We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - 225. How to Find 5 Seconds of Peace with Morgan Harper Nichols
Episode Date: July 6, 2023Morgan Harper Nichols is here today to help us – finally! – breathe deep and pay attention: What the hell is this elusive “peace” anyway? How to create your own peace practice How she ha...s found a truer way to communicate than words How her adult autism diagnosis helped her finally set boundaries Concrete strategies to find peace even in chaos Plus, she helps us understand why we don’t need to add “Presence” to our to-do list: It’s already right here. About Morgan: Morgan Harper Nichols is an artist, poet, musician, and best-selling author of Peace is a Practice and All Along You Were Blooming. Morgan has also performed as a vocalist on several GRAMMY-nominated projects and written for various artists. She is passionate about art making as a way to connect with others. Her latest book, You Are Only Just Beginning is available now. Morgan currently resides in Atlanta with her family. TW: @morganhnichols IG: @morganharpernichols To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. Today we have such a treat, someone I've been following
for a long time. To, as she sometimes says, help me cope with existing, which I love. Morgan Harper
Nichols, she is an artist, poet, musician, and bestselling author of Peace is a practice,
and all along you were blooming. Morgan has also performed as a vocalist on several
Grammy-nominated projects and written for various artists.
She was passionate about art making
as a way to connect with others.
In her latest book,
you are only just beginning.
So my bedside is available now.
Morgan currently resides in Atlanta
with her family, Welcome Morgan.
Well, thank you.
Thank you for the warm welcome.
I'm so glad to be here. So honored. Well, thank you. Thank you for the warm welcome.
I'm so glad to be here.
So honored.
Thank you so much.
I'm so glad that you decided to come.
I have, I don't know.
I wouldn't even just say just red.
I don't think red is the right word.
I have been experiencing your work for a very long time.
I appreciate very much that it doesn't feel like
just reading to me. It feels like
you got it. That's exactly what I'm going for. That's my whole thing. I get words,
they're a big thing. We have them. We use them all day long, but I'm just like, there's all these
spaces beyond words where it's just like trying to figure out
how to even communicate what we're experiencing.
I'm just like, I don't know, maybe it's a color of this time.
Maybe it's a rugged mountain scape that explains it better.
So for you to say that experience,
I'm like, that's exactly it.
That's what I'm going for, because yeah,
I feel like I actually struggle with words a lot.
So it's through the art that I'm able to say, oh, maybe they're still room for me to feel and share
what I'm feeling, even when I don't have the perfect sentences, if you will.
Yeah, because the words that we're all using are not the thing.
Yeah, because the words that we're all using are not the thing.
The words are just arrows. We're trying to point to something else.
Yes.
And so what I do think about what you're doing is it feels like you're just doing this something
else often. You're not even bothering with all the arrows that we're all using.
We get to go straight to this something
else.
Yes.
You get it.
That's exactly what it is because it comes from this like kind of a really shadowy place
for just growing up.
I struggled a lot with speech literally and I a lot, and I would have to practice speaking
before I could just have a conversation with someone.
And I don't know if it's like a generational thing
going up in the 90s, I don't know,
but I feel like there are so many 90s movies where like,
all the cool kids in the movies had like the fastest
quick comebacks.
Oh yeah.
And I was the opposite of that.
Oh, I was, oh, I'm just now thinking of comebacks
like 10 years from the 90s.
From the 90s.
From the 90s.
Same.
I remember practicing comebacks.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, that's awful.
It was like Dawson's Creek and that shit.
It was like constant like dialogue back and forth.
It was the currency, the teenage currency.
That's the word currency of and just the searing nature
of your come back.
Man, I had no money growing up.
If we're going by that center, I never came back to any,
I had no come back, zero.
Same.
And these kids are fast and I was surrounded and my sister was a quick
comeback and she still has a few years ago. I don't even try like she'll just
diss me and I'm like I okay you win I guess like I've got nothing so she's still
like that and I just wasn't that and I just struggled so much to just even like find friendships just because
I couldn't do the banter, the back and forth.
I miss so much of it.
And I thought poetry was going to be a safe space for me because I gravitated with that
like my preteen teen years.
And then one day, a summer camp, which a story that starts with that is probably like,
I can't wait.
I want this 5050 chance of me to happy story.
But just for whatever reason,
I decided to bring my poetry composition notebook
to the YMCA.
That's a sexy currency.
Yeah, sexy currency.
I'm like, that's all I'm going to spit my suburb.
I'm just going to bring my poetry when I can't keep up with anyone else.
And yeah, it just went so south.
It was like snack time.
This one kid got a hold of it.
It's hard at standing it around and reading all my poetry out loud.
And actually rating it, like the reading leader,
he was just like, oh, this one's kind of good,
but you should've, and I just sat there just like,
totally just like helpless.
What do I do?
Like, do I go run until the counselor,
like, hey, I, they're reading through my poetry.
They're gonna be like, why don't you bring poetry
here in the first place?
So I kind of got into this really interesting spot with words so early.
And then I really do feel like it was the arts where it was like through like photography or
music or whatever it was, I was like, I can hide here more. Like this is not a place where people can
pick it up in the journal and run it around the summer camp. So yeah, when I see what I do today,
I really feel like it is this part of this healing journey of like, I'm still learning how to take
up space with this thing. Like, I'm still learning how to know, put the words on there, let people
pick it up and take it with them. Like, it's going to be okay. That's kind of what the path has been
like. And I have to say, I'm pretty proud of myself
for at least figuring that out
because now it's something I can work on.
Cause I still hold back and I'm still like,
I don't know, like people can take this
and do anything they want with it, which is terrifying.
Yeah, I say to the bullies at the YMCA,
how do you like Morgan now?
Yeah.
Huh?
