Unlocking Us with Brené Brown - Brené with Sue Monk Kidd and Jen Hatmaker on Longing, Belonging and Faith

Episode Date: April 28, 2020

In this episode, I talk to two women who provide wise counsel for those of us who have struggled with belonging and faith (and still do on occasion). Sue Monk Kidd and Jen Hatmaker are dissident daugh...ters, brave leaders, and the very best companions for a contemplative journey. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 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. From October 9th to October 16th, get amazing deals on shoes and boots, on sale at 30-40% 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 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. About a year ago, two twin brothers in Wisconsin discovered kind of by accident that mini golf might be the perfect
Starting point is 00:00:46 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, 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. All right, let's talk about the episode today.
Starting point is 00:01:22 Wow, I'm not even sure where to start, y'all. When I heard that Sue Monk Kidd and Jen Hatmaker had books coming out on the same day, I was like, of course they do. Because talking about Dissident Daughters, if you know Sue Monk Kidd's book, you'll know that's a reference to one of her books about struggling with faith and patriarchy and religion and finding voice. And Sue Monk Kidd was the first person to teach me that I could love God, even be in a relationship with church and question some of the man-made rules. And by man-made, I mean man-made rules. She taught me that sometimes the search for myself and my own voice was going to piss
Starting point is 00:02:15 people off. And that included in houses of worship. Jen Hatmaker was someone who in recent history taught me what it looks like to find your voice and hold your ground in the midst of people threatening you, your home, your faith, not your faith, your worshiping home, which is different than your faith, what happens when you're threatened with a loss of belonging, and you have to choose doing what you believe is right and in alignment with your faith and belief versus what the man-made, again, parts of faith and belief say. So what I've done is I've combined these episodes. So I'm going to talk to Sue Monk Kidd first, then I'm going to talk to Jen about both of their new books and also just about their
Starting point is 00:03:06 lives and who they are as, to me, incredible, incredible guides for me on my journey. So let me just give you a little specific information about Sue Monk Kidd. You may know her from The Secret Life of Bees, which spent more than 100 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, sold more than 6 million copies in the US and was turned into an award-winning motion picture and a musical. It's been translated into 36 languages. Her second novel, The Mermaid Chair, was the number one New York Times bestseller and was adopted into a television movie. Her third novel, The Invention of Wings, which was an Oprah Book Club 2.0 pick, was also a number one bestseller. Her memoirs, The Dance of the Dissonant Daughter, which was, again, groundbreaking work on religion and feminism, and the New York Times bestseller she wrote with her daughter, Travel the Heart Waits, it wasn't my midlife dark night of the soul companion. It was my feet. It was my umbrella. It was my everything during my midlife kind of spiritual breakdown slash uprising, maybe. this conversation with Sue Monk Kidd, I think you, I know you will find her as compelling, brilliant, and planted, I can't think of another word, as anyone you've ever met, talked to, listened to, read, Sue Monk Kidd. read Sue Munkhead. I'm a little bit starstruck, so I'm going to take my deep breaths. It's so
Starting point is 00:04:49 funny because sometimes when I meet people at events, the first thing they say to me is, I feel like I know you. Do you get that a lot, Sue? Oh, yes. All the time. Okay. Because I feel like I know you. Yes. And they know a lot more about me than I know about them. So it's kind of weird. Yeah, no, it's completely weird. You have walked with me on some very treacherous paths in my life. Is that right? Yeah. So let me start by saying thank you. Oh, you're welcome. Man, have you been a guide for me.
Starting point is 00:05:28 I have to start with a couple of quotes that I keep near and dear to me going all the way back to When the Heart Waits. Tell me about that book for you? I think every book I write is a scary prospect. And I keep upping the ante all the time. Even when I wrote When the Heart Waits, it was a venture for me into some unknown territory because it was about contemplative spirituality and really had a theme in it of Jungian depth psychology that I was very interested in. And I grew up in a evangelical church. So this was like going to the moon or something, you know, to write this book. So there was that, which is always good to have to take a deep breath before you write something. That's
Starting point is 00:06:25 probably a good sign. But the book was very important to me to write this book. It was deeply honest and it was my interpretation of my process, my own process, that felt classic to me. It felt universal, but I didn't really grasp that until I began to meet readers who would say, that was my journey. That felt like you were talking right about my own experience. So that was in a way both startling and deeply satisfying because I realized that it was a kind of universal experience. And the deeper we go into our own individual journey, the more likely we are to hit the universal. Okay. So can you say that again? Because that is absolutely, if I look back on 20 years of my career, that is an absolute truth. Can you say it again? The deeper we go into our own experience, our own journey, the more likely we are to hit
Starting point is 00:07:40 the universal. It's a strange, almost counterintuitive idea. But if we can look very deeply into our very specific, particular journey and know it as an authentic process, there is the universal in there. And we will likely hit it. I have to say that for me, I read When the Heart Waits, the whole title is When the Heart Waits, Spiritual Direction for Life's Sacred Questions. I read that during my midlife unraveling when I just couldn't carry the armor anymore. The perfecting and the pleasing and the proving was too much to bear. And it literally sat on my nightstand. And I had to be able to see it when I woke up during that crisis. Because if I didn't see it, I felt untethered.
Starting point is 00:08:38 I want to read just a couple of quotes to you from that book, your words. I realized that the heart of religion was setting up an honest dialogue with the uniqueness of one's soul and finding a deeply personal relationship with God, the inner voice, the inner music that plays in you as it does in no one else. Oh, it's a lot of digging to get to the inner music that plays inside of us. Yes, indeed. It's a beautiful experience to find the music. It plays differently in every person. But I really think that the route to that is often through this quieter, more contemplative experience. At least it was for me. Me too. But I just love so much hearing your story about that.
Starting point is 00:09:28 It's kind of awesome to me to hear that. I've got to share one more quote from that book because it really was, I don't know, anyone that's hit mid thirties, I'm like, this is the first book you need to read right here. This is your midlife companion. Okay, so I have always been, Sue, my entire life, very focused, driven, ambitious, kind of type A. And this sentence, I don't know, this sentence undid me.
Starting point is 00:09:56 To know exactly where you're headed may be the best way to go astray. Not all who loiter are lost. Yes, I had to learn to loiter. I started trying to dress it up and call it creative loitering or spiritual loitering or something to make it more palatable to me. But it's true. Some of the best stuff, the best conversations with our soul happen when we're loitering around. In my life, it's always been a conflict that rages in me sometimes. It's quieter in other times. Between this urge to do just what you were talking about, to go. And I too was very ambitious, driven, always doing and doing. And then the other side of me is fighting that, wanting desperately to loiter, to sit quietly and contemplate the God spark somewhere inside of me to just be still. So there's always some conflict
Starting point is 00:11:08 in probably every human heart and that's where the real stories are, you know. And I was always going back and forth with that, trying to find the balance and the wholeness. So I, especially with motherhood, you know, when you're running around just with little toddlers or growing or teens or any kids, I remember that. And I have a painting that really represents that for me. I bought this painting and it's of Mary, the mother of Jesus. And she is sitting in a very bright red dress. And she has a baby kind of, you know how you can put one on your hip and just put your arm around it? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:50 Busy doing something else? For sure. And she has a book open, reading it with the other hand. And I thought, there I am. Yeah. You know? Oh, yeah. Is it book or baby?
