Unlocking Us with Brené Brown - Part 4 of 6: Brené with Ashley and Barrett for the Summer Sister Series on The Gifts of Imperfection

Episode Date: July 14, 2021

This might just be the toughest, most personal episode yet in the Summer Sister Series on The Gifts of Imperfection. As Ashley, Barrett, and I tackle Guideposts #5 and #6 (Cultivating Intuition and Tr...usting Faith: Letting Go of the Need for Certainty and Cultivating Creativity: Letting Go of Comparison), we reflect on our upbringing, which was marked with uncertainty, unpredictability, and plenty of eggshell living. It’s no surprise then that letting go of certainty is one of my greatest challenges. We talk about that and how we try to show up differently in the families we are raising now. 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. Welcome to our Sister Strong six-week series on the gifts of imperfection. I can tell you right before we started recording this, Ashley was like, oh boy, these two guideposts are up in my grill. We're doing guidepost number five and guidepost number six. This week, guidepost number five is letting go of our need for certainty and cultivating intuition and trusting faith. And the next one is letting go of comparison and cultivating creativity. Is it the need for certainty that's going to be hard about this one?
Starting point is 00:00:44 Oh, yeah, for sure. Yeah, I mean, I'm a number six on the Enneagram. So I really like to know what's coming. I like to have some certainty. I like to feel safe. So this is up in my grill. Barrett, what about you? Yeah, same. Number six on the Enneagram. But for me, actually, the comparison creativity will be more up in my grill, I think. Really? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:12 So when I start that gratitude journal on my own, in my own house, in my own room by myself. Oh, got it. Okay. Well. So let's look real quick at our assessments. So for- Five we don't test. Five we don't test.
Starting point is 00:01:27 And we don't test it for all the research geeks out there because faith is too hard to operationalize. So we just don't test it because people have different understandings of what that is. So we just do the need for comparison and creativity. I'm about 50%, a little over 50%. I'm a little over 50% also. I'm between a quarter and a half. Got it.
Starting point is 00:01:48 I would have never guessed that. I can't wait to dig into this. Yeah. I mean, I think it's just like a pretty recent. I was 47 years old when I realized. I was today years old. I was today years old. I was an hour ago.
Starting point is 00:02:04 All right. We'll be back with this conversation. We're glad you're here. 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.
Starting point is 00:02:23 Here's how it works. You call our hotline with questions you can't quite answer on your own. 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. 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 00:03:01 business partners, and managers. Listen in as I talk to coworkers 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, let's just dig in. Let's just jump right in.
Starting point is 00:03:23 Guidepost number five, cultivating intuition and trusting faith, letting go of the need for certainty. So... Boo. Barrett, wow. Coming out strong early with your boo. I like it. Let me just pretend like I'm Ashley. Say more. Therapist alert. Therapist I'm Ashley. Say more. Therapist alert. Therapist alert.
Starting point is 00:03:47 Say more. But really. Oh, I just love me some certainty. I want to know how it's going to turn out before I get going. And in really anything. How do you show up in uncertainty? I think I can get shitty in uncertainty. I think I can get shitty in uncertainty. I think I can get fearful.
Starting point is 00:04:08 I think I can be snappy. I think when I'm not sure how things are going to turn out, I try to control the situation. And instead of just letting go and letting God. Talking to me. Did you rub my lamp? No, I just I like to know I have some control issues.
Starting point is 00:04:31 I don't know if y'all know that about me. Do you want me to contact? So I do enjoy some certainty. But I can be shitty when I'm not sure how it's going to turn out. Me too. I can be scary when I'm not sure how it's going to turn out me too I can be scary when I'm scared yeah same I don't know you can ash there it that was David Ashley FYI okay can I just go there go I think this is not only about who raised us, but how we were raised. I agree. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:12 I second the motion. I think there was a lot of uncertainty in our household growing up. And I think it was very mercurial. Like, you didn't know. No, you didn't know. You didn't know if you were going to get a laugh or something fearful. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:31 And it was completely unpredictable. Yeah. And some days it was fun. And the same exact thing could happen on a Thursday and be great and then happen on a Friday and lead to a complete nightmare. Yeah. So I think that's where it came from. I think it came from that. And I think mom grew up with no certainty at all.
Starting point is 00:05:58 I agree. So Meemaw's addiction pattern was really tough growing up because she drank every other day. And so while there was some predictability in that, it was also hard. So I think mom controlled everything she could. She was valedictorian and head of the drill team and head of everything. Yet at the same time, no one was allowed to come to her house because she had the mom who was an alcoholic. And can you imagine that situation in the 50s where everything was supposed to come to her house because she had the mom who was an alcoholic. And can you imagine that situation in the 50s where everything was supposed to be perfect? And so I think that's why
Starting point is 00:06:32 I'll speak for the three of us and y'all interject if it's not true, but I think it's why the three of us are so committed to doing a lot of our own work in therapy is because we don't want to pass this down to our kids. And one of the ways I think we can pass it down to our kids is being afraid all the time. Because we don't have the rage and the kind of violent outburst kind of stuff that we grew up with, but we have the fear. And that can also create its own eggshells, right?