Everybody is walking around with Morgan's journal.
And it's saving their damn lives.
You want to know something even funnier?
The guy who did it doesn't remember me.
At least like, they never remember.
Sure he doesn't.
It's the most pivotal moment of your entire life.
And it didn't even register their memories.
I know.
I was like, you don't, you don't, I was like, that changed
like the courts of my life.
So yeah, this is funny, but yes,
I am proud of myself, because I literally live
like 15 minutes away from that wine city right now
and I'm just like, I think I made it through.
Is the painting and the photography,
I've never heard it describe that way.
Is that somehow more armoured or less vulnerable?
Because it's not susceptible to a direct interpretation like word is?
Yes, yes. I have been spending a lot of time thinking about this because I've just noticed with
language in particular,
especially just a little bit of family history,
just being black, being a distant of enslaved people
in America, I've done the math and I've realized,
you know what, my family actually doesn't go back
that far with comes to speaking English.
There were other languages, other ways of communicating,
not that many generations back.
So sometimes like, oh, that was hundreds of years ago,
it was like, actually, it was not many generations ago.
And I realized, I'm like, yeah, maybe there's something
within me that's just craving these other ways of sharing.
And in one hand, I access through it,
through this very armored approach of just like,
this makes me feel safe. But now I'm like, no, I access through it through this very armored approach of just like, this makes me feel safe.
But now I'm like, no, I'm going to own that. I'm just like, no, I'm going to communicate this
through a few words, spread out on a page, the way that I hear it and see it and feel it.
And sometimes it might fall into a sentence, but a lot of times it's not. And yeah, so it started
from this very like armored space, but then like the
more I dig dug into it, I'm like, actually, no, I'm, I'm going to own that more. And I'm
not going to keep pressuring myself to communicate how everyone else thinks that I should.
So yeah, it's like this really mixed, intertangle thing now, but I feel like the shift has been
like, but I'm learning to be proud of it. And'm not going to be a fan of it. I'm not going to be a fan of it.
I'm not going to be a fan of it.
I'm not going to be a fan of it.
I'm not going to be a fan of it.
I'm not going to be a fan of it.
I'm not going to be a fan of it.
I'm not going to be a fan of it.
I'm not going to be a fan of it.
I'm not going to be a fan of it.
I'm not going to be a fan of it.
I'm not going to be a fan of it. I'm not going to be a fan of it. words to tell you why your work is important. Maybe I could draw you something to tell you,
because it's so frustrating that even words that we have
to use, that when I was working beginning to work on a TV show,
the script writer was trying to teach me
about how the dialogue was the least important thing.
And what she was explaining to me is the movements
that they make, their eyes, every way they embody,
things is way truer.
You can say whatever words you want.
That's the least important.
And I thought words are the least true thing we have.
That is bad news for a writer.
Yeah.
Yeah. That is real news for a writer.
That is real. And that's a lot to take in because so much in our world is measured by words. And that's something that I don't, I didn't, I wasn't consciously thinking about that all these
years, but I think I was maybe wrestling with it. Tell me more so has that famous thing where she
talks about like the definer and thing where she talks about the definer
and the words belonging to the definer.
It's like, it's like, wow,
when you think about just a sure amount of definitions,
maybe we're just getting started.
Maybe there's just so many other ways of communicating.
I had a moment, I was pretty proud of myself.
I thought of it.
I thought of it some time ago
and I was like, I'm gonna hold this for the perfect moment,
which I'm terrible at that. I cannot hold on. I'm just like, I gotta say And I was like, I'm gonna hold this for the perfect moment, which I'm terrible at that.
I cannot hold on.
I'm just like, I gotta say it right away.
But I held on to this for so long.
I didn't tell anybody.
And it was my mom's birthday about a month ago now.
And you know how like there's like,
what do you call it?
I don't know, they're called.
No, not cheers.
What do you call it when you're having like a-
Toast, toast.
Toast, yeah. I can tell you were it when you're having a toast? Toast. Toast. Toast. That's it. Yeah. Yeah.
I could tell you were.
I was so moving your arms back and forth.
Yeah, but this is so not my thing. I can't even, I don't even know what it's called.
I don't think I've ever done a toast, but it was just this moment where like everybody had eaten
and we were all just kind of sitting and I was like, I feel like we should do something like
toasty kind of, but not that. And I remember it, I was like, all that thing. I thought of, this is the moment.
So I asked everybody, I said, instead of Toasting my mom,
my mom's name is Mona, I said, what have we all
in a round and did, what we think a dance would be
if it was called the Mona.
And everybody went around and did their version
of the boa and we just like laughed and it was
the funniest thing. And there were so few words involved. And kind of the fancy word of it is
embodied like more embodied experiences. And there was a few minutes and it was funny, but it brought
me just so much hope. I'm just like, wow, yeah, maybe there's all these other ways that we can
connect with each other. And sometimes the words will be, yeah, maybe there's all these other ways that we can connect
with each other. And sometimes the words will be there to help us get to a place, but then we just
go beyond that.
And offers so many more people into experience because words and language are just one way that,
you know, don't they say it's like 10% of all communication with what we're understanding about each other
is done through what people say.
And actually, there's a huge danger
in valuing speech so much because people can say
whatever the hell they wanna say, do.
And I love the opposite.
All the time, I'm constantly going, I'm fine, I'm fine.
Is everything okay with you babe?
I'm fine.
Guess what, I'm decidedly not and no one believes you're fine
No, right like everyone because your body is saying something else
So yeah, it's a I think the way you're expressing yourself
Beyond and under and above and in between words is
just helping
People who have a hard time connecting with words.
For example, I just said to my therapist recently,
I just feel like no one's saying anything that's true enough.
And I'm not either.