Starting point is 00:12:01 Baby or book? What's it going to be? Yeah. There was always this pull in me. Well, no one writes the pull like you do, I can tell you for sure. We're going to work our way quickly, but we're going to work our way to your new book, The Book of Longings. I want to walk the path with you for just a minute, if you'll indulge me on that. Because for me, as someone who is a very devoted reader of your work, I can see how the path brought us to the Book of Longings.
Starting point is 00:12:32 So then The Dance of the Dissident Daughter, A Woman's Journey from Christian Tradition to the Sacred Feminine. Dang, that was a risky book. Well, that was my first taking my own breath away. I've said so many times that every woman must take her own breath away at least once in her life. And I thought that was mine. No, it wasn't. It was the Book of Longings. But at the time, it felt like this one. And I remember sitting at my computer.
Starting point is 00:13:06 I mean, I wrote this book. It's 20, let's see, 24 years old. Is it really? It really is. It came out in 1996, but I was writing it in the years before that even. And I remember sitting there writing these things and thinking, I cannot believe I am writing this. But by God, I'm writing it.
Starting point is 00:13:32 Yeah. You wrote it. Let me read a quote from you that's one of my favorite quotes. And there's so many. That book is more highlighted than it is not highlighted for me. You write, this is The Dance of the dissonant daughter. There is no place so awake and alive as the edge of becoming. But more than that, birthing the kind of woman who can authentically say, my soul is my own,
Starting point is 00:14:01 then embody it in her life, her spirituality, and her community. It's worth the risk and hardship. Yes, it is. You wonder at times, but yes, I think that is a, speaking of universal or classic archetypal woman's journey right there. Yes, that's it. All of it right there in that quote, right? Yes. I mean, it's coming to own our own soul, to find our belonging in ourselves, to belong to ourselves, and to know ourselves and to voice that and to stand by that. It's all a journey. Okay, so then let's talk about the crazy success. Your next book, The Secret Life of Bees. Yeah, who would think? That was such a surprise. Was it?
Starting point is 00:14:59 Oh, yes. Of course it was. Because it's my first novel. I remember telling my mother that I just wanted to write a book that would be respectable and she would like to read and it would have a nice little readership. I never in my life imagined it would have that many readers in the end. I have the stats somewhere in here. Hold on, let me look. Spent more than 100 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, sold more than 6 million copies, which is completely rarefied air. I mean, the rarest of rarefied air, and turned into an award-winning major motion picture and a musical and has been translated into 36 languages. What is it about that book that speaks to us so beautifully?
Starting point is 00:15:47 Yeah, I don't know. I've tried to think about this. And I think there are mysteries about what resonates in people. But that book is about, for me anyway, it's about the search for a world mothering spirit in us. It's about goodness. It's about finding love. It's about finding a home where you least expect it. Maybe not the one you're born into, but the real home. These are our longings, our yearnings in the human soul. And so it must have resonated very deeply with people. If I could write a book that touches the soul, then I'm happy. I mean, people talk about learning things from novels, and I'm all for that. I want people to learn things from my books that they didn't know maybe. But what I really hope for is what Kafka called the ice axe on the frozen sea. I want it right in the heart to touch
Starting point is 00:16:53 the soul if I possibly can. That's where life is transformed and enlivened, where we come alive or go on a journey or start the conversation with ourselves. Yeah. World mothering spirit. For me, the ice axe on the frozen sea, which is such a beautiful quote, the mermaid chair, your next book. Wow. I got to the point where I had to be willing to smell the marsh to open that book. You just took me into this marsh. And it wasn't just the physical marsh. It was emotional marsh for me.
Starting point is 00:17:36 Oh, that's interesting, Brene. Tell me what that book meant to you. Yeah. Well, I have a, as I said, this contemplative side, and I loved to hang out in monasteries, believe it or not. I loved them. And Thomas Merton, who was a Trappist monk, very significant in my formation, I guess you'd say, spiritual formation in my life. Reading his writings, I began my, what I'll call my contemplative journey when I was 29. So the whole monastic world was just vivid for me. You know, Merton had an interesting experience in the later years of his life where he fell in love and had a relationship of some sort with a young woman that brought his feminine side alive. I mean, it brought Merton alive in some interesting ways and a lot has been written about it.
Starting point is 00:18:37 So I thought to myself, what if I reverse that? And I tell the story of Jessie, who's been in midlife marriage and who falls in love with a monk? What kind of crisis would she land in? How would she respond to that crisis? What would it do to her marriage? What would it do to her soul? Plus, I get to write about the whole monastic environment. So that pleased me.
Starting point is 00:19:06 So that's what I did. I see that story as a woman's search to belong to herself. That's how I see it. Oh, it was. Yes, I can see that completely. Yeah. I mean, there's a line in it where she says, all my life, I had tried to complete myself with other people. And now I just want to belong to myself. And that is part of the journey too.
Starting point is 00:19:34 You know, just it's a different, more complex kind of belonging. I mean, of course, we want to have belonging in with people, but the ultimate belonging is with our own soul. And that's, that's the really long walk, right? Oh yeah. The tough one. That's the tough one. Okay. I want to go to, because I want to make sure we can talk about this new book because man, did you just take it on. Tell about writing with Ann your daughter and traveling with pomegranates so my daughter Ann Kidd-Taylor and I wrote this memoir together which we call a mother-daughter story but it's also a story of two women at opposite ends of life. I mean, Anne was right out of college and I was
Starting point is 00:20:27 turning 50 and we went off on this journey together to Greece. And it turned into this extraordinary experience of refinding one another in our lives in new ways. As adults, right? As adults. It was different. Yeah. That's right. But it was also me searching for my third act, I guess you'd say. As adults, right? to do with the rest of my life. And so it's kind of a spiritual journey. And I guess I would also say I was over there looking for Black Madonnas like crazy and discovering feminine divine imagery, which was very exciting to me. And so it informed the writing of The Secret Life of Bees. That's why
Starting point is 00:21:23 Black Madonna turns up in The Secret Life of Bees. That's why Black Madonna turns up in The Secret Life of Bees. So that was a rich experience and many layered memoir, I guess. How was the creative process of writing together? Very interesting. We joked that whenever we told people we were writing a book together, the first thing they would say was, well, are you two still speaking? Which says a lot about mother-daughter experiences. Yeah, it does. But we managed to avoid all of that. And not only were we still speaking, I just learned so much
Starting point is 00:21:58 about her. And it was an intimate experience so that we, I think, became closer through the writing of it, even though we disagreed about some things sometimes. I gave her a card and set it on her desk, and it was a quote by Anais Nin that said, the role of the writer is not to say what we can all say, but what we are unable to say. And I said, that is what we're here to do with this book. And so we did our best and she would write one chapter, her chapter, and I'd write mine. And then we'd switch them and read each other's work and give feedback. That was kind of how it went. And it was a great experience. I hope we can write another one together. Me too. Okay. The invention of wings.
Starting point is 00:22:52 Yeah. The invention of wings happened because I was in the Brooklyn Museum in New York with the Judy Chicago exhibit. Oh, yeah. with the Judy Chicago exhibit. Just awed and excited about it. And I came out just bleary eyed with what I had seen in there. It was mesmerizing. And there was this, at that time, I'm not sure they still have it because I've returned and it wasn't there, but there were these sort of wall, a wall of women's names, 999 of them. And I think I read every one of them. And there was Sarah and Angelina Grimke, these two women who were the first abolition agents in America. And they were from Charleston. And I was living there at the time. And I couldn't believe I didn't know about them. And the more I learned about them, the more excited I became by them.
