Unlocking Us with Brené Brown - Brené with Dolly Parton on Songtelling, Empathy, and Shining Our Lights
Episode Date: November 18, 2020This episode is proof that dreams do come true! I get to talk to Dolly Parton about love, empathy, and the power of truth-telling. We talk about everything from her new book, Dolly Parton, Songteller:... My Life in Lyrics, and songwriting to the challenges of leading organizations and Burt Reynolds. It’s amazing to me how Dolly’s songwriting and storytelling seem to be driven by a deep calling to turn toward pain and heartbreak so she can shine a light for all of us to find our way. 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.
Okay, I'm losing my mind. In this conversation, I am talking to the one and only Dolly Parton.
Global superstar, musician, actress, performer, businesswoman, leader, superhero icon. Wow. I've said this about one
other person maybe that they say don't meet your heroes, but whoever said that had not met Dolly
Parton because she has been so important to me in my life. And you'll hear about why. And it's not,
it's hard stuff actually. Some of her music was banned by my family, actually my great aunt,
who had all of her albums when I was growing up. I couldn't listen to several of them because she
dealt with such controversial issues. And so I never thought of her as anything but a really
serious person. I think I thought she was maybe a preacher when I first heard her music.
But I talk with her in this episode about her new book, Dolly Parton Songteller, My Life in Lyrics, and how her life as a songwriter and a storyteller
has been really driven by empathy and a calling that she feels to connect with people and to shine
a light on shame, to create more love, more belonging. It is such a beautiful book too,
y'all. It's a coffee table book. It's huge. It weighs
500 pounds, but it's so beautiful. Amazing photographs. She tells the story behind every
song, even when it's just heart-wrenching. Photos of receipts where she wrote the lyrics on the back
of a receipt in a car. One of the things that I did along with my team that helps me prepare for
the podcast is we read
the books, all in different places, of course, because we're distanced. But we read the book
and listened to the songs as we were reading about them. And it was just an amazing experience.
This is just a dream come true. It's a huge conversation. I have to tell you,
it was bittersweet in a way because, and I'm going to get emotional here, but I could. God, I wish my grandmother
Ellen was here to hear this. She would just die thinking and knowing that I had talked to Dolly
Parton. I do ask her the question that I know my grandmother would have asked. It's a crazy
question that elicits an answer that I'm like, no, no, no, stop answering. And then she says, shut up. I'm going to answer because you asked. It is just the best conversation. So get ready for Dolly. I'm so glad you're here with us's. Fall is in full swing, and it's the perfect time to refresh your home and wardrobe for the sweater weather with new finds from Macy's.
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So how do you introduce Dolly Parton, y'all?
I mean, she is the most honored and revered female country singer-songwriter of all time, achieving 25 RIAA-certified gold
platinum and multi-platinum awards. She has had 26 songs reach number one on the Billboard Country
Charts, which is a record for female artists. Dolly is the first country artist to chart a top
20 Billboard single across seven consecutive decades, the 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s,
the aughts, the 10s, the 20s. She has 44 career top 10 country albums, a record for any artist,
and 110 career charted singles over the past 40 years. She has won 10 Grammy Awards,
49 nominations, including the Lifetime Achievement Award.
In 1999, she was inducted as a member of the coveted Country Music Hall of Fame.
Dolly Parton has donated over 147 million books to children around the world with her
Imagination Library. Her children's book, Code of Many Colors, was dedicated to the Library of Congress
to honor the Imagination Library's 100 millionth book donation.
Oh, man. From her song, The Code of Many Colors, to working nine to five,
no dream is too big and no mountain too high for the country girl who turned the world into her stage
and me into, I don't know, she changed my life. She really did. Welcome Dolly Parton.
Dolly Parton. Oh my God. Okay. I have to just say this. I am in Houston. I woke up this morning. I had a cup of coffee out of a coffee
cup that said a cup of ambition. I went to play tennis today on my Yeti little Tumblr. I have a
Dolly Parton sticker and I'm looking across my room at a framed photograph of you taken in 1982.
It's about five feet by four feet. And you are laughing and talking with former Texas
Governor Ann Richards. Oh, I love Ann Richards. Did you know her? Yes. Yeah, she was a character.
She was great, right? Yeah, I loved her. You're a big deal in my life. Can I start with a story?
Well, yeah, because you sound like you know a little bit about me. So let me
hear it. So growing up, I had my grandmother Ellen and her sister Lorena. Lorena lived on Lake
Travis, and she had a record player. It played 78s and 33s. And several of your songs were banned.
