We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - 241. Being Left Out: Navigating that Lifelong Ache
Episode Date: September 14, 2023Amanda, Glennon and Abby explore how to survive the lifelong, universal pain of being left out: What Abby felt when she heard “We don’t want you here” – and its long-lasting impact; Why ...it is so painful, and how to process feelings of rejection and isolation; How dissociation helped Glennon cope with rejection in the cafeteria; What parents should and *should not* do when helping kids navigate exclusion; and The real difference between “fitting in” and “belonging.” Also check out Episode 179: How to Fix Our Loneliness with Dr. Marisa G. Franco 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
Discussion (0)
Hello friends! Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. Today, we're going to discuss how to survive that feeling.
That's the worst. It's just the worst. And how even maybe occasionally to transcend that feeling.
But I don't even know. We're just going to talk a lot about how to survive life as an adult and a kid
with this constant recurring feeling
that never really goes away completely, doesn't? No.
I think there's a lot of different levels of it
and we'll discuss all of them,
but just the feeling of rejection.
Mm.
Oh, my solution.
Yeah, isolation.
And also, however good belonging feels, however good being in when you're like, you are
in with that person.
Yeah.
You are their person and they're not going to do anything without you.
It's like that feels so good.
And being left out is the equal and opposite
of that amazing feeling.
Yeah.
Do you have stories?
I have one.
Incidentally, I have the first time that I felt
like so hard.
Basically, I was left out of everything
as the youngest of seven kids.
Right.
But one in particular had nothing to do
with my family, it was my friends.
I lived pretty close to one of my childhood best friends.
And so I would ride my little bike down to her house.
And back then, you didn't really call,
we had no cell phone.
So you just showed up at people's houses
and you knock on the door and you're like,
you wanna play?
And so I knock on Susie's door
and she has a friend over, another friend
of mine, Caitlin. And they're hanging out and I walk in, you know, walk into the house
and eventually this must have been like four or five minutes being there. They just said,
we don't want you here. How old are you? I must have been seven or eight. And I was like, how old were you? I must have been seven or eight.
And I was like,
okay.
And so I got back on my bike
and the worst part is it's an uphill all the way home.
So I think I was crying a little bit
and I got myself together
because I now had to go say it out loud
to my parents,
to my mom,
who knew that I had just left like 10 minutes ago.
So I get home and my mom says, what are you doing back? And I said, they didn't want to play with me.
And she said, what? And I said, yeah, they told me that they didn't want me there. And so,
I don't know, I just remember sitting down at the kitchen table, just kind of baffled
and confused.
I come from this family who is like, you walk in the house and everybody's like, come on
in, the more the barrier, I had never been experienced with any sort of boundaries before.
You're like, first of all, I didn't even know you could say that.
Yeah.
Second of all, I can't believe someone just said it to me.
Yeah, yeah.
It was, it was, it was really, it hurt my feelings a lot.
And I get over stuff pretty, pretty quickly, but obviously this one was a big one because
I still remember it.
It's like, it's an amy great.
It's like one of the only things I remember from my childhood.
Can you feel it in your body right now?
Oh, it just sick to my stomach,
especially being in a big family.
My friends were really important to me
throughout my whole life
because all of these people in my house,
they have to like me in a way,
they have to love me.
And so friendship was really important
for me to get a sense of myself.
So this was a toughy
because I was like, I don't know what's happening. Yeah, a sense of myself. So this was a toughy, because I was like, I don't know what's happening.
Yeah, a sense of myself,
that's interesting way to describe it,
because it feels like I'm being isolated
or I'm being shut out,
but what it gets at more deeply is self-worth.
Yeah.
Am I not worth anything?
Am I not good?
Am I not likeable?
Am I not enough? Yeah. not likeable? Am I not enough?
Yeah, it's so far with us.
All of us.
Yeah, I mean, I guess who struggles still with that?
I might have imprinted right that in there.