Starting point is 00:07:00 Yeah. I mean, do you think we grew up on eggshells? Oh yeah, 100%. Yeah, Because we just didn't know. Yeah. I mean, I think pre-divorce, during the divorce, post-divorce, I think all of it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And I don't think people understand the level of trauma that goes along with eggshell living. Yeah. You just never know. It's like a landmine. You never know what you're going to step on. And I think it's traumatic because you don't know what the variable is that sparks it.
Starting point is 00:07:30 Yeah. It has gotten in my way of doing things that I want to do, like the fear of what would happen if I did it. But one time someone asked me if I like to travel. And the first thing that came to my mind was if someone was holding my hand, almost like a kid, like if I would be walking around the streets in Paris or whatever, if someone was holding my hand, I went to this place of needing, I would love to do stuff like that. And you and I have been traveling around the world together, but I need some safety in
Starting point is 00:08:01 that. I went with you as my older sister. So there was some safety in that. I went with you as my older sister, so there was some safety in that. But to go back over there, once I got over the fear of going across the pond over water, I would need to feel safe there. And so I don't want this to stop me from doing things that I want to do anymore. So it's something I'm working on, but I think it shows up in parenting, at work, in all the different parts of my life. Yeah, it's really hard because we're fearful kind of because of how we were raised. And so then we end up raising our kids with the same lack of a sense of safety and not because we're mercurial or outbursty, but because we're afraid because that's how we were raised. Do you know what I mean? It's hard. I keep going back to that
Starting point is 00:08:54 bridge metaphor that I've talked about so many times on the podcast where you've got that old wooden bridge over the ravine that's a thousand foot drop. And I think the way we were raised is it didn't have handrails. And then it was like, run now, go across, run. No, I'm scared. Run, run or I'll throw you across. That kind of parenting, right? And then when you start walking, they do a jump on it to make it go like that. To double bounce you a little bit. Yeah. And it's kind of funny, but then it's not. Yeah. And so then I think the way we're trying to raise our kids is with,
Starting point is 00:09:30 and for those of y'all haven't heard it on the podcast before, it was a piece of parenting advice that I got early on that really helped shape my parenting that was parenting and boundaries. And that parenting is like sending a child across one of these rickety old bridges over the thousand foot ravine. And boundaries are handrails across that bridge so that the kids have something to hold on to. And that's predictability, stability, and boundaries. And so I think this chapter is about letting go of our need for certainty and trusting ourselves, our intuition, and our faith. I'm even like this.
Starting point is 00:10:07 Well, exactly how do you define faith? Yeah. And so I'll tell you, I define it in here. So glad you asked. Yeah, glad you asked. Nice segue, Ash, if you take this on the road. So I'll define both of them because they're big, gauzy words. So intuition, this is how I define it. Intuition is not a single way of knowing. It's our ability to hold space for uncertainty and our willingness to trust the many ways we've developed knowledge and insight, including instinct, experience, faith, and reason. And you have to understand that when you say like trust your gut, if you look at the research on intuition, intuition is not independent of reasoning process. Psychologists believe that intuition is a rapid-fire, unconscious, associating process like a mental puzzle.
Starting point is 00:10:52 The brain makes an observation, scans its files, and matches the observation with existing memories, knowledge, and experiences. Once we put together the matches, that's how we get that gut that we talk about. Sometimes our intuition or our gut tells us what we need to know. Other times it steers us toward more fact finding and reasoning. Intuition might be that quiet voice within, but it's not a voice that's limited to one message. Sometimes the voice will say, hey, you should do this, follow your instincts. But sometimes your intuition is the voice that says, we, you should do this, follow your instincts. But sometimes your intuition is the voice that says, we don't have enough data to make a decision. We need to understand more, we need to know more. So the problem, and here's what I think we can all work on, not just us,
Starting point is 00:11:38 but everybody, the problem is to understand and hear our intuition, that kind of rapid fire unconscious system in us. We have to hear our voice over the noise. And some of the noise is other people telling us what we should do, but sometimes the noise is fear. Our own fear, our own shame, our own not good enough, not smart enough, not safe enough. So I think we have to learn how to hear what we're saying. And I think that's why people say meditation is life-changing. Because it's not just, oh, I'm going to get quiet and hear the voice about what the big challenge is of the day. It's I'm going to train myself to know how to get quiet so I can listen for it when I need it. Does that make sense? Yeah, it's so hard for me. It's so hard for me too.