I was not allowed to listen to them. I was allowed to listen to
Lefty Frizzell on the 78. And then she had all of your albums. And every now and then she'd leave
me alone because she'd go run her Avon route. And I would only have to go with her if she was
going to go to the dangerous places because then I would sit shotgun in the truck and carry a BB gun in case there was like wild
coyotes or something. And as soon as she left, I would put on your band songs. So I was not allowed
to listen to Daddy Come and Get Me. Oh, I was wondering what these band songs were.
I was not allowed to listen to Down from Dover or The Bridge.
Okay, because it's about suicide and pregnancy and all of that.
And the Daddy Come Get Me.
I bet a lot of people never heard that one that you and I know.
It's about a man that put his wife in the insane asylum just to get rid of her.
And so she was trying to reach out to her daddy to come get her.
It's called Daddy Come Get Me.
All morbid songs.
I've been writing those.
But your mom didn't want you to hear that because it's so depressing. And The Bridge, because it's about
suicide, right? And Dover. Yeah. They wouldn't play that on the radio either for a long time.
So for me, they were lifesavers. And I'll tell you why. Because all of those stories that you
were telling in those songs were things that were unfolding in my family. And things that I knew were whispers.
They were the kind of things you heard about in the grown-ups card room or things that you heard
about through the sheetrock walls. And you knew they were happening, but you thought something
must be really wrong with you because no one would tell the story. And then here you were singing
them. Well, I can see where that would have made a difference in your life.
That's one of the things I've always been so proud of when people like you tell me stories of how my
music and my songs have helped them over some really bad times in their lives. And I'm always
fascinated with that and so grateful that I've had the ability to write these things where people
come to me and say, you know,
I was going through this hard time and I was thinking about committing suicide. And then I
heard your song of this or that, and it changed my life. So, I mean, I think God works through
things like that. I think that if you have a gift and you're open to those things, you get the
messages and you can get them out there. But I'm so happy that I had a good place in your life
because you seem to have turned out all right, knowing and hearing all that stuff, right?
Yeah, because you know what it was? It was like a big, big old dose of empathy. It was like a
message of you're not alone. Like you were not afraid to tell a hard story, were you?
No, I wasn't. And kind of going back to kind of what you said about you hear those things and they're in your own family.
Nearly everything has happened to somebody.
I mean, how many families do you know that somewhere in and around that some girl has not had a child out of wedlock or people that have emotional and mental problems. Or people go through such horrible things, whether it's breakups or just their lives,
whether they're not, can't be comfortable in their own skin.
They might be gay and nobody accepts them.
And so many people become suicidal in the song, The Bridge.
I would hear those stories myself growing up.
I knew all those things.
I would hear things, like you said,
through the walls. And I knew things that were going on in the family. I was writing some really
serious heavy duty songs when I was seven and eight years old. Just from stories I'd hear my
mom and my aunts and people talking about, oh, I was nosy. I'm like you, I heard everything.
I'd pretend like I was not listening. I'd be doing something. Boy, I was just honed in
on everything. So I think that that's one of the gifts about music. I think it's very healing,
don't you? Oh, God, yes. Just to know that there were problems and there was suffering,
but we weren't alone. It was shame relief. Well, that's a good way of putting it. Yeah,
that's great. Well, I'm a good way of putting it. Yeah, that's great.
Well, I'm so happy that I was there for you.
Yeah, you were.
And I got to tell you this other story.
And it's funny because you have this amazing sense of humor and you can make anybody laugh
about anything.
But for me, because that was my introduction to you, you were always a very serious person
to me.
When I hear other people like kind of joking and laughing and, oh, she's so fun. I'd be like, oh yeah, we're talking about two different Dolly
Partons. I think a Dolly Parton is like, she's on the truth train. She's going to ride that sucker
right into your life. There's no kidding around. So when I was in high school, my parents, along
with three other couples, went to go see Nine to Five. And two of the men walked out of the movie theater. And when my parents got home,
my parents fought about that film for two weeks. My mom was like, yes, this is exactly what goes
on in companies and the women are underestimated and mistreated. And it was like, you became
an icon in my family that month. No, no kidding. All because of like just the
believing that women should be paid equal pay and all the... So why did the men walk out?
It's too much about women. I think it was too much truth about how women are underestimated.
Yeah. And I grew up like that too. I grew up all around all these male chauvinist pigs and
thinking a woman's place was at home or wherever you say they should be.
And I think that's all good if that's where she wants to be.
That's not the only place she can be or should be.
So I wasn't really being in that movie trying to make a political statement of any kind.
But we were addressing issues.
And I think it did a lot of good, that movie.