Damn, Caitlin.
You're not.
Susie and Caitlin are not alone in that.
Who I forgive, I forgive you.
We were eight or something.
Caitlin, I don't forgive you. I mean, we were eight or something. Caitlin, I don't forgive you.
It's interesting because this need to belong, if you look at Maslow's hierarchy of needs,
the belonging need is above the like shelter.
Wow.
Basic life things.
And it makes sense.
And I feel like this is important because it's this idea of
world laughing about how you know you're seven years old and you're kicked out of the house and
it's still there, but it makes sense from an evolutionary perspective. For millions of years,
isolation equals death. We are a pack of people you don't survive by yourself. So you have to be
included in the group to survive. And our society has changed so much, but it still affects the exact
same part of the brain. The part of the brain that when you get left out gets triggered when they
do brain imaging,
it's the dorsal interior singulate.
It's the exact same place where we experience physical pain.
Yep.
And they've actually done studies where the treatment for physical pain, when you treat
being left out, it ameliorates the pain because it's because there was no difference when
you think about our species of, you know, having a wound
versus being kicked out of the group. And so it's still there in us. And now it's even more confusing because we have this intellectual disconnect between being like, that is so silly
that I feel this strongly that at my office they don't invite me to sit in the group of people.
But it's because our body doesn't know the difference.
Our body is going to die.
Yeah, our body thinks we're like in a herd and we've been picked off from the herd.
And that's how animals die as they get kicked out of the herd and then they're left alone.
Well, humans, that's how humans die.
Right.
I mean, that's why it's in our bodies so much still is because this
has only been a little blip on the radar where we could ostensibly get through life, quote, unquote,
independently, which, you know, arguably we can't. I guess the good news for me though, is that
this experience informed so much of the rest of my life because I am so inclusive.
Yeah.
I actually can probably pinpoint this moment
being one of the first times
where I started to really be like,
wow, I need to be more aware of including everyone
because I now know what it feels like
to not be included.
And I think though it was heartbreaking,
I mean, you know, I just think about all the new kids coming in on the national team and how terrified they were.
And I would walk right up to them. I would invite them to sit at my table at the meal rooms, you know, just like being trying to be almost, almost like kind of overly.
Inclusively, probably a little bit too much. I'm remembering right now, being in my,
a lot of my early traumatic memories
were from cafeteria school,
but I'm remembering elementary school cafeteria.
I remember there were these big like grapes
and watermelons painted on the wall.
Oh my God, yes.
And then if you got in trouble,
you had to go put your nose up
against a grape. That's so wild. In front of everybody, you just have to stand. But I remember being
at a circle table, I think we had a sign tables and there were a bunch of different circle tables.
So you'd have like seven people at. And there was this one group that was in my class of girls. And it was
always an in and out thing like you were in, you were out, you were in, you were out of
this group. It was like as good as what you were saying sister, as good as the belonging
felt, there was always the threat of unbelonging because every week there'd be somebody who was out for whatever reason.
And then it was pretty brutal. Like the group would just turn on that person for the week.
And so I was being turned on quite often because I was kind of like an on the fringe periphery.
I was a periphery person. Yeah, not like in charge. I was not a ringleader.
So there's not a lot of power.
Then you just get in and out.
And I just remember this one day, I will call her Michelle.
Oh, you're covering that is in fact her name.
I was like, I didn't know you were trying to make it.
I'll call her for a shell.
Yeah, and she actually turned out to be lovely person.
But she looked at me and she said,
Oh my God, your hair is so greasy.
You could start a car with all of the grease in your hair.
Oh, shit.
And then I remember this really, really nice kid named Buster.
Cool name.
He was at the table and he goes,
you don't start a car with grease.
You start a car with oil. And I was like,
buster, I don't think that's as helpful as you think it is at the moment. But I
remember in that moment in the cafeteria, the reason I'm remembering the
watermelons and the grapes is that I dissociated and went to play with my imaginary orangutan
friend.