And it's not that people are lying, it's just something that's truer than words. So thank you for that.
Hi, it's Elise Loonon, the New York Times bestselling author of Honor Best Behavior,
and the host of the podcast, Pulling the Thread.
I'm pulling the thread, I'm joined in conversation by those who can help us bring meaning and understanding to
a world that often feels chaotic and overwhelming.
My hope is that these conversations spark moments of resonance and plant tiny seas of awareness
so that we might all collectively learn and grow.
Listen and follow Pulling the Thread, an Odyssey podcast on the Odyssey app or wherever you
get your podcasts.
Something you said earlier, can we go back to it about the difference between the writing
and the making of the art and how one was armored but became the most true thing about you
really in reclaiming it. I feel like we are living in a moment right now
where there's this kind of ultimate valor associated with vulnerability. That it's like
that is the gold standard. You are only humaning as well as you are being vulnerable. And it's almost like there's like vulnerability police
calling us out for any kind of armoring up.
And I feel like you've thought beyond that
with the way that you're thinking,
because you just said that, yes,
it was initially an armoring up to go to the photography
and the art, but then you found that
because of your history, because of who you are,
that was actually more truly you than just laying it as bears possible. Can you tell us more about that?
Yes, yes. I have thought very deeply about this and I think it does come from the past few years of really feeling like there are certain ways that people expect you to be vulnerable. And when people hear these things,
black autistic woman, there are a possibility of bullet point things that they think I should be vulnerable about in a certain way.
And oh, well, let's talk about race first and then talk about it. I'm like, it's not like that.
And I run into situations where with words where I'm like, I'm gonna try to do it their way. I'm gonna try to put this in a nice Instagram caption for you
and lay it all out and end with a happy note
that leads to a well-rounded comment section
and whatever.
Like, I try and use that.
Well, that's my engagement.
Exactly.
And I try to do that.
I'm like, I'm make it shareable.
And every time I do it, I'm just like, no.
Like, it just doesn't come out that way.
I don't have like a Google sheet on my computer of like,
okay, here's all the black stuff, here's all the autistic stuff,
here's all the, you know, I'm like, no, it's this constant,
like chaotic, really human experience that every now and then
I'm brushing up against words.
And every now and then it might turn into a cohesive paragraph that can fit into a comment section. But a lot of times it's something way more wide
and expansive and mysterious than that. And honestly, it's been these past few years that I've
really had to put my foot down in the sense of like, no, I'm not going to give more than I can give in this space in this way.
One specific moment that I had was after I shared my autism diagnosis,
I do get DMs, emails occasionally. It's not as many as I expected actually, but I do get
comments or people saying like, oh, your diagnosis
isn't real. Here's how I know and all that kind of thing. And I just had to after letting somebody
have it once, like, it won't comment, maybe more than once, but a few times, I realized, I'm like,
you know what, I have such little energy already. I want to preserve it for the people
who are not questioning me
and for the people who are like seeing themselves
and hearing themselves in my story.
Those other people are gonna be there,
but I'm just not going to answer you.
And I've had moments like that
where I've literally responded as I'm not answering you.
And I've just had to really put my
foot down on that because I do think that when it comes to vulnerability, there's also being
in a vulnerable state on the internet. And I'm like, I have to be very mindful about that. I have
to be very mindful about like this person saying something that that anger's me. And it's addressing
a real thing that people wonder about or have questions about.
But it doesn't mean it's my responsibility
every time it comes at me that I have to then open myself up
to all of that.
So I've just become very aware of it
and there has been some unlearning in that
because I think I thought I was being mean at first. I think I thought I was
not serving my community. If I'm not addressing every single question and concern and it's like
that's not my job. I can't just sign myself up for endless, endless labor of just like constant, constant explaining myself.
And it's hard because it does make me mad.
But it's like, I have to be mindful of my energy too.
Of course.
It sounds to me like that is one way that you have learned to create or protect peace because it is an interesting thing being a feeling,
notacy person who's making art on the internet because your job is to expose
yourself while also creating enough boundaries to stay soft enough to make
your art. Could you talk so much about peace?
And I would love to talk to you a little bit
about what that means to you,
because when you talk about it, I believe you,
but usually when people talk about it,
I don't believe them, like a 10-top ways to find peace.
Can you talk to us about what peace means to you?
Yes, yes. And it's something that I do have to think about all the time before I
share anything, before I do anything, even outside of the internet. And for me,
it's very much so peace is a practice of breathing deep.
And I mean that in the most literal sense.
And I think for me, just growing up with a lot of stuff going on health wise and not knowing what it was, I was having to literally find a way to inhale and exhale to just move through life, to just move through conversation,
to just move through the checkout line
at the grocery store without sensory overload.
So just the day to day moving from minute to minute
at times, depending on where I am,
what I'm doing, how stressful life is,
it requires so much of Cycling back into just taking an inhale and an exhale and then what that next thing is after that exhale
That is usually the the space where I'm like this is a rhythm that I'm seeking. I'm seeking that of like
Okay, and sometimes it's just that it's,
okay. All of this is going on. Okay, the guy that's going over here, got this going on,
globally nationwide, community in the house, in my body, like all these layers, like, okay, this. Okay. What's next? In the next three seconds? What's the next 30 seconds? The next 60
seconds? And I have been living my life that way out of necessity for a long time. And it wasn't until my late 20s and 30s that I started to find out, like,
oh, hold on, there's other stuff going on that's making this so apparent to you that this is where
the poetry has been coming from. This is where the art has been coming from. It's been coming from
the fact that you've had to live this out in necessity. So that's, that's the space that I try to write from when I'm writing about peace.
If I put the word peace or exhale or breathe deep into anything that I make, I try to imagine
at least a few spaces where someone else might be having that similar experience. There's like a few spaces where someone else might be having that similar experience.