We've still got a long way to go,
but I thought the movie in itself was very entertaining. And I think children even enjoyed
the movie when we strung up the boss. They didn't know why. They just thought that was all funny
with the boss hanging around and the animated part that we did and our fantasies of what we
would do to the boss and all that. So it really was entertaining in a lot of ways. But the base
of that was really about the workplace situations and what it really meant for women to be appreciated
and to be paid equal for equal work. And I really thought the movie was really wonderful. I was
proud to be a part of it. It was the first movie I'd ever been in.
God, it was so... I mean, I just watched it recently to prepare for this interview and it has aged well. It is still as poignant and funny
and real as it was in... What was that? 1980 or 1981? 40 years ago this year.
Wow. I know. Ain't that amazing?
Yes. 40 years ago. And it's still very relevant
and they still play it all the time.
Okay. Let's talk about vulnerability. So you may know, I don't know that I've spent 20 years studying vulnerability and courage and shame. And we talk about in our research that vulnerability
is the birthplace of courage and it's the ability to keep your heart open to both pain and joy.
And let me tell you something, this book, to everyone listening right now,
if you know me, you don't need to buy it because I've already bought 400 copies to give as Christmas gifts. But the book is Songteller, My Life in Lyrics. Oh God, this book. Here's something you
write in there. As a songwriter and as a person, I have to leave myself wide open. I suffer a lot
because I am open so much. I hurt a lot. And when
I hurt, I hurt all over because I cannot harden my heart to protect myself. I always say that I
strengthen the muscles around my heart, but I can't harden it. Well, that's exactly how I feel
as a human being and as a writer. I feel I have to feel for everybody. And I'm sure you're the same way.
You have to allow yourself to be open and you can't just shut these doors because you want to.
You'd prefer to, maybe, but that's not how you're going to become a good quality human being that's
going to be able to serve humanity in the best ways you can.
Has there been a price to keeping your heart open?
Oh, yeah.
It's like I said in there, you know, when you hurt, you hurt all over.
You know, I'm just the kind of person that rather than lashing out at something that
hurts me, I usually cry about it, pray about it.
Oh, I'm not to say that I can't tell you where to put it if I don't like where you've got
it. One of my favorite sayings. I can certainly do that. But I often say too that I don't often
lose my temper, but I often have to use it. Meaning I have to, as a businesswoman and being
protective of my business or my family or whatever is important to me, I know how to stand my ground. I know how to speak up. I know how to
stand sturdy. That still doesn't mean I'm hardening my heart or that I'm a bitch of any kind. Sometimes
people would say that I am. If you have to just speak your truth, if you have to say what you
need to say to get things done, especially if you're the boss of a major operation, I prefer
never to have to call anybody down for any reason.
I would prefer that people do what they say they do and they're qualified to do it.
And then when they take my kindness or my sensitivity for weakness, that's a big mistake.
Because I'll go with you a long way, but I'll call you on it.
And I'll just say, hey, no, no, no. That's not how this works here.
So I know you know you have to do that because you have to in order to have your own show and
all that. You've got people that work around you. You want them all to work together because I'm no
diva of any kind. I never think of myself as a star. I think of myself as a working woman.
And this is just the job I love. And I'm grateful that I get to make a good
living at what I love to do. That's a real gift, isn't it? To do what you love? Yes. Not a lot of
people get to do that, right? No, they don't. And I thank God every day for that. Because I can't
imagine what my life would have been if I hadn't been able to have made it through music. I'd
probably been a beautician and had to stand on my feet all day and do whatever,
but I would have got good discount on the bleach and cosmetics and stuff.
You could have gotten me some bulk hairspray. I like it.
I would have gotten you some good hairspray, yeah.
Let me ask you something just while we're here, because one of the things I also do is I study
leadership and we're just coming to the end of a 10-year study on leadership. As a leader,
what's something that really pisses you off?
People not being on time. That is the thing that gets me the most. Even if I'm being picked up by
somebody and they're not on time, that ruins my whole day because they make me late. And I am
such a responsible person. I believe that everybody's time is important. And I don't
think you ever need to be so big that you believe that your's time is important. And I don't think you ever need to
be so big that you believe that your time is all that matters. And I've worked through the years
with a lot of artists, a lot of my friends, a lot of people in the business that really don't
take it that serious. And I just really find that that really turns me off. I look different on them
after that when I think you don't care that there's a whole crew
around here that got up early, that have things to do, and you're going to show up late. I don't
like it. So I would have to say that as a leader, that bothers me more than anything. And then the
fact that you, like we said before, that you don't do what I know you're qualified to do,
what I hired you to do, what you said you could do. And you just get lackadaisical as if, well, you're the one getting
the big money. Yeah, but you're getting paid to do this job. And if you want a better one,
go somewhere else. But you've got to really take your work serious, no matter what that job is.
