not driven by a heartbeat of mystery. Yeah.
And that's hard one, I think, for somebody like you,
because you have a penchant for data.
I do.
And I feel like people like you and me have to fight for our mystery sometimes because we want the answer, but we know that the faith comes from not having it.
And it's really cool.
It's a lot of fodder for writing and creativity.
Yes.
Yeah. I think it's hard for me in my own life because I think the person I fight the most is
myself. I can see that. And the people who, I guess, don't think that being a social scientist
and a believer, people who believe those things are mutually exclusive.
Yeah, it's really true. I always say like, well, I know we're not algae. Okay, that's true. I'm going to use that.
Yes, yes, you can use that. Yeah. Lord knows I've used plenty of yours.
I want to talk about collaboration. Okay. You produced Tanya Tucker's 2019 album, While I'm Living, with Shooter Jennings.
It won a Grammy for Best Country Album.
Yeah.
You've worked with Dolly Parton, Sam Smith, Elton John, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Gary Clark Jr.,
Sheryl Crow, Willie Nelson, John Prine, our beloved, beloved John Prine.
Yeah.
The Indigo Girls, Dave Matthews.
Is there a connection or a thread between what I make up as your love of collaboration,
surrounding yourself with the people we need in our lives, and your belief in faith? Is there
something threaded through all of that? Well, I think there's mysticism in the fact that it's happening to me because that
never stops feeling like utterly surreal that I'm never, oh my God, it's insane. Like I'm 11,
you know, inside of here, just like you are. And then I'm, you know, on stage with Elton John and
I'm like having to reconcile that it's happening. But basically, I'm a perpetual fan, like I'm a wait by your tour
bus and ask for your autograph, fangirl. And so I would say probably the most satisfying
part of the fact that this has become my life is getting to like, stand toe to toe with these
people, sing with them and see them in real life, you know, without their makeup and shit. It's like
unbelievable to me. Tell me about some of your moments. Just invite us into some of those moments. For those
of us who love you, you know, my therapist gave me my first Brandi Carlile song. What?
Yeah. That's a good sign. I think I take that as like, Renee Brown's therapist. So this person is
obviously a genius. She's pretty good. Gave you a Brandi Carlile song,
Whoa. Which one? Yeah. First one she gave me was Hallelujah. Cool. That's a more important one.
It was like, Hallelujah recorded, it seemed like a bootleg something like,
Hallelujah recorded at the KLJC something. She's a deep dive fan. Like she's got the-
This was a deep dive fan.
Nice.
This was like a really deep dive fan.
She gave me that and she gave me Ani DiFranco's Amazing Grace.
I love this woman.
Yeah.
No, this woman, she's not to be messed with.
And I just listened to you and Ani DiFranco over and over and over again for like a year. It was the spiritual
breakdown kind of before I wrote The Gifts of Imperfection. So I just want you to walk us into
a couple of moments that were maybe moments where you had a hard time tamping down the 11-year-old
because you got to sing, right? Yeah. Okay. I will tell you the hardest moment. I'm just going to go straight to the hardest moment is that I decided to do
something crazy,
which is to cover and sing the entire blue album in front of Joni Mitchell.
Oh God.
And I didn't know that she was going to come.
I got asked to sing with Chris Christopherson at her birthday party,
like her 75th birthday thing at this theater.
And I met her that night.
She would never remember me.
It was like my face was, you go to my Instagram, you see how uncool I played this meeting Joni
Mitchell thing.
But I got to thinking like hearing all these people sing Joni's music, it was so beautiful.
And I was like, man, you know what?
Nobody's going to get to hear again.
And it's entirety live is like blue.
I wonder if I could pull it off.
And I just jumped.
I just booked it, said I was going to do it, started putting together the musicians,
started planning this thing.
And as soon as I put it up on sale, all these heroes of mine got the tickets.
And I was like, oh, shit, I'm going to do this in front of Bonnie Rae.
And I'm going to do this. And of Bonnie Rae and I'm going to do this.