There's like a few visuals that I kind of go back to,
what before I even start sharing about peace,
because I mean it in this very simple way.
So I think about it in the simple way of,
I'll think of someone sitting in a receptionist area of a doctor's appointment,
and they're just scrolling through their phone.
There's probably 0.5 seconds
that they might land on something of mine.
And what makes sense to say in that space?
Because I don't know what's gonna happen for that person
when they go on the other side of that door
and they follow the nurse to their waiting room.
I don't know what's gonna happen when they have to sit
on that awkward little table with that little paper
that rolls up and like all of that just but I know that stuff like makes me more stressed like
all those little things make me anxious and whatever I came there for I'm not even thinking about
that yet I'm just trying to sit on the little table right and and you know and navigate all of that
and it's just oh it's so much so I'm thinking about it in the most basic sense.
I'm like, in that moment, just a permission,
like you are allowed to take a deep breath here.
And I don't know what's next.
So that is where a lot of my work falls.
And there have been times where I have been like,
oh, I think it's too simple.
But then I just remember all of those little moments
that are happening all around the world at any given moment
where that stress, that anxiety,
it's just compounding and compounding and compounding.
And I'm like, if I can just help remind myself
and anybody else for these next five seconds,
if there's just an ounce of release,
you're allowed to take that space. And that's something we can continue to practice expanding.
It works.
It works.
How many times a day do you think that you remind yourself of that as As in terms of practice, is it just a, is that a constant thread throughout
every day of your life that you're doing that? It is, but I usually catch myself in it after I've
already started doing it. So about an hour before this, I was just like, I need an ice cube.
It was just random. It was just so specific, not a cup of ice. I was like, I I need an ice cube. It was just random. It was just so specific, not a cup of ice.
I was like, I just need one ice cube
and I just like darted out of the office
and ran to the kitchen and got an ice cube.
And then I came back in here where I record
and I just laid on the floor for like two minutes.
And it was like halfway through.
I was like, oh, when I woke up today,
I didn't do any kind of stretching.
I had so much going on.
And I was like,
oh, my body told me before my mind even caught up with it.
So a lot of it is that,
and the difference now is I'm just catching up to it.
So I used to be in music full time.
And I would be on these shows.
Sometimes I was a performing artist.
Sometimes I was like doing background vocals,
lots and lots of random different things. But I would have these moments where like this
darting to the ice cube where I would just say, I need fresh air, I need fresh air. I remember
one time specifically we were in Lubbock, Texas, which is like West Texas high winds, like they could
probably blow you away. And they were like, don't go outside. There's some kind of wind advisory or whatever.
And I was like, I have to, I have to,
because the sensory overload of the venue that we were in,
there was no escape.
And I was feeling it in every part of my body.
And I just remember running out of the loading dock.
And I was like, it's 18-wheeler.
My body physically just couldn't stay in that space.
I had to get out and I was like,
I would deal with the wind advisory theme
because it's at least a break from the sound.
So this is happening for me every day
and I'm just now becoming more aware of it.
Like, oh, my body's telling me stuff,
even before I've caught up to what's actually going on.
["The End of the World"]
So Morgan, is there a part of this where you have learned
because the deep breath, okay, in the okay, do we notice signals
from our body? Because usually when we don't breathe, when we don't, we're just next, next,
next, next, we are overriding, overriding, overriding signals from our body. And then, is our peace and self-acceptance tied together?
Because what I'm hearing you say is, I needed a piece of ice, so I got one.
I needed to lay down on the floor, so I laid down on the floor.
I needed to stop the musical, I was going to say ceremony.
We're having a great words day. The musical ceremony. And leave. So I did see these
things that you're saying seem simple, but in fact, they're
revolutionary because none of us need a thing and do it. And so
is part of piece, the self acceptance of I will listen to what I need and do it,
even if it's inconvenient for my moment, for other people, for capitalism, for all of
the things.
And do you do that all day?
Do you hear messages from your body and do what is not needed?
Yes, yes. And going back to the word piece, one thing that I found just in
in researching was it was fascinating. How often times like piece might be associated with
something in nature as a definition. And one of the most accessible ones that I had that helped
me kind of wake up to like, Oh, wait a minute, maybe pieces like this bullet point thing
that I got to work through every day was,
and people may be familiar with it,
but it's a song called It Is Well With My Soul
where it says, pieces of river.
And I took that as a little kid,
it's like a very literal thing.
And I was like, oh, pieces of river, okay, cool.
And I just kind of lifted it that.
And then I was like, wow, I grew up.
I complicated it more.
And for me, it's going back to that of like, well, what does a river do?
Well, a river is this flow of water that can sometimes be very wide stream.
Sometimes it's more narrow.
Sometimes it curves in ways that are unexpected through the landscape.
And I'm like, maybe the human experience is like that.
I know I'm not an actual river, but I'm like, maybe I don't have to become like a breath expert to know that it's in the landscape.
Like it's in the actual world that I can look out and see. So that kind of going back to the whole
beyond words thing. One thing I recommend look for something in nature that
makes you feel more serene and consider how you might connect to that. So when I
think about these moments and like you said about acceptance and all of that, it's
like I feel accepted by River. I don't know why.
I don't have words for it,
but it could be like the most mundane,
non-picture-esque little flow of water.
But when I see it, I see it, I feel it.
I want to be near that.
And I'm after that.
And I just want to keep looking for that.
And that's how I saw like the practices I did today even, I might not go running get
a ice cube tomorrow.
I might not lie on the floor for 10 minutes, an hour before a conversation tomorrow.
I probably won't even remember it that way tomorrow.
It's something else.
But it's like when you think about every little droplet in a river, it's kind of like
that.