On top of being all of the things that you are, songwriter, storyteller, artist,
you have found yourself leading a big organization. What is the toughest part for you as a leader?
I think when you do have to let someone go, it's always been really hard for me to have to fire
somebody because I really don't like to ever be put in that spot. And as a leader, though,
sometimes there are certain people working in certain departments where it's not that personal
up close that you can go through someone else running that department that can do that. But to
me, there have been times where I'm the only one that can go to that person and say, I'm going to
have to let you go. I'll give them all the reasons that
I have to do it and how sorry I feel about it, but I don't feel that it's my fault because here are
the reasons. I would never fire anybody without a reason. Fire somebody just to put someone else in
their place. I would never do that. I would never do that. But to me, that's always been the hardest
part of being a leader is when I really personally
had to let somebody go.
It's the exact same for me.
We used to worry that maybe I wasn't tough enough, but one of the toughest, most transformative
leaders I've ever worked with told me one day, when it stops tearing you up, no matter
how justified it is, when it stops tearing you up, you got to stop leading.
Well, I think that is a fair statement because it does tear me up.
It hurts me. And that old saying, like when your parents whip you, it's going to hurt me worse.
It's going to hurt you. Of course, they're the ones going to be losing. But honestly, emotionally,
it hurts me so bad that I grieve over it as much as they do. I imagine, you know, because I take
it so personal because I don't like to have to do it. But like you said, when you stop caring or tearing,
you need to get out of trying to be the leader, let somebody else handle it.
But like I say, people work, as you know, in different departments.
I own a lot of businesses.
I own production companies and I own Dollywood, you know,
working with theme parks and all that.
And so you have managers that do so much of that. But then I have
my personal business, my Dolly Parton Enterprises, where I have these people that I've been with
forever. But it hurts me too, to even have to call somebody down. I don't always fire them,
but to have to call somebody in and scold somebody, I hate doing that. I hate to try to
make anybody feel less than I know they really are.
I hate having to do that, too.
I don't like to talk down to anybody or you can't let other people suffer because one person.
It's like the bad apple syndrome.
Oh, yeah. Contagious, right?
Yeah.
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I have a question for you going back to vulnerability. When I was growing up,
my mom had a very big rule that we were never allowed to turn our faces away from people in pain. Because she would say when people are in pain, they've got to know that you see them
because one day you'll be in pain and you won't want to be alone. It does not seem to me as a culture in our country right now
that we're very good at staring pain in the eye.
I think people are too scared to look at pain.
I think people are too afraid to look at people suffering
because you think you don't know how to handle it.
And you're so afraid that you don't want to face that as truth, as reality. I
mean, this whole year has been so insane. It's just been crazy. Half the people don't even believe it,
that there's a pandemic at all until it happens to somebody in your family. And we've been fortunate
that it has happened, but it could happen. Like I'm always saying, you can't be too safe, but you can sure be too sorry.
Yeah.
Because dead is about as sorry as you can get, right?
But a lot of people can't even understand their own suffering.
So much less try to look and see somebody else's.
So that's when I, as a Christian person, growing up the way I do, I try to think about when
Christ talks about like the people that are suffering and going into the way I do, I try to think about when Christ talks about the people that are
suffering and going into the prisons to see people. I wrote a song once called,
Would You Know Him If You Saw Him? He might be a barefoot newsboy. He might be a beggar in the
street. God comes in all ways. See how we're going to deal with that, which says something about us as a
spiritual human being. Because I really think that it's just about some people don't know how to care
and some people just don't care. But I think a lot of it is just fear. It's hard though, right?
Because we know that hurt people hurt people. And how do you help people understand that it's okay
to turn toward pain? I mean, you've spent your whole life just
looking it right in the eye and singing to us about it. Well, I don't know how to teach anybody
how to deal with pain. I just go to pain. I just go to people that are suffering. And if I can't
do anything physically, I can write about it or donate something to the cause or whatever, but I
don't ignore it. I can't just turn my back on life and suffering and people. I try to do the best I
can in all the ways that I can and still have a business because I feel like God put me here for
a reason. And I feel like that I'm doing what I'm supposed to be doing. This is really kind of like it's my job, but it's kind of like my ministry too, really.
I feel like this is my ministry that I was put here to try to help people.
If nothing else, but through my words, either talking to people or if I put them in a song,
I ask God to direct me and lead me and help me to do that.
But I can't turn my back on people. I can't turn
my back on the situations, but I may have to handle it in my own way, but I will not just ignore it.