And then I hear Joni's coming, right? And then I was like cold sweats. And then probably one of
the biggest life altering things happened. Like right after we put this up on sale,
I invited Elton John, like I've invited him to every show since I was like 21. And of course
he had plans and he wasn't coming. And I got this email that I was going to get to ask Elton a couple of questions about his book,
Me, which is laugh out loud, brilliant. You've got to read this thing. He's a seven, I think,
on the Enneagram. And that's a glimpse into that mind. So I had, of course I had questions. I didn't
need to read the book to ask the questions, but I read it anyway. And so I got to go and have lunch with him and ask him a couple of questions. And he was like,
this is all mind blowing. When you read my book, you're going to see like,
I am in love with Elton John. He's my greatest hero. So I'm sitting next to him at lunch. We're
asking these questions and he brings up the Joni thing and he's just really interested. He's like,
are you going to have a teleprompter? And I was like, yeah, no, no teleprompter
and all original keys.
And he goes, you crazy bitch.
And so he gets his iPad out
and he starts plunking at his iPad
with his huge fat freaking fingers.
And if you know,
have you ever seen Elton John play piano?
But it's like that dude brutalizes that thing. Oh yeah. Anyway, he goes, fuck it, I'm coming. I can't miss it. I've got to
see this. And I always liken people's fascination with coming to that show, to the film Faces of
Death. It's for the same reason. It's like- To watch the disaster.
They don't want to look, but they can't look away so he's coming
to the show and then i went into a total spiraling mental unraveling a total breakdown and actually
got to where it wasn't funny at all i couldn't pull myself together i was writing this book when
it happened so i was mining my soul and i was doing this deep dive back into my childhood and
my imposter syndrome and feelings
of inadequacy. And now I'm going to sing in front of Elton John for the first time in my life. And
also Joni Mitchell. And also one of the hardest albums ever to perform like of all time. And I
lost it. I had to go to a hypnotist. I get that. But I'll never, ever forget it. I walked out on stage and I was like, I am on a lonely road and I am traveling, traveling, traveling.
And I look up in the crowd and I see Elton John and Joni Mitchell holding hands,
looking down at me with a huge toothy grin.
I can just see their teeth.
I'll just something I'll never, ever, ever forget.
And I was like, okay, I'm here. 11 year old Brandy, sit down. You're just going to have to watch tonight.
You don't get to come out and sing. This is me. This is 40 year old Brandy.
I'm really having a hard time keeping it together right now. Just listening to that. Like
what a moment for you.
It really was. It really was probably one of the greatest moments of my whole life.
And then the next night, we go over to Joni Mitchell's house for hot dogs and Santa Margarita, Pinot Grigio.
And Elton John shows up with his husband, David.
And they gave me a diamond ring with a little blue, like a little star on it.
And we sat around and we sang. And towards the end of the night, Elton goes over to the piano and he makes a little blue like a little star on it and we sat around and we sang and towards the
end of the night elton goes over to the piano and he makes this little speech about how much
he loves being there and how much he loved this couple of days and how proud he was of
joni with her recovery and he sits down at the piano and he goes ding ding ding ding ding ding
ding ding and he plays your song in joni ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. And he plays
your song in Joni Mitchell's living room. Well, I'm sitting against Joni's knee. She's got her
hand on my shoulder. Bonnie Raitt's sitting across from me, sprawled across her guitar.
My brothers, the twins, you know, my wife and Elton is just playing your song. And I'm just like,
I am in Joni Mitchell's living room, listening to Elton John
with my family, with the people I love. And that's the moment, like that's the greatest musical
moment of my whole existence, I think.
Have you ever heard a story that you love so much, your first thought isn't even, I wish I could have that moment,
but you love the story so much that you're just glad that that person had that moment.
Like, that's how I feel.
Really?
Yeah.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Thanks for being happy for me about that.
Wow.
That moment brought to you by Brandi Carlile forle for all the 11 year olds with the sweaty palms
And the heavy trays, right? Yeah
Put down that tray
Would you be married had you not fallen in love with joni mitchell? I'm curious about that
Girl, I for one am not messing with katherine
Yeah, you know her you know her without knowing her she was so offended
by that k Catherine was a crash course in feminism, first of all, immediately right off the bat. And I did not like Joni Mitchell's music when the two of us met, which I'm so embarrassed about now.
Did you not like it or had you not really explored it. I had explored one thing and decided I didn't like it. Got it. And it had more
to do with just like you, the way I feel about myself than I did about Joni Mitchell. It's like
22 T-Bone Burnett played All I Want, which is a song I was just singing to you a second ago.
And there's a line in it that says, I want to talk to you. I want to shampoo you.
And I was so repulsed by that line.
I was like, turn it off.
That is the most submissive, heteronormative.
And she's singing in this high voice about wrecking her stockings in a jukebox bar.