Like every drop of water, yes, there's this flow,
but there's all of these different ways
through that flow.
It's fascinating to me because so many of us are
not in active pursuit of peace
through these questions that we need to ask ourselves,
what do I want, what do I need?
That feels like self-care and secondary and something that we're going to like a lot into a specific period of our day.
What you're saying is revolutionary to me because it's like, oh, we have access to that every second.
Inside of us. Yes.
Because we're like, just give me an app. The nature thing, I just...
So our son made us... Our son invited us to hike the other day.
We were up in this mountain.
So high.
And it was like nobody had ever hiked there before.
I'm sure I felt like I was in the wilderness that no one had seen.
It was a well worn path.
Okay, whatever.
And Morgan, I kept noticing these flowers that were so freaking beautiful
and bright. And I kept thinking these flowers are just blooming and being this bright,
not for anyone to see them. Nobody ever sees them. They're just
see them. Nobody ever sees them. They're just being and blooming for themselves. Yeah, they're not pursuing vibrancy. And they're not doing it for anybody else. They're not like,
I am the reddest red that ever read because somebody's going to come and see me and pick
me. They don't do the shit. They're just like, No, that's so true. Like there's no little miniature flower billboards
gathered amongst them.
Like here's how to have the best bloom of the season.
Like, it's just like, no, they don't have that.
They don't have like little magazine stands, you know?
Have you tended to your roots today?
Yeah.
And like the little blue flower,
then honestly, it's not as cute as the tall red one that I'm looking at.
It's not like, doesn't look up at the red flower and it's like, oh shit, that flower is blooming so much.
I'm not gonna be gonna bother.
We'll see ROI with my blooms.
Clearly, not where the red flower is at.
Yeah.
Right?
The red flower is like the Kardashians.
They're just all the little flowers
on me. And this is what I have for this season.
And this is what I'm going to do. Yeah. Yeah.
Because the next person that walks by prefers the blue flower.
Yeah. Maybe I don't know that blue flower. I mean, who knows?
Like, everybody has their own taste on that.
No, that is a real thing because where I live,
we just move back to, to Georgia.
We have been on the West Coast for some time
and move back to Georgia and there,
I feel like, I don't know,
I just feel like Georgia has sticks everywhere.
Like, sticks, like, just all over the place.
So I just started noticing like little sticks
and feeling like little sticks
out of low personalities and stuff.
So I'll just like go outside.
I'll just like collect some sticks.
And when I tell people, I have a foyer,
I'll like, oh, you do this with your son.
I'm like, no, he actually doesn't care about sticks at all.
It's just me, like I like to go and collect things
and I'll just bring them inside.
I'll just look at them.
I'm like, I might be the only human who ever cared
about these sticks.
And yeah, they've had a whole life
and they didn't actually need me.
Like, I just happened to be someone
who's experiencing them and seeing them,
but they didn't need me to live.
I mean, they do need me to take care of the earth.
The sticks are like, hey, be kind out there.
Yeah, you are a fireman. It, be kind out there. Yeah, you want to be kind. Yeah, please be kind.
But it's like they didn't need me to write the quote
to help them move through their day kind of thing.
And I think the word that comes up for me there,
a lot is just presence, like just being present
to the most seemingly mundane things.
And that has actually just been teaching me a lot.
Because it's like there is a pressure even in nature,
like you mentioned like climbing a mountain
where it's like, okay, well, what's the view?
Clearly people have been making a big deal
about this trail or whatever it is.
Like, what's the view?
Where's the waterfall?
And all those things are amazing.
And at the same time, there's all these little other things
that we're encountering along the way that we can be present to that someone else might not be present to that's actually why I do draw a lot of little things in my artwork as well. and photos of sticks, and then I will trace over that stick inside of the piece.
And nobody knows that, but me.
Well, I've shared it here now, but I'm not like,
everyone just show you know, like,
there's a stick in there that I just put,
like a random stick on the sidewalk.
Like nobody has to know that.
It's called a new shirt.
It's called a new shirt.
It's called a new shirt.
So, it's like nobody has to know that. It's my no-ster. It's not my no-ster. Yes, it's George.
So, it's like nobody has to know that intimately for it to matter.
I know it's there.
Like when I look at this piece later, it is a reminder that I was present to this life
in the most seemingly insignificant, small way.
And that's something that I can grow in there. I can expand.
And it's certainly something I want to pass on
as a parent now too, I think.
I think it's just like, there's so much happening.
Like one thing I hear a lot of people asking me all the time,
like, well, I don't know what to do with my life.
And I'm just like, I don't like that question. I more of a, what can I do within my life?
Just expand it a little bit more. Like, what can we do within? And we can
collect sticks within this life. We can love. We can be angry about stuff. We can lie on the floor.
There's so many things that we can do within life. I'm trying to just
expand that a little bit more. Within, noticing, within what's here, what's already here. What
I hear you saying is what keeps us from peace is the pursuit of peace. Like just noticing
what's right here. I go for walks all the time. That's my thing. And I have a, our middle daughter is purple.
And like, I don't know how else to describe that.
It's just sure she is purple.
And so I collected a bunch of purple rocks for her
and brought them to her, to her bedroom.
So Morgan, your child is how old?
Four.
Okay, four.
So your child would be excited about a bunch of purple rocks.
My child is 17, so she was in her room and was like, thanks. Like awesome. And so then I left
kind of like, oh, like she didn't understand. What I'm telling you is when I think about
when I'm long gone, I feel like that's something that I'm going to want her to remember.
That time that my mom brought me all those purple rocks, because there's something that's so human.
It's like a resistance of what the world tells us matters of.
It's like proof of nonsense in the best way.
Proof of all that does not make us productive or worthy,
just so, oh, my mom noticed those purple rocks for me.