Starting point is 00:12:31 Fuck, it's so hard. I'm with y'all. What software do you use at work? The answer to that question is probably more complicated than you want it to be. The average US 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? In this three-part special series, Decoder is surveying the IT landscape presented by AWS. Check it out wherever
Starting point is 00:13:10 you get your podcasts. About a year ago, two twin brothers in Wisconsin discovered, kind of by accident, that mini golf might be the perfect spectator sport for the TikTok era. Meanwhile, a YouTuber in Brooklyn found himself less interested in tech YouTube and more interested in making coffee. This month on The Verge Cast, we're telling stories about these people who tried to find new ways to make content, new ways to build businesses around that content,
Starting point is 00:13:40 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. So that's how I define intuition. Again, not a single way of knowing, it's our ability to hold space for uncertainty and our willingness to trust the many ways that we've developed knowledge and insight, including experience, faith, reason, facts, and instinct. So I'm going to read a little bit from 1 to 17, because I think this is a helpful grounding in the chapter. I've come to realize that faith and reason are not natural enemies. It's our human need for certainty and our need to be right that have pitted faith and reason against each other in an almost reckless way. We force ourselves to choose and defend one way of knowing at the expense of
Starting point is 00:14:27 the other way. And I think that faith and reason can clash and create uncomfortable tension. And those tensions play out in my life all the time, and I can feel them in my bones. But this work has forced me to see that it's our fear of the unknown and our fear of being wrong that create most of our conflict and anxiety. We need both faith and reason to make meaning in an uncertain world. So how I define faith from the data in this book is faith is a place of mystery where we can find the courage to believe in what we can't see and the strength to let go of our fear of uncertainty. I think it's a good example because I would consider y'all both pretty faithful people. Do y'all think you're faithful people?
Starting point is 00:15:07 Yeah. Yeah. So let me give example. Y'all had no idea what was going to happen with the recording of these podcasts. True. Right? Yeah. I mean, you didn't.
Starting point is 00:15:18 No. And we didn't know how far we'd get into our family of origin stuff. We didn't know, you know, but y'all showed up. Right? Because I think there's a faith that we have. We know how to listen to ourselves when it comes to each other. And there's trust too. So trust and faith probably go hand in hand. But I think, I don't know, I'll speak for myself and I'd love to hear what y'all think about yourselves, but it's like shooting a three point shot. You have to shoot a thousand of those before you make one, right? I don't think I've put getting still and quiet
Starting point is 00:15:48 so I can hear myself into a practice. I don't think I've built those muscles very well. I have not either. I even got that app that one time that's like, okay, we're gonna start with five seconds and then we're gonna go with 20 seconds. I'm like, yeah, and done. Like it's just, I gave up on it too soon. I like, yeah, and done. Like, it's just, I gave up on it
Starting point is 00:16:05 too soon. I think I could get there. But yeah, it's just, my mind races. I'll never forget doing a guided meditation one time. And I was just sobbing afterwards. Because it was the pictures that I was creating in my head were beautiful and wonderful, and I loved them. And it brought me so much joy, and that's where the tears were coming from. And I was so surprised by that. So I imagine there's a lot of power in it, but there's also a lot of fear in it for me to just be still. I just can't concentrate. I have so many other things going on.
Starting point is 00:16:44 I have not. It's like a muscle. Unless it's a dishwasher. No, it's not the dishwasher so much. But I just, if it's a muscle, I have not built a muscle memory. I get so distracted, so easy. The only place I can do this well is in making business decisions. I am very intuitive and very trust myself and I can get really still and quiet. But I've never met a problem that cannot be solved by walking. Oh, and you don't listen to music or anything. So I think you have built muscle memory. I guess so. I guess I do walking meditation. I'm going to say that moving forward.
Starting point is 00:17:20 Yeah, I think you do. Yeah, because I do get really quiet. And even if I have to drive to Austin or something, I won't listen to any music or anything. And I'll just force myself to be in the quiet. And then at first it's like crazy. And then it gets really calm and still. And I start making connections between things. So maybe I have.
Starting point is 00:17:40 Yeah, maybe I have. I write about this in the book. I always know when I'm not listening to myself, when I start polling people about what I should do next, it's such a red flag that no one talks about, but it was such a finding in this research. When you start going, should I wear my hair short or long? Should I do this? Should I say, yeah, should I let Charlie do this? What do you think about letting Ellen do this? Once you start polling people, you're in shitsville. Yeah. I do that a lot too, because I'm a single mom. So I get y'all to help me make some really big decisions about schools and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:18:09 And so I also believe that I was good at being quiet and narrowing down the choices, but then needed to get to y'all to the final choices. So I think while at work, I'm not as good at it. But I think when it comes to Amaya, I can be a little bit better at it. But is that polling? I don't think that's polling. That's not polling. I think that's co-parenting.