Like, no, no, I don't like this woman's music because she doesn't sound tough to me.
And I mean, I'm like 22.
I'm like Joan Jett and Amy Rae and you know butchies and I wanted to hear
like what I thought was tough women and I didn't have a 360 degree view of what that meant yet
cut to I'm falling really falling in love for the first time and this really powerful woman
from England is playing me blue and I'm laughing because I think it makes me sound cool
to not
believe that Joni Mitchell's music is tough. And she says, do you know what Little Green is about?
This is, you think this is funny. Do you know what Little Green is about? And I was like, no.
And she explained to me, like many of you know, that Little Green is about Joni Mitchell
giving up her daughter for adoption after she'd had her for a
year,
realizing she couldn't afford to look after her anymore.
And that the right thing to do,
the kind thing to do was to find another place for her to live her life.
And then writing this heart wrenching,
but dignified song about it.
And it hit me like a ton of bricks.
Like little green is the toughest song ever written in rock and roll history.
And I have no idea what tough means.
And it changed the way I saw or understood what femininity even is.
And that was the first time Catherine blew me open as a writer and a person.
And then I made up for lost time and
now I'm freaking obsessed with Joni Mitchell. Everything she's ever done, all the way to
every single thing. I love it when your wife takes over your Instagram. We need to do that
more often because it is so... Oh, because she's evil.
She is so evil and so unapologetic and so fun. One of my favorite ones, I like it when she films you
and then gives us an analytical breakdown of what's happening when she is observing you.
So if I were your therapist, Brandy, I would start with this question.
You can be if you want.
No, no, no, because I'm not a therapist. I'm a researcher. So I have a therapist,
I could not be a therapist. Data, data. Yeah. I would start
with this question. I would say, Brandy, we need to talk about fitted sheets.
Okay. Are you in support of me on this or are you critical?
No, I'm not.
Oh, for love of God, Brene.
No. What are you like ex-special forces?
Where are your standards?
Look, the fitted sheet has a little pouch in the
corner. You take it out of the dryer and you go like this really fast in a circle and then tuck
the whole ball into the corner. Yeah, no, you don't do that because then you open the cabinet
and you feel emotionally unstable. That's why I'm talking to you about this shit if I was your therapist because you're catherine's filming you
redrawing
Sheets that were too wrinkled to go in the cabinet and this military
flag folding
of your fitted sheets
Have you always been this way? Is this part of your number one? It is it's something I think is so funny
I've got major problem with sheets and towels and i'll'll tell you this, and this is not in the book,
but it should be. I have an appreciation for these kinds of things because I didn't have them
when I was a kid. And I wanted things to look nice and be clean. And I wanted sheets and I
wanted matching towels and I wanted things, you know, and my sister
and I shared a room out in Ravensdale.
And I remember doing chores for, it must've been a half a year so that I could go to Walmart
and buy a set of sheets for me and my sister because I heard a bunk bed.
So it wasn't out of generosity.
Like I didn't want a perfect looking bed if she didn't have a perfect looking bed. So it wasn't out of generosity. Like I didn't want a perfect looking bed if she didn't have a perfect looking bed. So I have a thing with sheets and blankets. And it's not a sad thing.
It's like, I get to appreciate these things, I think more than people who had matching sheets
and pillows and towels growing up because I get them now and I'm going to make damn sure they look perfect.
You know what? That I get. That I get. And man.
Catherine says everything I do. She's like, everything you do is pork it. Everything you do is pork it. That's why she films me. She thinks it's hilarious.
I believe that. That's your full-size rainbow bright.
Yeah.
And a very large tomato.
And perfect unwrinkled sheets.
You know what? I love you.
I'll take the whole package.
I'll set you free on my fitted sheets.
I'm not going to fold them with you because I have a different story that I have to overcome,
but I will let you fold my sheets.
All right.
I'm really interested in that.
What do you mean by that?
Well, I think I grew up the opposite way.
I think I grew up ironing sheets.
Oh, really? Yeah. So I'm like, up the opposite way. I think I grew up ironing sheets. Oh, really?
Yeah. So I'm like, fuck the sheets.
Me and you, man, we're yin and yang about this. This is really good.
It is really good. It's like you, me, and some sheets, we could figure out the world.
This is like the key to world peace right here.
Somewhere in the middle is where sheets should live, where you're not ironing them, but also
I'm not spending 15 minutes folding one.