Like you having the sticks is so tender and beautiful to me.
I love that about you.
Thanks for sharing that,
because I had a somewhat similar robot, even though my son just for where I went and collected some sticks and leaves and
I laid them out on like this big piece of paper and I sat them there and he just like looked
at it and like just totally unimpressed like he's like oh sticks and leaves like and just went
on and said like this is supposed to be a beautiful moment. Like, look at these leaves.
Like you weren't expecting them.
They were on the table and like barely batted an eye and just kept on going.
And it just makes me think, yeah, maybe the moment that was supposed to be, it was supposed
to be a bookmark that they could back to later.
It's like, maybe it's, it's just a bookmark, a placeholder
of a memory that can be unpacked later on. And I feel like that takes so much like patience.
It does. Because I'm like, this is supposed to be a moment. But it's like we're always trying
to make our kids happy by the extraordinary. We'll make it awesome. we'll take it, we'll do Disneyland and we'll
do blah, blah, blah, blah, and then we create this addiction to thinking that what is is
not good enough. But I think sometimes like the best thing we can do is to teach our
children to see the beauty and the ordinary because they don't have to hustle for that
if they have that skill. Yeah. And one thing I think a lot about that too is that when it comes to seeing the beauty
and the ordinary is that I think we will live in a better world if more people paid attention
to what have been deemed ordinary.
And I think about a lot of the suffering that we see happening in the world is like, well, it takes somebody paying attention
to the details. It takes someone saying like, wait, but don't forget about these people over here.
Don't forget about the actual conversations we have to have. Don't forget about the things that,
to you, it might be a small thing. But to this person, it's a really big thing,
the way you set that.
It's a really big thing, the way that impacted them.
And maybe there is no small thing.
Like maybe there is, it's just small to us.
I will say that there's been a theme of me
allowing myself to be a little bit more angry,
I guess, if you could say, because I
did grow up feeling like, don't be mean to people. Like that was like, don't be mean, don't be mean,
don't be mean. But I've just realized this is like an argument for a way to live. It's like, no, I
am going to be very unapologetic about, no, we have to spend a lot more time paying attention
to the details. It doesn't matter if you
were sending a rocket somewhere to space or, you know, if you're trying to organize meals that people
can have free access to. It's like we need people who are in the details who are noticing the small
things. And it makes a difference. And yeah, it's like a multi-layer thing that I just try to spend a lot of time with
because there are times where I do feel like, oh, am I doing enough?
You know, if I'm like outside collecting sticks, I'm just like, what does this even mean?
And I'm like, I'm practicing going deeper and this is something I can take into other
things.
That's right.
I have a question about that because you just said, I wonder if I'm doing enough because
I'm collecting these sticks.
And like, is that enough?
But I'm sitting here as a person heavily socialized and invested in household culture.
And I recognize that completely.
And I feel like sometimes I think about peace and the lack of it in my life.
And I'm just like, well, put it in the calm of things I'm fucking up.
I don't have enough peace, like I don't have enough exercise,
like I don't have enough quality time with my family, you know,
like all of the things that I'm screwing up.
And I'm hearing you picking up sticks and Glennon picking up purple stones.
And I'm like, oh, I'm not doing enough.
Because I would never in a million years go out and be like,
unless I was doing like an actual program,
and I had a journal that was like,
you're a kid today is pick up steps.
Then I would do it.
Yeah, the tyranny of being like,
you should be having more peace,
and you should be having more presence.
And like, what is the in-road,
if like you're on one side of the spectrum thing,
I'm not doing enough because I'm picking up sticks.
And I'm over here thinking about doing enough,
because I'm missing all of life,
because I've never looked at a purple rock
and thought to pick it up.
Where is the on-trait in for someone like me
that doesn't feel like this tyrannical,
you're not vulnerable enough,
you're not peaceful enough to get there a little bit.
Yeah, I love that you said Entry,
because that is an example in my mind,
I'll go with food.
So for instance, I'm not a good host person,
like hosting a meal of something,
I can maybe order pizza and make sure it gets here on time.
That's about as far as I can go
however I
I remember moments from childhood
Where someone who was really good at preparing a meal
And they just thought about like the smallest thing if someone in the group had an allergy
And they went out of their way to create a whole separate thing for that person, I think that's the same as picking up rocks. I think the person who
sends emails and they back space a few words because they're like, I think that might come across
a way and I want to be sensitive to this person. And they think about that and they changed that up. I think that's the same thing as going outside and looking at the sky.
I think the people who are listening, they can hear tone and voice and I'm conscious of this
because I'm being autistic. I cannot hear tone and voice very well. And there are people who can
tell by the slightest shift in tone that something has changed in that person and they're
going to be the one who's able to ask in a way that I can't about how are you really
doing and help that person find peace.
So I think there's a lot like as many as are stars in the sky, there's so many different
ways that like we are accessing that and we can
nurture that. Because I'm like, I think some people may, they may never, like you said, they may
never think to, like I don't even really think about the six things. Sometimes I just open the door
and I just go outside and I start doing it. But I'm also the same person who, if you ask me to
But I'm also the same person who, if you ask me to prepare a meal for a group of people, there is no peace in that for me. No, I am angry. I'm like, why did I? Who's who, who's signed me
up for this? Somebody guilt me into this. It is exact opposite. No, no, no. But I know a lot of
people who that is how they can help one,
find room to breathe in their life.
There's people who have sensibilities around little spices.
Like they can smell different aroma and spices.
And like they connect them to different memories
and help some calm down.
But for people say, like, oh, yeah, if I smell this certain scent,
it makes me think about this.
I don't have that.
For me, it's a lot of touch and going outside and touching and holding things like that.