Starting point is 00:23:51 They were brave. They were brave women. And they fought. I mean, like raw courage, life threatening brave. Definitely. And I just wanted to tell the story. So that's, but I have to say too, I knew that if I told the story of Sarah Grimke, I would have to also tell the story of an enslaved woman
Starting point is 00:24:16 and not really have to, but want to. That was a little daunting because I was writing in the first person voice of an enslaved woman. And so I had to do a lot of research. Happy Book Pub Day, which the Book of Longing just came out. I'm just going to read the back of this book out loud. And then I'm going to try to catch my breath.
Starting point is 00:24:43 Okay. I am Anna. I was the wife of Jesus Ben Joseph of Nazareth. All my life longings lived inside me, rising up like nocturnes to wail and sing through the night. That my husband bent his heart to mine on our thin straw mat and listened was the kindness I most loved in him. What he heard was my life begging to be born. You have written a book about Anna,
Starting point is 00:25:20 the wife of Jesus. We're both just looking at each other. We're on Zoom right now. We're both just looking at each other. Neither one of us is saying anything. She's shaking her head and I'm shaking my head. Walk me into this. Yeah. Okay. It took my breath when I wrote it, frankly, I'll be honest. I didn't write this book lightly, I'll tell you that. I wrote the first lines that you just read. And I wanted her to walk on this literary platform that was this page and announce herself. And this is really a literary announcement. Here I am. This is who I am right off the bat. And I wrote that. And then I sat back and I looked at it. And what came to me was the line I said earlier. I thought, yeah, I went around telling people, you should always do at least one thing in your life that takes
Starting point is 00:26:20 your breath. And I told them I'd already done it, but no, I'm doing it right now. And it's scaring the you know what out of me. And so I felt really, I felt really vulnerable. Yeah. So this book wasn't without some trepidation. And yet, at the same time, this is the book I longed to write. The book I feel like I was put here to write. It was so compelling for me, and my soul demanded it. And I have this thing where I know when I'm being asked to write something, because my heart is talking to me. My soul is talking to me. I try to listen and I believe that longings are one of the most eloquent ways the soul speaks to us. Wait, okay. You have to say it again. Longings are? Well, I'll say it like this. One of the most eloquent ways the soul speaks to us is through longing. And in the book, there is a character named I didn't have to scrape up the courage to do it all the time. I'm just notorious about putting little signs and propping them on my desk. And I even had a bunch of them stenciled on the wall to my study, up the stairwell wall.
Starting point is 00:28:04 What did the sign say? Yeah. One of them said, writing is an act of courage. That's what it is. It all boils down to that. And I would read these every day walking up to my study and try to embody that the best I could. I'm so like mesmerized when you're talking. I'm like forgetting to check my notes and go to the next question because I don't want to take my eyes off you and I don't want to release my ears from your words. There are many things about this book. First of all, I'm going to get to the question about the research behind this book. I have to assume that there was a, I can't even, as a writer, I don't even understand the amount of research that went in this. And I'm a researcher.
Starting point is 00:28:46 But let me talk about this first. Anna longs for the freedom to bring forth what she calls the largeness in herself. Talk to me about, I'm not going to be as eloquent as your character is in terms of talking about longings, but I'm going to tell you where there's some heartbreak in the book for me. You were the first person that convinced me that I could love God and challenge the rules of the church I was brought up in that made me feel small and unseen and unheard. Like you really were, I have to say, honestly, and I'm a very deeply spiritual person still. But you were the first person that I believed when I read that calling the man-made, and I say that with intention, the man-made rules of the church into question did not mean I loved God less. And so when Anna talks about the largeness in herself. Tell me about that, because I grew up believing
Starting point is 00:30:05 my Christian faith worked as long as I was committed to my smallness. Yeah, we do get that message. Now, I believe, now I didn't always know this, but I believe it now, that every person has their own particular genius. That is their largeness. That it's unique to them. It's not that we're special. It's that we're unique and we all have this, I call it the particular genius. And bringing it forth is a life's work. You could talk about this in so many ways, different language, like we are here to create our soul or we're artists creating our souls. I mean, people speak of it in lots of ways. But I think of it as this inner part of us that we bring forth.
Starting point is 00:30:58 And I think we fear it. And this is what Anna says in her prayer. She says, Bless the largeness in me, even when I fear it. It's frightening to think of having this part of ourselves, this magnitude, this passion in ourselves. We're told to be humble and meek and mild. And this is why I love the Black Virgin Mary so much, as they call
Starting point is 00:31:27 her in Europe, the Black Virgin. I'm not real fond of the virgin part, but I do like the Black Madonna. And she is fierce, and she does not have the dipped chin and the humble face and the Lord eyes. She looks you straight in the eye. She places her fist on her knees and she says, here I am. Here's my largeness. I think women need a little more of that. Now, it's not to say that we are being arrogant or thinking too highly of ourselves. I think we contain that in the right way because it's, I think, God-given what is in us. And we're here to create that. I think probably someone asked me one time, what does the soul do? And I thought, how in the world do I know? But what came to me, and I just blurted it out, was the soul loves and the soul creates. And one of the first things the soul learns to do is to love life and to love our own self and our own life and everything around us, you know. But to create
Starting point is 00:32:44 not just tangible things outside of ourselves, but within ourselves, that is to work with our largeness. And Anna does that through the whole story. She is trying desperately, longing desperately to bring forth her largeness as a gift to the world, really. Tell me about the research behind this book. Oh, my Lord. How many years? It had to have been years. Well, I started, it was before I started writing a word, I researched 14 months. And that was like going to school every day for about eight hours. I bet. It was a lot. And there were days I thought, what have I gotten into? But mostly,
Starting point is 00:33:36 I really loved the research. In fact, got almost where I couldn't stop. Oh, yeah, I know that. Yeah. I had to have someone, my daughter, tell me. She did an intervention and told me I had to stop studying the aqueducts, the Roman aqueducts in Galilee and get on with it. It was getting bad. Mostly what I had to research, or I'll say spent the most time on, was the scholarship of the historical Jesus. That was so compelling and amazing to study that. Brene, what I was interested in doing as a novelist was talking about Jesus' human side. Yeah. interested in doing as a novelist was talking about Jesus' human side. I wanted to portray him as a man, a human being, and let us see what is possible. I just read during my endless researching,
Starting point is 00:34:39 I read the work of Marcus Borg. Oh, my God. He's amazing. Well, Steve and I call ourselves Borg again Christians. Well, I am. Count me in. Yeah. And I came across something as I was trying to grapple with the question, how does a person write the character of Jesus? I'm putting words in his mouth and I'm doing all this. It really kind of does take your breath or my own breath. And I came across something Marcus Borg wrote, and he said, there is the pre-Easter Jesus and there is the post-Easter Jesus. And I thought that was absolutely fascinating. And by that, he meant that the human Jesus, the one that was born around 4 BCE and lived and died somewhere around 30 CE, was a real human being and an extraordinary one. And we have somehow lost touch with that
Starting point is 00:35:45 because it has been overshadowed by how much emphasis we have put on his divinity. And, you know, the church doctrine basically is that he's fully human and he's fully divine. But I think most of us have just seen him as divine. And Marcus Borg's point really was that by losing touch with the humanity of Jesus, we have lost the possibilities of what humans are really capable of. And I just thought, that is it.
