Unlocking Us with Brené Brown - Brené with Father Richard Rohr on Breathing Under Water, Falling Upward, and Unlearning Certainty, Part 2 of 2

Episode Date: December 21, 2022

In Part 2 of my conversation with Father Richard Rohr, we talk about facing our shadows and living and loving through the second half of life, and we laugh. A lot. What a gift to be with him at the Ce...nter for Action and Contemplation in Albuquerque. A deep and true blessing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi everyone, I'm Brene Brown, and this is Unlocking Us. We are back with part two of a very special conversation with Father Richard Rohr. We had this conversation in person at the Center for Action and Contemplation in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Ooh, what a sacred trip that was. I just, again, an incredible place, doing deeply meaningful work. I got to meet the staff, got to meet Opie, the dog, and living heart of the center, I think. In the first episode, we talked about some of my favorite quotes from Breathing Underwater, Spirituality and the 12 Steps. And in this one, we're talking about quotes from another one of my favorites,
Starting point is 00:00:41 Falling Upward, A Spirituality for the Two Halves of Life. We talk about the powerful trinity of paradox, contradiction, and mystery, why I miss church so much, and how hard it is to unlearn and let go of certainty. I'm glad you're here. Support for this show comes from Macy'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. 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. From October 9th to October 16th,
Starting point is 00:01:10 get amazing deals on shoes and boots on sale at 30 to 40% off. And you can shop new styles during the Macy's Fab Fall Sale from October 9th to October 14th. Shop oversized knits, warm jackets, and trendy charm necklaces and get 25 to 60% off on
Starting point is 00:01:26 top brands when you do. Plus, get great deals on cozy home accessories from October 18th to October 27th. Shop in-store or online at Macy's.com. I just don't get it. Just wish someone could do the research on it. Can we figure this out? Hey, y'all. I'm John Blenhill, and I'm hosting a new podcast at Vox called Explain It To Me. Here's how it works. You call our hotline with questions you can't quite answer on your own. We'll investigate and call you back to tell you what we found. We'll bring you the answers you need every Wednesday starting September 18th. So follow Explain It To Me, presented by Klaviyo. Before we get started, let me tell you a little bit about Father Richard. He is a Franciscan friar and teacher, an internationally recognized author and spiritual leader.
Starting point is 00:02:21 He teaches primarily on incarnational mysticism, non-dual consciousness and contemplation, with a particular emphasis on how these affect the social justice issues of our time. He is the author of, I don't know, 60 books, and he has been a huge influence on my life. I wanted to connect with him about his writings and ask him about a number of my favorite quotes. I'm glad you're here. Father Richard, welcome back to part two. Well, good to be with you. Easy to be with you.
Starting point is 00:02:51 Thank you. Oh, easy to be with you too. Thank you. Okay, can I start this podcast with a great story? Yes. So a couple of weeks ago, I was interviewing Bono, the lead singer for U2. Oh, yeah. And we're sitting on the stage, and just like right here in your office in Albuquerque, I had 10 pages of notes.
Starting point is 00:03:17 And about 30 minutes into the interview, we're talking about God. The name of his book is Surrender. Yes. And he says, let me ask you something. Have you ever heard of a fellow named Richard Rohr? No. He said that. And I said, what?
Starting point is 00:03:38 And we were already in weirdly connected, divinely connected in this moment. And I said, have I ever heard of Richard Rohr? Yes, I've read every book he's written. And then I turned and I showed Bono this page of seven quotes of yours that I wanted to ask him about. And he said, whoa, man, we're synced up. And I said, yeah. Yeah, he's. Bono and Brene via Richard Rohr.
Starting point is 00:04:07 He's a spiritual son to me. He just, he gets it. Yeah, he gets it. We were talking about paradox. And transfers it to the music realm, which I know nothing about, so it's wonderful. You know, I wore this T-shirt for you today.
Starting point is 00:04:24 You did? Johnny Cash. Johnny Cash. Ishirt for you today you did Johnny Cash Johnny Cash I always think of you as the Johnny Cash of God I don't know why I always think truth teller he's the guy in Folsom Prison
Starting point is 00:04:37 yeah yeah I can see why you'd say that alright let's go. Okay, let's go. Spirituality, this is falling upward. All right. Spirituality for the two halves of life.
Starting point is 00:04:52 Okay. You write, in the second half of life, we do not have strong and final opinions about everything, every event, or most people, as much as we allow things and people to delight us, sadden us, and truly influence us. Oh, I'm glad I wrote that. That's in the second half of the book. Yes, it is. I'm experiencing this right now.
Starting point is 00:05:19 I'm in my 50s. Oh. And all of a sudden, I keep thinking to myself, man, I should have done more stuff in my 30s when I knew everything. Yes, because you have this low level of healthy doubt about everything you say and believe and do. I do. Yeah, yeah, that's good.