So I hope that those examples could at least be like just little dots that people can maybe
grasp that.
Because I'm like, I think there's a lot of different ways of doing it.
And I think some ways get more popular because they just seem kind of absurd,
or just sort of random,
but there's just so much that humans do that is so,
it's so needed for themselves and others. I see you in those pictures you send me on the sidelines of the basketball court. She's a coach. She coaches eight year olds. Oh, in basketball. Okay. And she sends me these pictures of her
Intently looking in these girls eyes. First of all my sister doesn't know shit about basketball. Is it even basketball? What are you playing?
I coach basketball basketball. I know anything about anything. I just scream believe in yourself.
Yes, but like the intensity and beauty
that you are concentrating with these girls,
and I can see these pictures of you with your eyes
and they're looking at you.
And that is collecting purple rocks and sticks.
I think maybe you need to, you don't need to do shit.
You could just notice all the things you're already doing
that are picking up purple rocks.
Yes, it's like the little girls are the little things.
Yes, it's already there.
Morgan, that just like expanded my heart when you were saying that.
You said like you're so sick of the find your purpose bullshit,
which thank you for the love of God.
And but you say focus on what energizes you and excites you.
Sticks excite you.
Little girls being a disaster on the basketball court
for getting one hoop the entire season thrills me
like nothing has to date.
And so it's just paying attention to that connectedness.
Yeah.
You already are.
Me connected to these little kids.
That's all the same bag is what I hear.
It's the same. it's the same.
It is absolutely the same.
Sister, Morgan, sister,
I know we're gonna make her pick up sticks.
No, and it's so funny.
I used to think that way,
like I used to think like,
okay, we all got to get out in nature,
but it's like, you know, it's a huge part of nature?
People, like, if you but it's like you know, it's a huge part of nature people
If you people like human
We need other humans to be present to humans like not everybody can go outside and pick up six off the ground That's not going to be everyone. Of course. I love people
But I'm not as in in that real time like I'd be a horrible coach of any kind
I'd be like I coach of any kind.
I'd be like, I can write them some poems
and deliver them after the game.
Half-time speech.
Well, there's actually billions of different ways
and we're already doing it.
And I do think it's just, it's noticing and looking,
because even a lot of the things that I'm,
that I'm so passionate about now such as the art
and an emphasizing art as communication
and not prioritizing words.
I didn't even realize that till I looked back on my life
and realized I had already been doing it.
And it was like, yes, it was incredibly awkward
at summer camp when all that was happening.
And I felt like I was fighting for my life.
But at the same time, it's like, no,
you were living that out then too.
It was like, you were saying,
no, I'm gonna show up to this camp exactly like I need to today.
And that's just gonna be what it is.
And of course, I didn't have that confidence at that time,
but I was practicing it.
It was there.
So I look back on that. Now I'm like,
oh, that's what I'm doing today. I'm doing a different version of that. I'm literally putting
stuff out there on the internet that people can take it and take it anywhere. They can do whatever
they want with it. And now I'm aware. I'm noticing, oh, this is something that I've been doing all
along. This is how I've been practicing courage all along. This is how I've been, I've already been doing it.
And I'm just going to keep nurturing that.
I actually had a question about that because it does seem
that you are uniquely courageous and brilliant and very
special in the way of you seem to be.
I feel like accommodating has this kind of negative
connotation. like it's
for deficit of some sort.
I don't mean that.
I mean it in the strongest, most powerful way of you are accommodating how you were made
in your life, even when you were bitty coming up.
I feel like most of us spend our whole lives just trying to kill that thing that's calling
for our own accommodation. Yes. Inside of us. But I'm wondering how your later in life diagnosis of autism,
did that change your even self perception of these accommodations that you had built into your life to be who you are?
And if so, what was the shift there?
As a result of that.
That is such a good question. And honestly, credit to my therapist,
because the specialist that I saw who helped me through the whole diagnosis process, like very clearly said, Morgan, you have grown up and moved through life,
thinking your needs don't matter and thinking that you're not someone who can be accommodated for. And now it's time to open up and accommodate all that from childhood all the way till now their space for you, no apologizing for it. And having someone tell me that very, very directly,
it really was a wake up call
because I don't think anyone had told me that before.
I don't think I had ever really heard
to my face like that.
No, your needs matter in a big way.
Not like, like, I think I was like, like, second area.
I had done that a lot of like,
okay, yeah, my needs matter, but I mean, hold on though, there's real stuff going on a lot of like, okay, yeah, my needs matter,
but I mean, hold on though,
there's real stuff going on.
It's like, no, this is front and center,
we have to address this.
I'll just give some very specific,
that started with the top layers of like
when I was just telling everything that I was doing in the,
it's like you're gonna have to take off
like half of the things that you're doing in the day
because you're just doing too much.
And I was like, but this is my job, this is my job.
This is my job. Well, what can we do to make your job less stressful the day, because you're just doing too much. And I was like, but this is my job, this is my job.
And she's like, well, what can we do to make your job
less stressful?
I do need a move.
I did.
Move to a more affordable state.
Like I did a lot of things like that.
And then it was working into the layers,
as you were saying, of like, oh, and there's
burdens of little Morgan that needed that too.
Like what did little Morgan need off of her plate?
What did little Morgan need when she her plate? What did Little Morgan
need when she was sitting at the picnic table? We thought like like some follows like you know
that has a back connotation but it's like yeah maybe some likes and follows would have helped
that summer you know if I could have shared those poems online when there was no social media
yet. It's like maybe that would have helped like you know what these kids that can't don't get it
but there's some some kid in you in South Africa who likes my palm,
my palm who gets it.
So yeah, it's like, what did Morgan need then?
So yeah, I'm still working on it for sure.