Starting point is 00:36:20 That's how I want to write pre-Easter Jesus. The post-Easter Jesus is this divine reality that he later became through his followers. So telling the human side of Jesus in those lost years, they call them the unknown years of Jesus, was really thrilling. Have you had tough feedback from people who question whether you should be writing this or not? Well, I'm sure there will be. Yeah, it's new. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:52 I mean, let's give them time. It hasn't really happened that much yet, although I have gotten a few comments, you know, through social media. I know one woman explained to me that she was a Catholic and a good Catholic. And she said, I think you must go to your nearest Catholic church, wherever it might be. You must go kneel before the Blessed Sacrament and you must ask God's forgiveness three times, and then you must write a retraction. Oh, my. Okay. So she was very specific in what I needed to do about it. But yes, you know, there will probably be some controversy about it. But I'm used to rocking boats a little bit. And I went around the controversy block with the Dance of the Dissident Daughter.
Starting point is 00:37:48 Oh, boy. When I was not as able or ready to take it on as I am now. So you learn. Yeah. And you know what? Maybe that's an inherent part of taking your own breath away. Yeah. You know, is speaking, speaking your heart.
Starting point is 00:38:08 The only two words that I have for you really are thank you. Thank you for the longing, but also thank you for your courage. Thank you for giving me personally permission to be a woman of faith, but also to be in my largeness and to challenge ideas that I just felt like were unholy based on their merit. What a gift you've given us in this book and in all your books. That's so gracious, so generous. Brene, thank you for that. You know, I just mostly want to tell a story that sweeps people up, but takes them where they need to go in their lives. And Anna follows her longings. That's what she does with the help of this Aunt Yaltha, who is her lifeline and her cohort.
Starting point is 00:39:06 And she encourages her audacities, I guess we'll say. God, so we need aunts like that, don't we? Oh, man, do we ever. I wish I had an Aunt Yaltha, and we all need one. I discovered my Aunt Yalthas later in life as my girlfriends. Me too. I have Terry, Tricia, and Curly, and they are my Aunt Yalthas. And they bless the largeness in me.
Starting point is 00:39:32 And we bless the largeness in one another. And we say, yeah, go for it. We try to make each other do audacious things and believe in our largeness. And I think that's God given, that largeness. And so what should be blessed, you know? Oh, yes. It's the holiest part of us, don't you think? I do think it is holy. And I feel like not only do we fear it, we don't even believe in it. Yeah. So we have to come to believe that there is so much more in us than we can even imagine. And we all have some passion to bring forth.
Starting point is 00:40:11 So Anna, our protagonist in your new book, The Book of Longings, tell me her prayer one more time, and then we're going to do a rapid 10 questions. Well, there's several lines, but I'll give you two of them. I'll just say quickly, she wrote this prayer in an incantation bowl, and that becomes a central icon in the story. And what she writes in her bowl is, bless the largeness in me, even when I fear it, when I am dust, seeing these words over my bones, she was a voice. Oh, God. Amen. Can I just say amen to that? Yeah. She wanted to be a voice in the world. And I think women's voices, women's stories are so important right now. And that's why this story feels
Starting point is 00:41:08 relevant to me. I think there's just a whole lot of Anna and a whole lot of women. Oh, yeah. Okay. You ready for our quick, our quick 10, our rapid fire? Let's go. Okay. Number one, fill in the blank for me. Vulnerability is? Taking off the armor and being who you are. Number two, you, Sue, are called to be very brave, but your fear is real and you can feel it right in your throat. What's the very first thing you do?
Starting point is 00:41:42 Take a deep breath, plant my feet and say it anyway. Number three, something that people often get wrong about you. That I'm not funny. I'm really funny. Yeah. Yeah. You have to because you write funny too. I mean, like you don't write funny, but you write humor so well. People think I'm very deep and spiritual, but I'm really funny. Okay. We could have a whole podcast about that. How people think deep and contemplative and spiritual and funny are mutually exclusive when I think funny is a prerequisite for contemplative and spiritual. Okay.
Starting point is 00:42:17 Number four, the last TV show that you binged and loved. Killing Eve. So good. Okay. Five, favorite movie. Oh, wow. That's not too rapid. Let's see. I love Sliding Doors by Gwyneth Paltrow. And I love Shirley Valentine. Oh, Shirley. Okay. If you're listening right now and you've never seen Shirley Valentine, I have to tell you I own it and everything from VCR to DVD. Wall. Oh, you have to get Shirley Valentine and listen to her conversations with the wall. I love it so much too.
Starting point is 00:42:55 My favorite. Okay. A concert that you'll never forget. James Taylor. Favorite meal. Lasagna. What's on your nightstand? Untamed for the second time around.
Starting point is 00:43:12 Serene Jones book. Oh, what's it called? Something Grace. Okay, I blew that one. But that's okay. We've got the author. Okay, a snapshot of an ordinary moment in your life that brings you true joy. Oh, sitting in my little circle outside in my backyard with my dog Barney and my husband
Starting point is 00:43:35 Sandy in our rocking chairs, listening to the creek. Heaven. Heaven. Last one. Tell me one thing you're deeply grateful for right now. Talking to a friend. Hmm. Heaven. Last one. Tell me one thing you're deeply grateful for right now. Talking to a friend, expressing what is inside of me and being able to voice it and having it heard. Thank you. Oh my God. Thank you. Sue Monkhead, light bearer, heart unraveler, midlife tour guide. Yes, thank you.
Starting point is 00:44:08 Well, for all you've done through your work, for me, I thank you too. 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?
Starting point is 00:44:35 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? In this three-part special series, Decoder is surveying the IT landscape presented by AWS. Check it out wherever you get your podcasts. Hello, I'm Esther Perel, psychotherapist and host of the podcast, Where Should We Begin?, which delves into the multiple layers of relationships, mostly romantic. But in this special series, I focus on our relationships with our colleagues,
Starting point is 00:45:11 business partners, and managers. Listen in as I talk to co-workers facing their own challenges with one another and get the real work done. Tune into Housework, a special series from Where Should We Begin, sponsored by Klaviyo. Okay, y'all. Was that just... Every now and then you have a conversation that sweeps you away. This swept me away. And I got to see her on Zoom, and sometimes we just looked at each other and smiled and we didn't say anything and we didn't have to and it was incredible. And now we're going to continue this podcast on longing and belonging and faith with my friend Jen Hatmaker. If you follow me on social media, you've seen pictures of me and Jen at UT football games. We are friends IRL in real life. And again, as I said in the intro, she's someone who put into practice what it means to put everything on the line for your faith when people from your
Starting point is 00:46:18 faith home threaten you with expulsion. And she is a mighty, fierce, wonderful woman. Let me tell you a little bit about her. She's the author of 12 books, including the New York Times bestseller of Mess and Moxie, Wrangling Delight Out of This Wild and Glorious Life, For the Love, Fighting for Grace in a World of Impossible Standards, and Seven, An Experimental Mutiny Against Excess. Jen is also the creator and happy host of the award-winning For the Love podcast with Jen Hatmaker. She is the curator of the Jen Hatmaker Book Club and a sought-after speaker. She tours the country all the time. Sometimes we're lucky enough to end up in the same places. She and her husband, Brandon,
Starting point is 00:47:10 founded the Legacy Collective and also starred in the popular series, My Big Family Renovation and Your Big Family Renovation on HGTV. Jen is a mom to five, a zealous resident of Austin, Texas, where she and her family are helping keep Austin weird and a fellow Longhorn supporter. Let's lean into a conversation with Jen around her new book, which is just incredible, which is called Fierce, Free, and Full of Fire, The Guide to Being Glorious You. Jen Hatmaker. Jen Hatmaker. Hi. I see you in your Texas Forever t-shirt. You know, it's so true. I'm just trying to remember that I'm a human person. And that one day I will walk back out of this house and I will see I will see another human person. And oh, man, you are on the other hand, have a real lady shirt
Starting point is 00:48:00 on it has a fluffy sleeve and flowers on it. You just, I am really impressed what I'm looking at right now. I am phoning it in Brene real hard. Like my hair feels a little itchy right now. Do you know what I mean? Yeah. I have on a real lady shirt over a real lady bra that I've had on for the first time in five days. So I had to salute you. I had to do it because I don't know what happened yesterday, which was, what was the date yesterday? What month are we in? I know. Yesterday was the 22nd of April.