Were you born with this? Was this an ethic in your family? What gave you the strength to walk
towards suffering? Well, I grew up in a very spiritual church. My grandpa was a preacher. My mom was very, very spiritual, very religious. And we believed in healing. We believed in caring for the sick. We believed in going to sick neighbors' houses to see the sick. We believed in taking something to eat. We believed in all that. When somebody died, you go comfort them in whatever way you can, whether you take food or whatever.
Same with all that.
So I grew up thinking that that's the Christian way to be.
I mean, we're supposed to love one another.
You're supposed to love your neighbor as yourself, whether we do or not.
That's a big, hard thing to do.
But at least you can love them some.
You can love them enough to go bring them something or tell them something
or have a few kind words to say oh i hope you feel better it's like in our little radio station back home they
had this section on the farm and home hour whatever it's like where they do songs and
dedicated to the sick and shut-ins that's how they said it this one goes out to the sick and shut-ins
and i'm sure the sick and shut-ins at home, listening to that, maybe nobody
had come by to see them, or maybe they're just laying there sick with something. But just knowing
that somebody kind of called out. And yes, I think that's what I learned in that little house of
prayer when my grandpa was a preacher, is caring for one another. God, that's so beautiful. And if
we could just do some more of that. No one rides for free, right? We'll all be the ones in pain
one day. That's true. We'll all be the ones in pain one day.
That's true. We'll all be in pain one day. And you want to treat people like the way you want
to be treated. I don't mean to wax religious or anything, but you don't even have to believe in
anything to be good to people. You should just know you should be a good human being. There's
a golden rule. I'm not preaching to anybody to say, be this, be that. This is where I grew up,
how I grew up, and this is who I am. But it doesn't matter. Whatever your religion is,
whatever you are, you should be a good, caring person. I really think that it has nothing to do
with religion. But if you are a religious person, you should know better anyway.
That's why we're religious. We're supposed
to be religious because we can do bigger, better things for more and more people. But it doesn't
matter if you don't have any faith at all. Have some faith in yourself as a human being and believe
in a higher wisdom, something bigger than you. If you don't believe in something bigger than you,
then you become your own God. And then you're really in just a big mess.
Yeah. It's really hard to come back from that, isn't it?
Yes.
And it sounds to me that you are talking about faith and religion,
but it sounds to me that you're also talking about love.
I think love is the answer to all of it. And that is the big word. But the only two
descriptions we have in the Bible of God, it says, God is good and God is love. And what more do you need? Two simple
things. Like I say, you don't have to believe in God, but you can believe in good and you can
believe in love. And it all stems from love. Okay. So speaking of love, I want to ask you
if this is true about you. This is an assumption I have about you, is that you give people the
benefit of the doubt, that you assume good things about people until proven
otherwise. Is that true? I absolutely give people the benefit of the doubt. I would rather know all
this good about you than to dwell on something I heard that was bad. And if I hear something bad
or hear people talking about people, I know that we're all good and we all have a tendency to be bad at times.
But I know that people are basically good.
And I try to play to the good in that.
I try to find that little God light in everybody.
And I know that it is in there.
Some people let it shine more than others.
A lot of people don't even know they have it unless somebody can with enough
love or reaching out, kind of help shine it up a little bit. And even if your pilot light has
gone out, that can be ignited too. You can kind of get that back. And if you've got enough of
somebody caring, but you're right. I really give people the benefit of the doubt. I mean, I just
love people. I just love people.
You can tell that. You can see that from far away even. I need you to prove or disprove a research hypothesis for me. So in our research, we found that the people who assume the best
about other people only shared one thing in common, and that was they have very good boundaries in
their lives. Tell me about the relationship you have with boundaries.
Are you comfortable about saying no
or telling people what's okay and what's not okay?
Well, I don't like to have to say no,
but I've had to learn to.
It's harder for me to say no to my family
than anybody else,
but there comes a time when you have to just say,
this is going to kill me, but I can't do that.
So I can say no.
If my conviction tells me that that's the best thing to do, it's like whether it's your family or not, if you're offended by it or it's affecting you and your life and your lifestyle and your
flow, it's just like that scripture that if thy right hand offends you, cut it off. If your right
eye offends you, pluck it out. That just means if you're not seeing straight because of something
or somebody that's offending you, it just means get rid of that.
It's not literally jerk your eye out or cut your arm off.
It just means even if that right hand is someone you love the most,
the one you depend on the most, if they're offending your spirit somehow
and you're high or good, you're going to need to say no.