I have not figured it out,
but I'm at least aware of like,
I love that you said the word accommodation.
I think that's a good word to bring forth
in something like this, because it's something
I want to remember.
I like the emphasis on accommodating, as opposed to assimilating, because we tend to measure
success.
I'm successful.
The more I can assimilate, the more I can do things the way the world wants me to do.
I went to the party.
I did all the work for eight hours. I did the thing, success. Is it? Or can I measure success based
on how much I didn't do the things that don't serve me? Like that I didn't. Well, this week I didn't,
I said, no to the party. I did way less work. So success. Like I committed my own needs as opposed to success being out as much as I changed into
what society needed me to be.
And for everyone and in every circumstance, I mean, it's life, it's relationships.
I have just started to believe our marriage therapist for the first time.
Like maybe she's on to something, even though she said it 400 times,
that I don't have to, when I don't like something,
put it in my head for 24 hours and decide,
if that's reasonable, if you're average person,
would find that not okay.
If I'm just being a raging bitch,
that I just get to say, I don't like this.
Yes.
And that maybe it is crazy.
And guess what, it doesn't matter
because this is who I am.
There's only two people in this relationship.
And one of them doesn't like this.
We can at least accommodate two people.
But that is a monumental idea.
Like I would sift it through,
is this reasonable?
Is this crazy?
Before I would ever even say it out of my mouth?
That's accommodating yourself, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And and there's so much more room for that. This conversation just me even thinking, I'm like,
yeah, I'm probably just just getting started with even realizing like,
oh, there's probably a lot more in my life that I have felt like I've had to do or I've had to keep up.
And maybe there are more questions that I can ask myself and say, no, how do I do this in a way that I know that is actually fruitful and helpful to me and can help me not even just grow, but to just rest more.
to me and can help me not even just grow, but to just rest more.
And to just have more time,
I'm like, okay, I did what I did.
Now I'm just gonna go walk away now
and not think about anything for the rest of the day
in this area.
So that's something I've been trying to bring with my work too,
because it has become harder when I now share things
and art and poetry and I doing all these collaborations
and things, it's like, oh, what's next, what's next, What's next? If you're just like, I don't know all the time.
Like sometimes we're like, what does that mean? I'm like, I don't know.
I honestly don't know. I'm still trying to figure out how I got to this point.
So it's, it's very interesting because I am feeling that, but at the same time, there is like
this sort of journey that I'm going on right now
of like, how do I invite other people into that?
How do I invite other people into, yes, yes,
we can look at our lives as a story, but maybe it's this nonlinear story.
So the hero's journey, I've been very interested in that.
And I love the hero's journey. I love the hero's journey.
However, what I've
started to look at, and I'm like, you know what, so many representations of the hero's journey
is this perfect circle. And I'm like, this is great for two and a half hour movie. This is great
for a television show series. But when it comes to life, it's a lot more, a lot more like moving
through an actual landscape. It's not this perfect circle.
So I was writing about different parts of the story
when I was writing my book.
You were only just beginning.
Originally, I had planned on doing like,
oh, I need to have like perfect circles in the book.
So everyone knows like where they are in the journey
of the book.
And I'm like, actually life isn't like that.
In this space, it's going to be, yes, it's a story.
And it's all over the place.
Yes, and also story implies words. Journey implies one foot in front of the other.
The hero's journey implies that everything is geared towards the top of that mountain.
The hero's journey doesn't emphasize the sticks along the way.
All of that stuff is not the way that we're experiencing life.
It's the climax.
It's like everything is like, just keep your head down until you get to this top thing.
I get so disappointed when I live that way.
Like if I get to the top of the mountain and everyone's owing and owing about the view
and I'm like, yeah.
But the way that you're doing it is so different
than maybe it's not just a one foot in front of the other journey. Maybe it's not a story made up of
words. Maybe it's the small sticks and, you know, I think I have two teenagers and sometimes words
aren't cutting it. Like, we can't, if I just depend on words right now in this phase, we will miss each
other forever. And so sometimes I just have to be Morgan, like I'm standing there and I'm
like, okay, what I mean is just like sitting here with you on the couch. The truth is just,
I guess me just putting my hand on your leg for a second, not too long
because that's too intimate at this moment, but like, the truth is just me not leaving
the room and being quiet.
And so this conversation is freeing to me because I feel like in this culture, we think
if we don't communicate it to each other with words and nail it, that we are not being
real enough with each other.
And if you've ever raised a teenager, you know that can't be it. There are truths that can just
be expressed to each other standing next to each other or being in different rooms and loving
each other huge from our hearts. The truth doesn't always have to be communicated with words.
The truth doesn't always have to be communicated with words.
That is so profound. The way you said that, I never thought about how even like in teenage years,
it's like a threshold because childhood is a lot more embodied, a lot more present in a lot of ways. Like you're very present to like big emotions, but oh, just makes kind of so much compassion for teenagers.
This is like, you're now at this threshold of like, no, it's
time to like, cut all that out and get it into words. And
where are you going to do it your life?
Where you go? And how are you going to? And it's like, wow,
but you're coming from a whole lifetime so far of like, now
emotions are actually really, really big. And I feel them. And then
now it's like growing up, you're getting that message of like, no, tone it down, like put
it into a paragraph. I'm like, oh, that's really, that's a lot, that's a lot. It's making me think
about my teenage years in different ways. Thanks for saying that. That's, that's really profound.
things are saying that. That's really profound. Morgan Harper Nichols, thank you for being you because you being you,
please just keep accommodating constantly because it helps all of us.
And it helps us, you being yourself is allowing us to be ourselves more.
And thanks for somehow magically on pages and the interwebs,
creating a place that is beyond pages and interwebs.
Not sure how you're doing it,
but I appreciate very much.
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