Starting point is 00:48:32 April. Okay. That was a hard day for me. And I don't know what happened. Like, I am like, am I going to stay married? Am I going to like, like, what is happening here? I am going crazy. Yep.
Starting point is 00:48:45 So I was really looking forward to just seeing your face today and talking about Fierce, Free and Full of Fire, your new book. Thank you. Thanks for having me on. I had that day, by the way, last Friday, where I thought, are we going to stay married? Am I going to continue to parent these kids? Yeah. Because I could get rid
Starting point is 00:49:05 of one and still have four. You know, that's still a lot. And so I that is a that's a that's a crew. Yeah, I mean, I can, you know, we've got some wiggle room in here. It's what I'm saying. So I hear you. And I appreciate you always being so honest about that because anybody who's telling the truth right now is saying that we are all having some real days where we are just slogging through. And I had that too. We kind of just had to have a real come to Jesus all weekend and be like, we got to figure out how to pull out of this. But same over here. I'm with you. Okay.
Starting point is 00:49:44 There's so many things I want. I'm with you. Okay. There's so many things I want to talk to you about. Okay. To set up this episode for our Unlocking Us community, what I explained is that I wanted to do you and Sue Monk Kidd together because as a person of faith, and for me, person of faith is synonymous with a person of struggle. I just set this whole thing up by saying Sue Monk Kidd taught me that I could love God and question the man-made parts of the church. And by man-made, I specifically mean man-made parts of the church.
Starting point is 00:50:18 Yep. And that you have inspired me to stay in my fire and to stay fierce in those challenges, despite massive consequences. Yeah. Yeah, you have. Thank you. So I want to talk about fierce, free and full of fire. What you learned, what you're putting into practice. But I don't want to bullshit people because I also want to talk about the price. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:53 It's higher not to do it, but let's talk about the price too. All true. And it doesn't serve us well at all to gloss that part over or to pretend pretend like that's not real, or that it doesn't cause actual pain, or even like real loss, that would not be a fair discussion here. And so fierce is kind of the culmination of what I lived and learned and really earned. Did you say earned? Yeah. Okay, wait, I just want to stop right there. Lived, learned and really earned. Did you say earned? Yeah. Yeah. Okay, wait, I just want to stop right
Starting point is 00:51:25 there. Lived, learned, and fully earned. Yeah. Right. I think the best stuff is earned. Yeah. It's the stuff that we face head on, even when it's scary and terrifying and hard and even guaranteed to cause some suffering for us, right? Where we know automatically there's loss built into this or I can't control the outcome of this. And still it is the right thing to do. It is the right path to take. That's earned freedom. That's what I feel like this is.
Starting point is 00:51:56 You know, I love that you're setting up this episode the way that you are in this faith packaging. I came up through just a very conventional, traditional, organized religion space. That's the only worldview I knew. I didn't have another perspective. I didn't have any competing ideas. I didn't even know to question that until I was older.
Starting point is 00:52:19 And so I realized that I got to a point in my adult life where a whole truckload of conventions that I had been handed, which I just received, by the way, unquestioned. I was a very type A rule follower type. And so my idea of ambition was to be the best good girl there was. I would follow all the rules the best. I would hit all the rules the best. I would hit all the marks the best. I would be the most compliant, the most obedient, the most certain and sure of everything that I knew, which was also high currency in that community. And I was. I was really good at that.
Starting point is 00:52:57 I was a darling. And I built a huge career there, by the way. And so I built this entire world and then started noticing as I got older, saw more, heard more, listened more, learned more, experienced more. My worldview expanded. The people in my community began teaching me things. I started paying attention. I'm like, oh no. Oh gosh. Oh, some of this doesn't match what I believe. Some of this I don't think is true. Some of this is built on systems of injustice and white supremacy and misogyny and patriarchy and homophobia. And now what am I going to do? Because I'm like a poster girl over there, right? But let me ask you this. I want to slow us down.
Starting point is 00:53:49 What did that physically feel like and emotionally feel like for you? Okay, if y'all could see Jen right now, every therapist will know this. She's in full-on face rub. She's wiped the eyebrows off her face right now. I want to know what the inconsistency felt like for you emotionally and physically. Thank you for asking that question. It's a good one. I was so assured from such a young age and not even just subtly, overtly assured that I could not trust myself, that something was bad about me. My heart was bad, deceitful and wicked. My mind was bad.
Starting point is 00:54:34 Ambition was bad. 100% questioning a structure or an authority was very bad, completely frowned upon. So that something inside of me was just off. And I just thought, golly, I guess I'm just going to have to just do better to earn approval somehow. And so it never occurred to me that I could trust anything about myself, my instinct, my own good eyes and ears paying attention to systems and rhythms that were breaking people's hearts. I couldn't trust my gut. I couldn't trust what felt true. And so when those things started to rub for me, when I started to realize that I was one gen in this room, this big public room that everybody can see. And I, I knew about that room and I knew the language of that room, but I was a different gen over here in this little private room that it was, that was
Starting point is 00:55:29 the only safe room I had. It was very small. Nobody can see it. Nobody knew that I was visiting it. But when I started to realize that those two things were disintegrating, I was terrified. I felt physically sick. I stopped sleeping. I defaulted to the mechanism, which is the reason this is making me feel so with so much turmoil is because something's wrong with me. I'm not allowed. I'm thinking the wrong thoughts again. Here I am questioning some things and it's making me feel bad, but my body was trying to tell me that I had permission to trust myself, that I had permission to trust what was true and good and right. And when something I was handed and I was told this is true and good and right, but what I see at the other end of this is pain and suffering and loss and sorrow and exclusion.