I don't like to say no,
but I can say no. I'd rather say yes, but I can say no. True or false? Elvis Presley wanted the
rights to I Will Always Love You. You said no. I said no because my boundaries said,
the boundaries that I have for myself, I knew that that was not right for me. I knew it was
fine for them because that's how they were. It had nothing to do with Elvis personally. He loved
the song. He wanted to do it. But his manager, Colonel Tom Parker, who did well with him through
the years, no complaining there, but that's just their rule that they had. Well, this is a rule of
what I had. And my rule was more important than their
rule because it was my song. And it broke my heart to have to say no to Elvis Presley singing,
I Will Always Love You. But they wanted publishing on it. And it was my most important copyright and
one that I was going to be leaving to my family, my state. And so I couldn't do it. And it broke
my heart. That's another thing. It broke my heart
to say no, but I was willing to suffer that temporary disappointment and heartache than to
live with something that I knew was wrong because now just think about that. If I had done that,
and then if Whitney had had that big record, all those millions of dollars that I made for my
family, my state, because of
that song, I would have had to share that with people I don't even know. So anyway, that was
really a hard decision. But I was just starting my potion company, getting all my eggs back in my own
basket. And I had to think about that as a business minded woman, because when they say you're in show business, I love the show and I
can do that all day. But I knew I had to focus on the business end of show business. And that was
one of those business ends of show business. God, I just thought when I read that, I was like,
she is such a badass. You just are the whole thing on the business part. All right. Last thing I want to talk about before we go to our rapid fire questions, shame.
Shame, oh, hard.
We have found in our work that shame cannot survive being spoken or in your case sung.
And I experience you as a very shame resilient person, very skilled at not internalizing
the messages that tear people down.
Because I love the way you talk about your dad in the book and how he was the inspiration behind Imagination
Library. So this is your organization that you started in 1995 to provide free books for children,
150 million books to more than 1.6 million children across the globe.
Your dad never learned to read or write.
I just read this over and over. You told him, your dad, that there was no shame in not knowing
how to read or write. And you said, Daddy, there are probably millions of people in the world who
don't know how to read or write, who didn't get the opportunity. Don't be ashamed of that. Instead,
let's go do something special. Yeah. There's no shame in a lot of things that
people are ashamed of, like that with my dad. He was so embarrassed that he couldn't read and write.
And to him, he felt shamed. But that's not the feeling he should have had. He didn't know. But
he thought because he couldn't read that that was something to be ashamed of. But after we got the Imagination Library going and I built it because of him, he helped me with it.
He felt like he'd done something really special.
He never did learn to read.
I wanted him to kind of hopefully like maybe read the little books and stuff.
But he thought that was just too late for him.
But he felt so proud to be part of that, that we were getting books in the hands of kids that could read in their most impressionable years, learn how to do that.
But anyhow, I will always be so proud of my dad and that I got to share something great with him, something that has grown to where it is now.
And daddy passed away several years ago, but he did live long enough to see the Imagination Library doing good.
But I often think if there is such a thing as people looking down and I often want to feel like they are.
And I just know my dad is so proud of me and I want to think he's proud of himself.
Were you surprised how many people reached out to you about not being able to read and write and how hard that was for them and
how you gave them permission? Yes. Daddy lived long enough to hear that too, because when I
started that program 25 years ago, we were getting all this mail and people were so touched by me
telling that story about daddy. And I would read letters to daddy that I would get saying that this has touched
them so much and that I couldn't read or my mother couldn't read or this couldn't read.
And this has just been an amazing thing. Of course, the kids got the benefit of the books,
but there were so many grown people that couldn't read and write that it just healed and touched on
a whole nother level.
And so good things work together for good to those that love the Lord. And I truly believe that.
Yeah. And just another example of you speaking truth to shame, just saying that we're not
defined by these things. It's just so powerful. Well, we're not. And so I know I have so many people, speaking of the shame thing, people that tell me horrible things that happened to them in their childhood, maybe by an abusive parent or some horrible sex crimes committed against them.
And they think it's their fault and they're living in shame.
It's not their fault. But also, they don't have to be defined by that if they can
find a light and the way to actually brighten up their own little light and try to forgive,
if you can, the darkness that was in that person that did that to them. It's not their shame.
They're ashamed that it happened, but they can't't distinguish the great shame was from the person
the people that were doing it to them but they can be brought into the light with enough love
and if you throw enough light on that situation to say honey it's not your fault you didn't do
anything wrong but let's try to make it right with you and try to have them love themselves enough to come out of that and to see that they still have a life ahead.
And it's just horrible.
Who knows what kind of a life that people doing that to them has had before.
But you can't think about that now.