Starting point is 00:18:32 I don't think that's polling. I mean, polling is literally not even asking people whose opinions you really give a shit about. I think you coming to us and saying, this is what I'm thinking about with Amaya, what do y'all think? That's just family. But I think you coming to us and saying, this is what I'm thinking about with Amaya, what do y'all think? That's just family. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:18:45 But I think polling is, it's almost trying to see what people think when you know you're not going to take it into consideration even. Should I cut my hair short? Yeah. Fuck you. Who asked? You know, you're like. You don't know me. You don't know me.
Starting point is 00:19:00 Yeah. You just asked. Okay. I think we should do this because I think this was a hard one for all of us on page 118, the dig deep. Let's see what I wrote 10 years ago. Letting go of certainty is one of my greatest challenges. Check. I even have a physical response to not knowing it's anxiety and fear and vulnerability combined. Still, that's when I have to get very still and quiet. With my busy life, that can mean hiding in the garage or driving around the block, whatever it takes. I have to
Starting point is 00:19:30 find a way to be still so I can hear what I'm saying. That is the biggest thing in my life. I'm not even kidding y'all. I trust myself 100%. Whatever chart that is, I'm off the, I really, can I get to a place where I can hear myself over the bullshit and the noise? That's the question. Yeah. Get inspired.
Starting point is 00:19:51 The process of reclaiming my spiritual and faith life was not an easy one. Oh, this is that quote from Anne Lamont. The opposite of faith is not doubt, but certainty. What inspires y'all around faith and intuition and letting go of uncertainty? How do you get going even? Is there a prayer, a mantra, a breathing? I love the serenity prayer. I say that a lot.
Starting point is 00:20:16 And you know, it's so weird. It's like every time I pray at night when I'm going to sleep, I always start off with gratitude to God for the life that I have and the family. And that because earlier in the day, I'll have prayed. It's raining really hard. Please let Amaya get home safely. Thank you, God, for letting Amaya get home safely. You know, it's so weird is when you think about this, like, mystical place that we have
Starting point is 00:20:37 a bigger connection than ourselves. For me, it's not so much church, but it's the singing at church. Oh, God, me too. It's like being at camp and singing with everybody and just hanging on the lyrics and feeling connected to a bigger, something that's way bigger than me. And it feels like everyone is connected to that same place or together. It's like I miss camp. Yeah. Yeah. And when we went a couple Sundays ago, right, for confirmation, I mean, I was just waiting
Starting point is 00:21:15 for someone to bust into my song. So it's just like, I just sit down and I just want to sing. Collective joy. Yeah. You love that because you love concert. Yeah. You love to be in connection with people Collective joy. Yeah. You love that because you love concert. Yeah. You love to be in connection with people in that way. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:29 Should you do more of it? I should. I did just go see the air supply group. Where she said women over 60 were caught smoking pot in the bathroom at air supply. Oh my God. Cheryl's hashtag with 60 plus in us. Okay, Barrett, what about you? I think for me, I find myself connecting to like family. When I pray, I pray a lot to Meemaw.
Starting point is 00:22:01 I pray a lot. Sometimes I pray to Aunt Peggy. Sometimes I just, depends on what the prayer is, is who I need to summons up in my prayer. Oh, yeah. But we have a lot of gritty, amazing folks who have loved us along the way that I call on in my faith. Yeah. I love that. Me too. God, because it doesn't matter whatever you look at in our family, on either side, moms or dads, there's never, ever a question of how much everyone loves each other.
Starting point is 00:22:36 No, there's just a question of how much work people have done and not done and how much pain they either can deal with or they put on other people. Yeah. What's my mantra from the other guidepost? Well said. Do your work. Yeah. And we'll close. I love this quote from paulo colo's the alchemist intuition is really a sudden immersion of the soul into the universal current of life where the histories of all people are connected and we are able to know everything
Starting point is 00:22:58 because it's all written there that's so good such amazing book too yeah you got to read the alchemist it's graduation season i ordered 1700 of them from bookstores okay you don't even know what the alchemist is doing to you while you're reading it no you really don't all right we'll be back next week with Guideposts 7 and 8. Sorry, that was like an evil laugh. It's going to get real. Yeah. If it gets any realer than this. Yeah. Letting go of exhaustion as a status symbol and productivity is self-worth, cultivating more rest and play, and then letting go of anxiety as a lifestyle and cultivating calm and Stillness.
Starting point is 00:23:49 There's an episode page for the podcast on BreneBrown.com. If you need anything from the website, you can go to BreneBrown.com. Y'all stay awkward, brave, and kind. We'll see you next time. 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.
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