Starting point is 00:56:19 It felt terrifying to question. I didn't know that I could. I didn't know other people had. I was still in the private room. I was in the private room. I didn't know. I didn't know. I didn't know I was allowed. But what is system where it tells you all the rules and then tells you if you start to question them or something feels off and you feel sick, it's because you're questioning them. I mean, that is a good system. That's a winner system. That's like a winner football playbook right there. I mean, it's just a built in mechanism right there. Yeah, to assure you that you are off the path. And it works. It's very, very effective. Because here's the deal, Brene, like we're talking about this in a faith context. But I bet a lot of women can understand this because we have
Starting point is 00:57:06 these subgroups, these subcultures that we are a part of, and they all have their own set of rules. You know, they all have this set of expectations and we know what they are. Like I knew what they were and in my world, and I don't think it's just mine. I think this is in a lot of spaces, actually. The currency was belonging. And so I knew when I hit my marks, when I give the room what it wants, I get to belong. That's my prize. That behavior will be rewarded. But these types of behaviors, the ones that I had over in my little private room, the questions that I was asking, the systems I was pushing on, the doctrines I was reexamining. If I bring any of those behaviors in the private room to the big public room, belonging will be the first thing
Starting point is 00:57:53 that gets revoked. That's the punishment. And I knew it. Yeah. Now you're into neurobiology too, because now you're into the need to belong is hardwired in us. So you're in your room, you're physically sick, you're not sleeping, you know something's wrong. Tell me about the cascade of decisions you have to make and how that plays out. Here's the thing. Women will just never, ever thrive. We will not flourish if the cost of belonging is our silence. Like we can keep it up for a while, you know, for a while. And I did, I patch worked the thing together.
Starting point is 00:58:36 Me too. It was all starting to leak out, you know, because it does, it was leaking out and it would cause a lot of turbulence. And my community would be like, no, those are not things we say. Those are not people we align with. These are not questions we ask. And it would be so swift and so punitive, which I knew. So then I would spend two or three weeks just being unimpeachable. Do you know what I mean? I will just be absolutely adorable. I will be charming. I will say something that cannot be disagreed with. I will hold the thing together somehow and kind of repair it. So I had all these little stabs in the fabric have built it and where you've built it, as you know it. Or you are going to get to hang on to your integrity, but you do not get both.
Starting point is 00:59:33 These are incompatible. So you pick. And I picked my integrity. And I decided that the cost of my silence was too high. The cost of my silence was too high. The cost of my integrity was too high. I couldn't pay it. I couldn't pay it for another day.
Starting point is 00:59:55 So I just said, if the whole thing burns, if not one bit of it ever gets rebuilt, and I didn't know if it would, I had no idea. I didn't know if I would rebuild. I didn't know where I would go. I didn't know who would have me. I didn't know what other kind of community I would land in. I didn't even know if that was a thing. But I just said, even if it isn't, like even if it isn't, there is a comfort in being true. It is its own reward. Integrity is its own reward. And it was. And it held. It held me tight. It held me fast
Starting point is 01:00:25 long before anything recovered. Tell me about the decision. You made a real decision. This was not a theoretical exercise. You made a decision, huge financial consequences, huge career consequences. Tell me what the decision was. Tell me what you decided and how things fell apart. Right. Okay. So there's a big umbrella under sort of the faith structure that I was in. And it was very much, it was founded upon and dependent upon a lot of systems of oppression, not the least of which is patriarchy. I mean, that's, that's its whole skeleton and racism. I mean, there was a lot in there. And so I started to notice that my allyship with people of color was creating a ton of turmoil. That just the white fragility
Starting point is 01:01:16 inside that conversation was untenable. That was the big tear. So things were starting to kind of unravel. But for me, apparently, ultimately, the straw that breaks the camel's back in that particular system is unequivocable allyship and support and affirmation for the LGBTQ community. And so that is the thing. That's the one. It can sustain, the system can sustain some of those smaller tears in the fabric, but not that one, at least not at the time. And so when Brandon and I decided that we had to pick our integrity, we had to pick this community, we had to pick justice. So this was a justice issue
Starting point is 01:02:00 for crying out loud. We knew the cost. And so that was a very public, I guess, declaration, if you will. And then the cost was immediate, immediate and fast and punitive. It was just like loss upon loss for a while. I just never thought about it. It was like, yeah, it was like Dixie chick reaction. It was like your books. I mean, it was like they pulled your books out of bookstores. Oh yeah. And out of print, not just out of bookstore. It was like your books. I mean, it was like, they pulled your books out of bookstores. Oh, yeah. And out of print, not just out of bookstore, it's like out of print books that were selling and, and still being bought and read out of print. And, and then it was just, as we mentioned earlier, complete excommunication of the community, you know, the book, my belonging
Starting point is 01:02:40 was immediately pulled. And so to your earlier point, that is real loss and real pain. It's not fake and it's not easy. And so I hope in fierce, I have told the truth about that, that I did not make that seem like a simple step just to get past. No, you didn't. But I'm telling you, did you ever get to meet my friend, Rachel Held Evans? Did you ever get to talk to her? Do you know all we ever did was exchange messages on Twitter? Yeah. Oh, I wish you could have known her, Brene. I do too.
Starting point is 01:03:17 She was so special. Right when all that was going down and everything was just on absolute fire, just absolute fire. I couldn't even see out of it. It was just nothing but smoke and flames. Rachel called me and she'd been a real mentor to me. She was one of the guides that I watched and went, Oh my gosh, look what's possible. I didn't know this was possible. I didn't know this community existed. I didn't know there was a possibility of spiritual curiosity that isn't punished. I didn't know that was real. And she was a real mentor to me. And I remember she called me right in the middle of just the
Starting point is 01:03:50 heat and the flames. And she goes, Jen, I'm going to tell you something that you're not even going to know that you can believe right now because everything is so scary and everything is so loud. And you're just going to have to go through that. And that's just too bad. But she was like, I promise you that when you emerge from this and what you have intact is your integrity and your goodness. She said, really and truly, it will be enough. That will be enough for you. It will sustain you. It'll hold you in this and it'll serve you later. And she was so right. The only thing, if I had any regret at all, it's that I wish I could go back and make every one of those decisions sooner. I wish that all those years that I carried tension where I was one way with this group and another way with this group. Oh, I wish
Starting point is 01:04:44 I could go back and not have wasted a single unnecessary day because this is the way to live. This is real freedom and real beauty. Now I'm living in a world I didn't even know about and it is so beautiful and so good and true and genuine and safe. This is my highest vision for women to live like this. Okay, let's jump into one of the things I love about your new book. So let's get inside baseball for a second. Yeah, new book. How do you feel around new books coming out? Mostly disastrous. Me too. Me too. I just stopped eating. So what I love about books are the words of them. That's what I love. I love the words and the truth inside those words, the possibility that those words hold for readers, what they can create in real life. That's what I love. I love all of that. I can, I can just eat that up with spoons. The part where I have to tell everybody that and talk about that a lot and be
Starting point is 01:05:52 like, here it is. It's in a bookstore. I just die. I just come undone and I fall apart and my team like pets me, like pet my hair. Like, and I can tell they're handling me. Do you know what I mean? Do you know when you're being handled? I can tell they're being handled. I'm managed all the time. Yeah. I'm managed all the time. Yeah. I'm managed mostly during book launches. Yes. Me too. I'll get a little email, just a little email. I know you're doing great. I'm like, oh God, I'm being handled. I know it. They see me. I'm fragile. It's just, I didn't get, I'm not an author because I want to be a marketer. You know, I'm an author to serve my community. Anyway, whatever. It's just a system that we're inside of. And I don't know,
Starting point is 01:06:35 I don't know how to manage it. I don't know how we'll ever get out of it. Do you have a solution? No, I have no idea. I'm the exact same way. I had to ask because I think it's almost everything you said in the beginning. As long as the words live in the small little true room, I have to kind of trust everything else is going to work out. Yeah, that's it. That's it. Yeah, that's all I can do. Okay. One of the things that you do in this book is you give a lot of, and I love this about it, specific strategies that have worked for you. Right. For me, I think right now, and not just because we're coronavirus right now,
Starting point is 01:07:14 but because we're desperate, like we are grasping for tools right now. Yeah, we're grasping for tools. So tell me about some of your favorite tools that you use to what I would call and from a union perspective, probably integration. Yeah, one one gen, the gen that Brandon sees the gen that your kids see the gen that the world sees one person. Tell me about some of your favorite integration tools. I did that in hindsight. Of course, you're all in there. Thank you for giving us the tools that you give us all the time. They have served me immensely.