You've got to think about what we've got to deal with right now of what these people are going through that live their whole lives
not knowing they can have a life out of it and to be able to forgive. Of course, you'd never forget
a thing like that, but you can forgive to the point of being able to move on and to find your
own beautiful self. You do an incredible job. I love the way you frame that of shining a light
in dark places so that people
can find love. That's so much about what your work is for so many of us. I'm grateful for that.
Well, that's what you do too. You help people try to shine a light on the darkness out there
and in the dark spots of their own lives. It's hard to shine a light into those dark places.
You don't want to relive it. You don't want to remember it. You think you're going to forget it, but you never are. So it's best just to get it out,
tell somebody with a good heart and a good mind and enough love to say, hey, let's just work this
out. I'll help you with that. Are you ready for some rapid fire questions?
Oh, I guess. Is this going to be scary? No, it'll be fun. But I will have to ask you this first. So my meemaw,
my grandmother, who was a beauty operator in San Antonio, married to a brewery forklift driver,
she thought you were the best thing since sliced bread. And every time we would talk about you
when we were growing up, she's long since gone, but she would always say
one day, she didn't know about Carl apparently, because she'd say one day, Dolly Parton's going
to marry Burt Reynolds. It's going to be the best day of my life. Oh, she loved Burt Reynolds. She
didn't love me. She loved Burt Reynolds. Well, I didn't know what this meant when I was little
until I asked my mom one time.
And boy, she was not happy because she used to always tell me, oh, they called me sissy
because I was the oldest of four.
Oh, sissy.
Burt Reynolds could leave his boots under my bed anytime.
And I never knew what that meant until I asked my mom one time.
And oh, boy.
So tell me, can you just, for my grandmother, can you just tell me what was your relationship with Burt Reynolds were y'all good friends yes we were very good friends we were
very much alike and I used to make jokes about Burt because you know he was short and he kind
of wore the lifts in his shoes and stuff you know when he was no no no no well you asked me so shut
up anyway he was no I just mean to like you know where he was like i was short in order to be a little taller than me
we had to put the lifts in his shoes and i'd say okay burt we're too much alike to have romance
you know like we both wear wigs we both have a roll around the middle and we both wear high
heel shoes and he hated he hated when i'd say that i said'd say, he said, you're going to kill the magic. I said, no, I'm just being funny.
Sort of.
I thought he was like 6'5".
No, no.
He was only about, I would say about 5'8", 5'9".
Maybe 5'9".
We both wear high heel shoes.
Well, he has a little toupee and stuff he wore.
He was like, I said, we both wear wigs.
I said, we both have a roll around the middle.
But anyway.
That is so funny. You just killed it. Well said, we both have a roll around the middle. But anyway. That is so funny.
You just killed it.
Well, anyway, he got a kick out of it.
But no, we were just good friends.
We laughed a lot.
And we're very similar.
Wow.
Okay.
In our personality.
Yeah.
All right.
Ready for the rapid fire?
I guess.
Okay.
Fill in the blank for me.
Vulnerability is?
Well, allowing yourself to be smart,
but open to whatever you need to be dealing with at the time.
But let your head go first.
Beautiful. Okay.
You, Dolly, are called to be very brave,
but your fear is real.
You can feel it in your throat.
What's the very first thing you do when you have to be brave?
I always just think my desire to do it is greater
than my fear of it. And I just pray about it and go. Love it. Okay. What is something that people
often get wrong about you? I don't know. I think probably people don't really know what a quiet
person I am. I'm so centered within myself. And when I don't have to talk, I feel like I'm always
having to be on because somebody wants me to be on or they're wanting something from me.
But I'm basically like when I go home, I'm very quiet. I'm very still within myself. So I think
people would be surprised to know what a calm person I really am. I can see the centeredness
though, to be honest with you. Okay, number four, the last television show that you binged and loved.
Oh, I guess that would be my heartstrings.
Yes.
Well, actually, I did enjoy watching it only because I loved all the people that were in it.
And I wanted to see if it turned out because we were working so hard.
We were just doing one right after another.
But I only didn't get a chance to actually watch them like on TV because we were so involved in the producing it and editing.
And it's just sort of like when you cut a record, you're so involved in it.
You don't even know what you've got.
So I did watch all those just to see how they looked on television.
Those are on Netflix and they're great.
Yeah, well, they were just fun things to do.
I'd always wanted to do a bunch of songs with that.
Honestly, I don't get a chance to watch much TV.
I don't get a chance to listen to much music.
I'm so involved in doing things for TV.
I'm so involved in writing songs that I don't really have a lot of outside interest.
Favorite movie?
Oh, favorite movie around Christmas time.