Starting point is 00:05:42 It is? As it should be, yeah. You don't think we should be getting more certain? See, wherever you got that from, it's not the true gospel. We have two great traditions of spirituality. One, forgive the big words, one was called the cataphatic. Have you heard that word before? I have.
Starting point is 00:06:01 And the other is the apophatic. The Western Church almost entirely, except for the Catholic mystics and a few Protestants like George Fox and so forth, we never taught the apophatic after the first few centuries. And the apophatic is knowing by not knowing, coming to clarity by not needing to be so certain. That's what I'm saying there. First half of life is filled with opinionated people, like most of America. I don't mean to be anti-American, but people's level of opinion is just sad today. They're so certain, and they're not even well-educated about the subject. It's usually a prejudice. Yeah. I call it common enemy
Starting point is 00:06:56 intimacy. Oh, yes. I don't know you, but we hate the same people. We both hate together. Yeah, we hate together. That's how we're hate together. Yeah, we hate together. That's how we're in community. Right, right. Wow, so this whole idea that in the second half of life, we allow things and people to delight us, sadden us. It's just they are what they are. And truly influence us. Yeah, I love this.
Starting point is 00:07:20 Okay, second quote. Oh, this is a doozy. Too much. One of the great surprises is that humans come to full consciousness precisely by shadowboxing. Oh. Facing their own contradictions and making friends with their own mistakes and failings. People who have had no inner struggles are invariably both superficial and uninteresting. We tend to endure them more than communicate with them because they have little to communicate. Oh God, that's true.
Starting point is 00:08:00 That is. He says good things. But you know, see, I've forgotten that I ever said that. I've forgotten that I believe it. Do you still believe it? Oh, very much so. The only roadway into the unconscious, which is most of all of us, is through shadowboxing, facing your own dark side, your own contradictions, the paradox that you are. There's no other way we get into the unconscious except crawling through the shadows.
Starting point is 00:08:40 If it's all about certitude and light, I believe this. I know that to be true. And God gives that to children, thank God. When I see smiling, happy children, who of us isn't happy for them? But it can't last. You can endure it even through your teenage years to the senior prom, as we were saying before, but soon after, maybe at the senior prom, you have to see how selfish you are,
Starting point is 00:09:11 how narcissistic you are, whatever. It's always, your shadow is not your bad self. You know this. No. It's just what you don't want to see about yourself. Now, why is it you don't want to see about yourself. Now why is it you don't want to see something because it's covering up what you don't like
Starting point is 00:09:30 about yourself. So I dare not look at it. People who help you see your shadow in a gentle way. They can't push it in your face. It's what a good marriage is for I think. And if It's what a good marriage is for, I think.
Starting point is 00:09:46 And if it's not a good marriage, it isn't any good for you. Mm-hmm. It's, yeah. It's interesting because I call my 50s this reckoning, Brene's home for wayward girls. Like I'm having to call all these parts of myself back home. Perfect. That I wanted to really orphan.
Starting point is 00:10:09 Yes. Do you know what I mean? And the things that I didn't think were allowed to coexist. I know. I know. You have this great line. I can't remember it. I don't know what it's from.
Starting point is 00:10:20 But it's one of the lines I read to Bono, because we were talking about paradox. And you said about straddling the tension of opposites, that Jesus was crucified between a good thief and a bad thief. Yes. Between heaven and earth. A male body and a female soul. A male body and a female soul. What else did I say? Just this whole idea that these two things can be true at the same time.
Starting point is 00:10:53 Yeah. There are saints, mystics, who said that you can almost tell the truth of a doctrine. And I would agree with this, if it has a character of paradox to it. Let me take our central one as Christians, Jesus human and divine. That's a paradox. They normally cancel one another out,
Starting point is 00:11:19 but we hold them together. Mary is virgin and mother. They normally cancel one another out. God is virgin and mother. They normally cancel one another out. God is three and one. There's always, no, that can't be. So they're set up to invite you into non-dual thinking, mystical thinking. Oh, I love this. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:42 I just. Oh, you get it. I do. And that's part of what I said to the Pope when we had our half hour together, was unless we get this mind, all of our doctrines that we teach in the Catholic Church are unable, unable to be understood by contemporary people because they can't deal with paradox, contradiction, and mystery. And you knew if you were Catholic for a while, you know, it's bread, but it's Jesus. It's bread, but it's Jesus. And that's meant to be a big slap in your logical face.