Starting point is 01:07:53 So I got here. I looked around and went, oh my gosh, I'm free. What, how did I get here? What just happened? It was very, very fuzzy and it was very, very crazy. And so I looked back over, I'm going to say the last four or five years and went, who helped me get here? Who have I been listening to? Who have my teachers and leaders been? What conversations have I been learning from?
Starting point is 01:08:18 What tools and resources have I served? And so it was really hindsight where I could start picking up all the pieces from wherever they all were and put them in one place. So literally I shoved everything in this thing that I know. Now, I don't know if that's everything there is. I'm just one person, but it's everything that got me here. And that includes an integration on how I think about, talk to, and treat my body. So I had a variety of really incredible teachers and mentors who have led me well. And so inside the book, it's not a memoir. I hope that it is just a mighty resource in the hands of women, but it's got things like scripts and literally sentences to put in the conversation that
Starting point is 01:09:07 is hard. And these are things I just kind of amass. I've got a lot of stuff from you. All your work on true belonging is everything. It's absolutely everything to me. It's exactly what we're talking about here. And so your work on true belonging served me so well. I remember the first time I read a couple of paragraphs where you defined true belonging, what that meant.
Starting point is 01:09:29 And I just remember thinking that sounds like a dream, but maybe an impossible dream because of the cost built into it. And yet here we are. And so, so hopefully I don't just, it's hard to just shine a light on areas of disintegration for women without offering a path. Cause then it was just depressing. I agree. It is depressing. Cause we all know, we know those places. We know the places that rub.
Starting point is 01:09:58 We know the places where we're lying. We know the places where we are pretending and just keeping the temperature stable in the room that somebody else wants us to keep. We know what they are. It's not a mystery. So hopefully, I hope that women will finish it and close the last page and feel like, I know what to do. Like, I know where to go.
Starting point is 01:10:18 I know my next steps. One of the things I love that you write about is be okay with wobbly beginnings. Yeah. Tell me about that. I mean, the way I think about this book is, this is the way I picture it, y'all, that Jen, I wouldn't say walked is probably too graceful. Jen crawled down a path for several years, some of it covered in broken glass, got to the end of the path, found freedom, her fierceness from learning that she earned, walked back to the beginning of the
Starting point is 01:10:51 path, and then strung twinkle lights down the path for us to follow. What a great. Yeah, went back and said, Okay, I've crawled down this path, it has led me to somewhere solid and real. Now let me go back and illuminate some of the more treacherous parts of the path. Yes. Is that a fair description? I love that actually. And I like that you mentioned the wobbly beginning part because it's really tempting sometimes to look at women that we respect or that we admire that are leading us well and see them closer to the end and just feel like that is so unreachable. It's just so impossible. But the truth is that no, that's just not true. Everybody had to get there. It's just that some
Starting point is 01:11:36 people started sooner. Some people came from a subgroup that was just more charitable. Thus, their journey was received with kinder arms, you know? And so there's so many factors built into that, but it is wobbly. Those first few steps are shaky. And especially if we're flexing new muscles, we've never flexed. If all we've ever done is figure out how to keep the peace, I'm putting that in quotation marks, keep the peace for everybody else. And then in doing so rob our own selves of peace. Then when we finally decide that we have the right to our own ideas and convictions and desires and wants and needs and boundaries, those muscles are, they're going to take some working.
Starting point is 01:12:26 It's going to take some working until they're solidly under you. And so that's okay. Like, I don't think we ever disparage those first few steps. Those are the bravest steps. Look, I, sometimes I just, I want to go back to Jen of five years ago, the one who was scared as shit and staring down what was inevitably going to be a lot of loss, but still on the other side of it, still very much succeeding, very much beloved, right? Very, very centered and privileged and favored in my group. I want to go back to the Jen that decided to let it all burn for the sake of honor and integrity and hug her. I want to be like, Oh, those steps were so wobbly. Oh, you were just like literally falling on your face. You just, but you did it like you did it. And so I want to say that
Starting point is 01:13:20 to women too. Those very first few steps down the path, you're taking them, you're on it, you've laced up your shoes. That means something. It means something. It means something. It means something. One step at a time may be slow, but it will get you somewhere. And so I honor it. I honor the movement. Like I honor every single step that you earn. You know, one of the things I've been thinking about a lot, you know, I've only been doing the podcast for maybe two or three weeks, four weeks, maybe, I don't even know. How long are we in? Four weeks. And talking to you, talking to Alicia Keys,
Starting point is 01:13:56 Tarana Burke, Glennon, talk to Sue Monk. One of the things that has really struck me, and I think it struck me probably kind of pierced my heart a little bit when reading your book, the new book, Fierce, Free, and Full of Fire, is when women say, I can't afford to pay the price. I can't afford to pay the price of if I stop proving, stop perfecting, stop pleasing. I can't afford to pay the price as if there's not a price being paid now. Every lie is costing somebody something. The question is. Oh my God, say that again. Every single lie we are telling or protecting.
Starting point is 01:14:48 Maybe it's just in our silence that we're protecting a lie, but it is costing somebody something. So the question is, who is benefiting from this lie and who's paying the price? Because it's never neutral. It is never neutral. There is no status quo that values justice and truth. They are counting on our submission and our silence and our complicity so that that power differential
Starting point is 01:15:13 stays in play, right? If we're waiting on systems to overturn themselves, we're just going to go to the grave in an unjust world. So this work is ours to do. And those lies cost us something. They cost you, they cost a, they cost a woman, her heart and soul. They cost her, her own agency over her own damn life. That cost is too high. That price is too high. You know how this- I'm with you. Too high. It's too high. Too high. Here's how this gets clear for me, Brene. And you will understand this. I breathed this air my whole life. And so it is so much work for me to undo this as a grownup.
Starting point is 01:15:57 I have to just pull and unravel and just tear it, all the fabric of all this. It's hard to unlearn it and then relearn. And so that makes it sometimes hard for us to believe that we are worthy of this, that we are worthy of our own truth. We are worthy of our own life. We are worthy of our own authority and possibility and freedom. But here's where this gets clear for me, because I'm telling you, even as I'm talking to you right this minute, I have a mean little voice right here in my head being like, but do you, I do. That voice is so mean and I've had it for so long. But when I think about my daughters, when I think about them, the clouds part, the clouds part, because then I go, wait,
Starting point is 01:16:34 aren't they worthy of ownership? Aren't they worthy of freedom? Aren't they worthy to be inside relationships and systems and structures and faith communities that are true and systems and structures and faith communities that are true and real and good? A hundred percent. Would I ever want them to shape shift just to keep a power differential intact? Comfortable. Like I can't even stand it.