I think It's A Wonderful
Life, but I think Dr. Zhivago is my personal favorite. God, that's a tough movie. Jeez,
Louise. I know, but I love it, don't you? Yeah, I do love it, but it's hard. Well,
I loved it all. It's just crazy, heavy duty. A concert that you'll never forget? Oh, probably
the show that we did with Kenny Rogers when all those great artists were performing his songs.
And I was part of it, but I was watching that concert with all those people.
And of course, I'll never forget that concert with Kenny and being the last on the show to finish that off.
But watching all those other wonderful people pay tribute to him with all those incredible songs.
Favorite meal? Favorite meal would have to do something all those incredible songs. Favorite meal?
Favorite meal would have to do something with potatoes in it.
I like potatoes, but I love like chicken and dumplings, a bowl of slaw,
just a bowl of mashed potatoes on the side.
I'd be in heaven.
Butter and gravy or just straight up?
Butter and gravy?
Well, I got butter on my biscuits and a bowl of gravy.
Okay. What's on your nightstand? Well, my little Bible and my little book of meditation,
my little tape recorder, if I dream a song, I have a notepad and a bottle of water.
Give me a snapshot of a very ordinary moment in your life that brings you true joy?
Oh, I don't know. Almost any pleasant thing, just sitting around with my husband on the swing at our big old house. There's just one swing. We love to sit in and watch the sunset. So that's just a
peaceful time. And I love that. Tell me one thing you're grateful for right now.
I am grateful for every good thing that's ever happened to now. I am grateful for every good thing
that's ever happened to me.
I am grateful for the gift that I have
to be able to do and say things to help somebody else.
I'm just grateful for my life.
It's been a good one.
It's beautiful.
Okay, we asked you for five songs
that you couldn't live without.
You gave us Amazing Grace by Elvis Presley.
He's Got the Whole World in His Hands by Mahalia Jackson.
He's Alive by Dolly Parton.
I Will Always Love You, Whitney Houston.
And He Stopped Loving Her Today, George Jones.
In one sentence, what does this playlist say about Dolly Parton?
It captures every emotion that I have.
It makes me laugh. It makes me cry. It makes me spiritual. It makes me feel all the colors that I am. And I am a girl of many
colors. Oh my God. Thank you for this time with us on Unlocking Us. They always say, be careful
about meeting your heroes. Definitely they had not met you because you have meant so much in my
life and so much in my life and
so much to so many people. And the only thing that I wish is that my grandmother was alive
to hear the duet between you and Willie Nelson on your Christmas album.
Is she the one that loved Burt Reynolds?
She is.
We wouldn't tell her that part about Burt, right? He was handsome. He was handsome. He was great,
and I did love him. But thank you so much for having me.
You have a lot of fans and hopefully your fans will enjoy our conversation.
And I thank you so much.
I know they will.
Thank you.
Okay.
Bye-bye.
Happy holidays.
Happy holidays.
Just pinch me, like pinch me, wake me up from this dream or don't pinch me and let me stay in it. Actually. It's just, you know, it was a more serious conversation than maybe a lot of you've
heard with Dolly. But for me, as you know, from listening, she was a serious person in my life for real reasons. If you are a Dolly fan, and who isn't, the Dolly Parton song teller book,
the coffee table book, is just what an incredible book and what an incredible gift to give to
someone who loves Dolly. She also has an album out right now, A Holly Dolly Christmas, which
debuted at number one on Billboard's country albums and holiday charts. That's where she has a duet with Willie Nelson.
Ah, pretty papers. My grandmother would have died. She has A Christmas on the Square musical special
directed by Debbie Allen, the choreographer and dancer, incredible, coming to Netflix on November 22nd.
She has a hundred other things going on at all times, and we will put links to everything on
her episode page on brennabrown.com. You can find Dolly online. She's just Dolly Parton on Twitter
and Instagram and Facebook, and her website's dollyparton.com. She's given us such a gift,
the gift of song, of empathy, of truth, of connection. The imagination library just has
changed so many people's lives. And if that's not enough, one thing that was just announced
is she gave a million dollars to Vanderbilt, who is studying one of the new vaccines that's showing a ton of hope for COVID. I picked the right hero, right? And just so grateful that we all got to
spend some time with her today. I feel like I'm learning something every week from these
conversations and that they're truly unlocking stories that show us how connected we are.
And I'm grateful that we get to be together and learn and laugh and meet some incredible
people.
This week on the Dare to Lead podcast, I talk with Guy Raz, the creator and host of the
popular podcast, How I Built This.
And he's got a book out by the same title, which I think is just should be required reading
in business schools.
And I think that's it. Stay awkward, brave,
and kind. And I will see you guys next week, or I will be in your ears next week. Grateful for you.
Thank you. 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. We are part of the Vox
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