Starting point is 00:12:23 How could it be? How could it be? But that's the mysteries of faith, right? Yeah, that's the mystery of faith. Well, the mystery of faith is the Paschal mystery. Christ is died, Christ is risen, order, disorder, reorder. That's the biggie. Christ will come again. Yes. And we come to resurrection through a necessary crucifixion. You can't avoid it. You can't hop over it. You can't go under it.
Starting point is 00:12:53 You've got to go through it. It will always be a mystery. Yeah. I was talking to someone about why during COVID I missed church so much. And this person said, I thought you really struggle with a lot of things in church. And I said, I do, but I really love to go for a couple of reasons. I like to pass peace with people that I really think bad things about. I like to go to the rail and take communion with people I kind of want to punch in the face.
Starting point is 00:13:26 And I want to sing with people I don't get along with. And he just said, I don't think that's okay. And I said, I actually think that's— I don't think that's okay. Yeah, but I think—I was like, but isn't church the home of paradox? Isn't it the home— Most people don't think that way. You know, you've heard me use that quote
Starting point is 00:13:46 with Karl Rahner. Either he said by the next century, the church becomes mystical, or we might as well close shop. Yeah. Really? It's only the mystical mind that can endure through the trials that I think are still coming to the earth and so forth. That much sadness, that much tragedy. Carl Jung said the paradox was humanity's greatest spiritual gift and the only thing that came close to describing the real human experience. Really? And who said this? Carl Jung. Oh, yes.
Starting point is 00:14:20 Yeah. Okay. I was going to say, Carl Jung said something just like that. I wasn't listening. Okay, good, good, yes. Yeah. Okay. I was going to say, Carl Jung said something just like that. I wasn't listening. Okay, good, good, good. And speaking of this, this is a paradox you write about in every one of your books. I think this is everything. Your concern is not so much to have what you love anymore. But to love what you have right now.
Starting point is 00:14:45 Love what you have. This is a monumental change from the first half of life. This is what you write. This is bold. So much so that it's almost a litmus test of whether you are in the second half of life at all. Yes. I would still agree with that.
Starting point is 00:15:02 You would. Yeah. You've got to have it when you're young. Accomplish, acquire. That's why most people can't get to love. It's all lust. I've got to have it. I can't enjoy it without controlling it, possessing it. And the Passover line to maturity is when whatever I have is already good.
Starting point is 00:15:27 You know, I can sincerely appreciate it, and I don't have to have things that I don't have. I've often felt that while being in a city like you, I was on the speaking circuit and I'd walk around towns and see these beautiful objects. And, you know, as a Franciscan, I never had the money that I could buy such things. But the freedom, I don't need to buy it. I just look at it and it's beautiful. And that's enough. That's a contemplative mind. It can enjoy without possessing.
Starting point is 00:16:06 It can enjoy without possessing. And when you don't have that, almost all love becomes lust. Oh, here you want a pen. Can I borrow your pen? Well, of course. Is that a great big, oh. It can enjoy. Without possessing.
Starting point is 00:16:21 I'm writing it down, y'all. And my favorite place, in fact, in Houston, was to the art museum to go alone for two hours, you know, and just, I don't have to buy that picture and hang it in my living room. I've seen it, and it's had its effect on me, and I love it. And that is more than enough satisfaction. That's a contemplative
Starting point is 00:16:49 gaze where you enjoy it for being what it is in itself, apart from you. Apart from you. Yeah, apart from you. What software do you use at work? The answer to that question is probably more complicated than you want it to be. The average U.S. company deploys more than 100 apps, and ideas about the work we do can be radically changed by the tools we use to do it. So what is enterprise software anyway? What is productivity software? How will AI affect both? And how are these tools changing the way we use our computers to make stuff, communicate, and plan for the future?
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Starting point is 00:18:13 Can I ask a question? You can ask me anything. You can enjoy it without possessing. One of the things that has been, and it just feels vulnerable to share because it's not a great portrait of me, but I think in my 30s and even into my 40s, I could not appreciate talent and other people without thinking I should be able to do that.
Starting point is 00:18:37 But now I appreciate without having to compete or do. See, you're there. Yes, and I believe you. You couldn't have said it that way otherwise. Yeah, you're so imprisoned. It's a prison. Yeah, yeah. I know this won't surprise you or you either.
Starting point is 00:18:58 Walked with men who have to look up every woman up and down or other men up and down, and then make some crude statement. And it's like, there is nothing wrong with saying that's beautiful, that woman, that man, but that need to have it. I got to have it. And most sexual language reveals that need for possession,
Starting point is 00:19:28 that need to plunder. Is that the right word? I don't know. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's a strong word. Yeah. The second half of life, to be able to enjoy without possessing, appreciate without competing. Yes. Love without possession. Or comparing. Yes, or comparing. Comparing even. It's just that's that and that's that. And I'm bad about that.