Starting point is 01:16:58 I cannot even stand it. And so this is work I think we do right now in our generation and we pass it on to our daughters in strength. Hopefully they will read this book that I just wrote in a few years and just not even get it. Like not even get it. Like what are you talking about? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:18 Like it must have been bad back then. Yeah. Yes. Yes. I hope it is absolutely obsolete for the next generation. So here's my other one thing I want to talk to you about before our fast 10. You write in this book that we don't have to choose between home, parenting, and you know, what I guess Sue Monk Kidd would call our largeness, our individual genius and gift that
Starting point is 01:17:41 that we're here to find and explore. Are we really still having, we are still having that conversation, aren't we? It's maddening. I believe we're on the downhill slope of that. Okay. That's my best hope on my best day. The reason I think that is because of my daughter who's 20. Because she's like, what? What are you even talking?
Starting point is 01:18:03 Enish, what are you talking about? It would never even occur to her to operate inside those sort of structures. So I think we're on the downhill slide here. Underneath it, if we have any internal work to do here to expedite this process, I think it is simply, I wish that women would believe that they have the right to want.
Starting point is 01:18:30 They have the right to want. Period. I mean, you can leave it right there. They can want. They can want big. They can want something like in real hungry, blazing ways. They can want it with ferocity. That is beautiful and wonderful. And that sort of
Starting point is 01:18:46 feminine wanting has deeply served the world. I mean, that has created so much human flourishing. And so I hope women can learn to trust that, that, oh no, you get that. You get to want something as wild as the day is long. And I think if we address that, if we say, no, no, no, I get to do this and I want to do this and I'm going to do this. And this is not a binary thing that I have to pick this or this. We're going to finally put a period at the end of the sentence and be able to put it to bed. My daughter who's 20, our daughters are the same age on her 16th birthday. Was it her 16th birthday? No, it was mother's day when she was 16, wrote me a card that said, thank you for showing me that I can be ambitious and be a good mom. Yeah. And she said, I know you hate missing some games. I know you hate that. But I don't want to
Starting point is 01:19:39 ever have to choose. So thank you for that. And I just I still have the card, you know, and it's, you know, and it's, it is everything. It's the thing I hope she does better than me is less guilt about it. Like I I'm, you know, I'm doing it, but I still feel I'm still, I know I'm still hard. And when we, we both travel for a living, so that's hard. You ready for my rapid 10? I sure am. Okay. Number one, fill in the blank for me. Vulnerability is worth it to you. Jen are called to be brave, but your fear is real. It's right in your throat. What is the very first thing you do? I gather my girlfriends on my porch and force them to talk me into courage.
Starting point is 01:20:25 Awesome. Something people get wrong about you. Oh, that I am not tender, that I can handle anything. Nothing hurts. I hate that one. Just speaking personally. They think the same. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:20:41 Yeah. Hard. Last show you binged and loved Schitt's Creek favorite movie Notting Hill a concert you'll never forget Aerosmith favorite meal oh this is so hard that's like why I asked him my favorite kid. It's going to be, I'm going to have to say a whole culture. I'm going to have to say Thai food. I can't pick it.
Starting point is 01:21:09 I can't, I want the whole thing. I want the whole buffet. You got it. Yeah. What's on your nightstand? I'm trying to decide right now if I can tell you the truth or lie, but I decided to tell you the truth. A wine glass with just a little bit of wine left in it.
Starting point is 01:21:24 Cause that was last night. And the last book I just finished, which is The Nightingale. A snapshot of an ordinary moment in your life that brings you real joy. That's a good one. Being in my kitchen with a knife in my hand, an onion on the counter, chopping away.
Starting point is 01:21:42 Last one. One thing you're deeply grateful for right now. Oh, man. I'm so grateful for the goodness of people. It's just coming out everywhere right now. I can't even open my phone without seeing the most beautiful stories of connection. And look, can I tell you the quickest story? Yes, please. It's so short. But Fierce just came out on Tuesday. It's a brand new baby. And it's such a weird time to release a book.
Starting point is 01:22:09 And I don't recommend it. And so, you know, everything that we kind of built around it, it was canceled and not possible and everything's virtual remote. So that included release day. So my girlfriends who live 50 yards this way, texted me on Tuesday, the day it released about four o'clock and said, come outside. Let's take a walk. We want to celebrate you.
Starting point is 01:22:32 We'll take a socially distanced walk. We just at least want to see your face and cheer on the book and say, yay, we see what you've done. And so me, no clue. Absolutely no clue. I'm like, oh, you guys, it's hot. And they were like, okay, we'll make it short. I'm like, oh, you guys, I just have on flip flops. They're like, oh my God, like it'll just be a stroll.
Starting point is 01:22:49 And so they're like, come outside. So I start coming outside and the warehouse is situated. I can't see anything. I can't see the road. I can't, I have to almost be to the road before I see. And first of all, it's weird that Brandon's following me. I'm like, why is he following me? What a weirdo. And why is he filming me? That's weird too. And I started getting out to the street and I can't tell what's happening. First thing is my ears. I hear all these little bike bells, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. And I see my friends and they're dressed weird. They're dressed up and their bikes have all these streamers on them. I'm like, oh, that's cute. They did like a cute little thing. And then I like see somebody dressed in a big dinosaur costume. And I'm, and then I see my mom, like, why is my mom here? And I see my sisters, why are my sisters here? And I get all the way out to the street and I look down,
Starting point is 01:23:35 there are cars wrapped around the block and it's everybody who loves me. and they have signs and horns and confetti and banners and they are screaming and they are honking and they're driving by me slowly and they're jumping out and putting gifts in a socially distanced bucket for me. And I'll just never forget it as long as I live. Like it was the most incredible moment. And I'm like, everything that matters will last our love for each other, our connection to each other, the way that we love and serve and share one another, all that, none of that is in jeopardy right now. Even now, even in this weird quarantine world, that stuff is finding a way to bubble up and rise up and still like, just absolutely fill our hearts with joy and love. And so that is giving me hope right now. People, people, they're still good. They're still out
Starting point is 01:24:32 there. They're still good. We'll get to have them soon. Jen Hatmaker, thank you so much. And thank you for the good work in this book. We love it. Thanks for having me on. Unlocking Us is produced by Brene Brown Education and Research Group. The music is by Keri Rodriguez and Gina Chavez. Get new episodes as soon as they're published by following Unlocking Us on your favorite podcast app. We are part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. Discover more award-winning shows at podcast.voxmedia.com. time. Klaviyo turns your customer data into real-time connections across AI-powered email, SMS, and more, making every moment count. Over 100,000 brands trust Klaviyo's unified data and marketing platform to build smarter digital relationships with their customers during Black
Starting point is 01:25:38 Friday, Cyber Monday, and beyond. Make every moment count with Klaviyo. Learn more at klaviyo.com slash BFCM. So you've arrived. You head to the brasserie, then the terrace. Cocktail? Don't mind if I do. You raise your glass to another guest because you both know the holiday's just beginning. And you're only in Terminal 3. Welcome to Virgin Atlantic's unique upper-class clubhouse experience, where you'll feel like you've arrived before you've taken off.
Starting point is 01:26:24 Virgin Atlantic. See the world differently.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.