Maybe not wrinkled into a ball, but you know, loosely folded.
Can we compromise on that?
So the ball is out?
Yeah, the ball's out, but the loosely folding.
I think there would be a struggle in our match.
Yeah, because I don't believe fitted sheets are meant to be folded.
Okay, ball up the fitted one, but can we fold the flat one, please?
We can fold the flat one neatly.
Okay.
Yeah, not like if y'all need to go back in her Instagram history and see these sheets,
you could bounce a quarter off these.
Oh, girl, they are perfect.
Yeah.
Yeah, they're good.
All right, you ready for, I can just talk to you for like six days and 15 hours.
So could I.
This doesn't have to end.
This should be a series. This should be a series.
This should be a series.
Brandy and Brene and the Sheets.
That's a different series altogether, Brene.
That's true.
Don't you cut that part out of this.
You leave that in here now.
Oh, hell no, I will not.
Brandy and Brene and the Sheets.
I like the sound of it.
I'm going to just be totally honest with
you. 10 years ago. Yeah. 30 for me, but my best friend, Amber Lee, who's in the book,
she is the one that brought me your books and brought you into my life. And it's so interesting
because I've always kind of felt like I know you from reading your words and, you know, I follow
you on social media and I'm, I find you really fascinating and inspiring leader and stuff. But now that I'm talking to you and
looking at you, you remind me so much of her. Oh, really?
I kind of feel like we're best friends now. Yeah.
That's how I feel. I'm going to have some kind of locket.
Okay. A locket. Exactly. One half is you, one half is me.
With a little torn sheet inside.
Yeah, Brandy and Brene sheets.
I'm going to hear about this forever.
I just want to say on the record, I will never forget doing this podcast with you, like hard
stop, but I will also never forget saying, what does that mean? And you leaning into the Zoom and saying, I think you know what it is.
I will.
Don't make eye contact.
Okay.
You ready for the rapid fire?
Yes, ma'am.
Fill in the blank for me.
Vulnerability is?
Faith.
You're called to be brave, but you're scared.
You're like, you're really scared, and you can feel it in your throat.
What's the very first thing you do?
Do it anyway.
Write the book.
Do it anyway.
Write the book.
Amen.
What's something that people often get wrong about you?
This is a little bit more explanation, but people think that I get what I want.
I ask for what I want. People think I get what I want, but I think what I get is what I feel is needed. Wow. There's a difference.
You understand that. You're one.
I do understand that. That's painful sometimes, actually.
What's the last TV show that you binged and loved?
Better Things. Glennon Doyle hipped me to it. Oh my God. Some TV shows, they're really good for your soul.
Like that one really, really was. Better Things about Raising Three Daughters, man.
Oh my God. That is just so real and so honest.
Another study into the feminine. Really good show.
Yes. Favorite movie or one of your all-time favorite movies?
The NeverEnding Story, which I have the R and tattooed on each of my shoulders, big.
You do not? Yeah. And the twins have it matching. It's about the nothing. It's about this
imposition of complacency onto the imagination of a child, but the nothing. And this metaphor is a storm
that's taking over a place and erasing its identity. And this boy is on a quest to defeat
the nothing and to save Fantasia, which I just see as a metaphor for preserving your inner
child, your ability to create and imagine. And the Aran is this necklace. It's like these
infinity of snakes and it protects the boy on
the quest from the nothing. And so I've got them tattooed on both of my shoulders and keep my
imagination intact. I love the Never Ending Story. I have to watch it again with this.
You've got to watch it. It's so good. Watch it with your 15 year old.
Wow.
Mystical.
Mystical. Yeah. A concert that you'll never forget.
Elton John, Made in England, 1995.
God, I love me some Elton John. I mean, I just...
No greater rock star in the history of the world, I think, than Elton John.
That's a big thing, but I mean it. That's a big thing, but I think it's a solid argument.
Favorite meal? It's going to be on the boat,
because I have a fishing boat. And it's going to be on the boat because I have a fishing boat.
And it's going to probably be oysters, giant tomato, and my wife's amazing pasta dish that she makes with fennel and saffron and spot prawns.
All these things caught from the boat and eaten on the boat.
That's my favorite meal.
That's the one you need to invite me to.
I'm down for that one.
Come out on the boat.
You know, I love fishing.
Oh, do not.
Are you serious?
Yes.
You don't think I grew up hunting and fishing?
Yes.
Of course.
Okay.
We're doing this.