Starting point is 00:19:54 I tend to compare. Oh, I'm a comparer too. Yeah, yeah. Is that a little bit of one in the Enneagram? It is. It comes with our judgmental function. I thought we agreed on the first podcast that we were not judgmental. We were great evaluators. Ooh, that's nice.
Starting point is 00:20:10 Evaluators we are. Yes. Oh, I'm much less so now, but I was. Always comparing. I do that with the staff. Aren't you going to give me a smirk he's hard working she's on time those who aren't
Starting point is 00:20:35 are a little less I don't know how I get rid of that it's tough because that's where I got all my points growing up. Sure. Yeah. It's true, most of us. Last two questions.
Starting point is 00:20:50 They're big. Oh. Let's hear them. What is the good word, and what isn't the good word? The good word is whatever, I'm just stabbing at this, but whatever points you toward what we call the three transcendentals
Starting point is 00:21:15 in scholastic philosophy. The good, the true, and the beautiful. The good, the true, and the beautiful. If it points you toward those it's a good word that's why I often think some comedy some
Starting point is 00:21:36 it just teaches you how to be cynical it doesn't point you toward the good, the true, and the beautiful and I enjoy Seinfeld as much as the next person, but just when you go on for half an hour with cynical remarks about everything,
Starting point is 00:21:56 you destroy the contemplative mind. You can't just see the good that's there, the true that's there. The beauty. And the beautiful that's there, the true that's there. The beauty. And the beautiful that's there. In the Franciscan school of philosophy, beauty was the dominant one.
Starting point is 00:22:14 The Dominicans, it was the true, veritas. Veritas. Veritas, yeah. Who had the good? I guess the redemptorists, I don't know, Jesuits. Yeah, probably the Jesuits. This judgmental, critical mind about, and thank God for them.
Starting point is 00:22:34 But if you don't have a desire for the good, the true, and the beautiful, you won't get very far in the spiritual life. You'll settle for very little, put it that way. It's not that you're going to do bad things, but You'll settle for very little. Put it that way. It's not that you're going to do bad things, but you'll settle for very little. The good, the true, and the beautiful. Good.
Starting point is 00:22:54 You never heard that listed that way before? I've never, ever. I mean, Catholic schools, Catholic college, I've never heard. Here's the one good thing. Well, there's probably more than one, but one of the good things. The Catholic field, when you're exposed to it, and most people aren't, is such a big, wide field that you can find plenty that's good there. But the typical church on the corner doesn't give.
Starting point is 00:23:27 We don't have time for that. We just got to teach them mortal sin and venial sin. It's such a shame how few Catholics are really Catholic. And you know it means universal. Universal? Yeah, yeah. Last question. What's your favorite prayer? Do I have one?
Starting point is 00:23:53 You know, they seem to always change. There's never one that I've held on to all my life. Yeah, I don't know. They change with the seasons? I guess so. And the prayer of St. Francis really wasn't composed by St. Francis. What? No, it wasn't.
Starting point is 00:24:13 But it reflects Franciscan spirituality so well that we let people think it was. It's so poetic, too. Do you know it? Oh, yeah. Lord, make me an instrument. too. Do you know it? Oh yeah, Lord make me an instrument. Do you know it? I do. It sounded like you did. Because that's the language of Francis. Don't make me peaceful, make me an instrument of peace for other people. Isn't that good? Yes. So I'll settle for that one today, the peace prayer of St. Francis.
Starting point is 00:24:50 Yeah. I love it. Thank you. Thank you for being on the podcast. Oh, my goodness. The privilege is 100% mine. Thank you, Brene. Wow.
Starting point is 00:25:01 And thank you for inviting me here. Yes. It's amazing. Now you can picture us. Wow. And thank you for inviting me here. Yes. It's amazing. Now you can picture us. Now I can picture you. In our little Adobe's here on Five Points Road. I know. I said, someone of your staff said, is it what you thought? And I said, I didn't know what it was going to look like, but I knew what it was going to feel like. And have we lived up to it all? I hope so. Yeah. I hope so. Thank you. Thank you for what you're doing for the world. Thank y'all again for being here for this two-part special. It meant a lot to me and it
Starting point is 00:25:37 again means a lot to me to be able to share it with you. You can go to BreneBrown.com. Every podcast has an episode page where we put links and quotes and assets and all kinds of great stuff. You can find links to both books here and you can find links to all the books. And I'm so glad that we got to talk to Father Richard. It was just, whenever I go places like that and talk to people, I always think you're with me. Like, so I think we talked to them, the Unluckiness, Awkward, Brave, and Kind community. We were there in New Mexico. We'll be back with more next week. Thanks, y'all. Unlocking Us is produced by Brene Brown Education and Research Group.
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