Yes.
Hunting, fishing, and listening to Tanya Tucker.
Yeah.
My nickname from my Uncle Wimpy in San
Antonio was double T for Tanya Tucker because I always had whatever hairstyle she had at the time.
Oh my Lord.
Yes. I would bring her picture in so I could get her wings.
Oh yeah. And her gait, the way she stands all bow-legged like that.
Oh yeah. Like bring it.
Yeah. That woman man spreads. I don't know if you've seen this, but she will sit
in a chair and man spread. Yeah. Not only am I not messing with her,
I'm messing with anyone who does mess with her. So yeah, I'm with you.
What's on your nightstand? My nightstand currently or usually?
Usually. Regamuffin gospel, a candle and a restoration hardware lamp right next to a perfectly fitted sheet.
I knew as soon as I said nightstand, we were going to be drifting into the linens.
All right. I can't wait for these three. A snapshot of an ordinary moment in your life
that gives you real joy. This is an ordinary moment because it happens every day. I live in a log cabin and I heat it
with a wood stove. So every morning I get up and I start a fire to make the house warm for all the
girls. And every night I make a fire so that when we wake up, it's already warm enough to not be uncomfortable. So my fire making
feels symbolic. It's when I consolidate all the love and all the day into warmth for everyone.
God, that's beautiful. What's one thing you're deeply grateful for right now?
I think I'm the most grateful for my wife. I know that sounds cheesy, but
she's so important to me. She's my best friend. She's all the jokes. She's all the fun. She's
all the realism. She's all of the putting my feet on the ground, making me go fishing and put my
hands in the dirt and reminding me of who I am. She is the thing that makes the two
people inside of my Gemini soul one person. Wow, that's no small feat.
No, it's a lot of work. She's got her hands full.
Wow. Okay, we asked you, which is so fun to ask Brandi Carlile for five songs you can't live
without for your mini mixtape.
Here's what you gave us.
Someone Saved My Life Tonight by Elton.
A Case of You by Joni Mitchell.
Hallelujah by Jeff Buckley.
A Coat of Many Colors by Dolly Parton.
Yep.
And We Are the Champions by Queen. That's right.
In one sentence, what does this mini mixtape say about you, Brandy?
This mini mixtape honors the realness inside of everyone.
It honors loss, but also it honors winning.
You know, we're the champions. I mean, it honors coming through hard things to see
big, big, beautiful, complicated things happen.
I love it. All right. The book is Broken Horses. What an honor. Just all of it. To get to talk to
you today, to get to ride in my car and listen to your music, to get to read your book.
It's a hard world right now. And you bring way more than your share of light into it. And so
I'm really deeply grateful for you as a person and as an artist who shares your craft with us.
So thank you.
Thank you so much. You are really incredible. And it's important to know that I'm really grateful
for you too. And we had never talked, but you've taught me so much.
And this has been really special for me.
I'll never forget it.
Me neither.
Thank you, Brandy.
Until next time.
Until next time.
This is Brene Brown coming to you live.
Brene Brown, Brandy Carlile in the sheets.
I love it so much.
I love it so much. You can't make that shit up.
Oh, isn't she the best? She is the best. She's just incredible. And things got really mystical
and crazy in there with the alchemist, but none of that surprises me. As Paolo Colo says,
also in the alchemist, when you're on the right. As Paolo Colo says, also in The Alchemist,
when you're on the right path, the universe conspires. And so I just think there's something
so honest and joyful and committed about how Brandy shows up in the world and what she brings
to us with her art and craft. It's something to behold.
The Broken Horses virtual book tour events can be found at brokenhorses.veeps.com.
Brandy's website is brandycarlyle.com. And the Looking Out Foundation is www.lookingoutfoundation.org.
You can find all these links on her episode page on BreneBrown.com. She's really
fun to follow on social y'all. Her handle's at Brandi Carlisle on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter.
Again, don't forget all of this is on an episode page on BreneBrown.com. We do episode pages for
all the Unlocking Us and Dare to Lead podcasts. Five days after we record them, we also add
transcripts for those of you who are looking
for those. Thank y'all for being a part of this community. Stay awkward, brave, and kind,
and I'll see y'all next week. Gina Chavez. Get new episodes as soon as they're published by following Unlocking Us on your
favorite podcast app. We are part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. Discover more award-winning
shows at podcast.voxmedia.com. Support for this show is brought to you by Nissan Kicks.
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