Oh wow.
This is a good joke.
Hold on a second.
Yeah, hold on.
You guys, you guys.
I've never heard of imaginary orangutan.
Have you since literally neither have I.
Okay.
I'm telling you because I can remember moving my attention from that table where
I was stuck where they were being so mean to me and looking up at the corner, the upper
corner where I used to have this friend who was an imaginary friend.
What was the friend?
I don't know.
I just remember him being a tang, yeah. And feeling like, oh, this isn't really happening.
I've got my little friend here who's gonna be with me all day.
This is something.
I'm looking at your faces and I'm feeling like maybe
this is less related to storytelling.
I just like, okay, first of all,
is it a ring of tang or a ring of tang?
Is it a ring of tang? I think it's a ring of tang. all, is it a rangatang or rangatang? Is it a rangatang?
I think it's a rangatang.
Oh, well, don't say you didn't learn something today.
I think it's with a G at the end.
Can somebody find out for us?
I feel like it's the least of our concerns
or how much it's just a ticket.
Listen, my point was, sometimes the horror
of the left-outedness feeling, which feel like death can lead us to things that become
Survival skills in our lives like for Abby inclusiveness and for me imagination. No, well disassociated
So your no, but like orangutan become orangutans. Wow
but like orangutan become orangutans. Wow.
orangutans become bulimia, right? Because if you're like, okay, don't worry about the outside drama.
I have my own interior thing that I can control and rely on,
even if it's not kind to me, at least it's not in this wild
best. That is fascinating. Wow.
I wanted to follow up on Abby's thing,
but I feel like we're out of the shell on Albi.
Did you guys not have imaginary friends?
No.
Oh, God.
And I think it's cool that you did.
I feel like imaginary friends and stuffed animals
and comfort things like my Blinky.
I had my Blie until college.
I feel like
comfort things that
that are
controllable by me. I like their adaptations. It makes sense. I mean, that's also
very evolutionary, right? You're like, well, I find this to be an inhospitable environment.
It will adapt to make it less so.
You know who never leaves you out?
You know who never leaves you out?
I'm right.
I'm right.
That thing loved me.
You were the center of its world.
Greece or no Greece? I think that this is interesting,
because we can talk about all the kinds of ways we get left out,
how we handle it is really what this conversation's about.
Because we've all been left out.
But what do we turn to?
What do we try to use to solve that heartbreak or that?
Thank you, because you know what?
One way to look at that is that that's dissociation,
that's crazy, that's whatever.
But another way to look at that is remembering
that there's always something within you
that will help you withstand the rejection
of something outside of you
and that you have everything you need internally
to be your own friend.
So cool.
I am interested in being left out as why? Why does it happen?
Why do people do it?
What is the actual nexus of it?
So we've all been left out.
We all still feel as upset about it when we're 45 as when we're seven.
But are we actually being left out a lot of the time?
Because often I feel that way.
I have like such a strong reaction to even a perceived being left out
as I do through the actually being left out.
What is happening at the center of that when folks are leaving people out?
So I wanna tell a story about something recently
that happened with Alice that I think really
it's all this.
Bobby was on a new baseball team.
So there's always like new set of siblings involved
in that if we're lucky.
If not, it's like really, really, really long,
double headers with no siblings. New siblings for Alice to play with.
For Alice to play with. Yes. Ideally. So we really looked out. There are two on this team.
She loves both of them. Hallelujah to all of us. And they're playing during the games.
us and they're playing during the games. So before one of the games, she asks if she can invite this girl, Sarah, changing the
names, but she says, can I have Sarah over after the game?
I say, sure, that's great.
So we go to the game, she and Sarah find each other they're playing and then the other
little friend Amy is also at the game.
So they're all playing
together at the game and I say to Alice, oh, Amy's here. Let's invite her also to come back after
the game with Sarah. And she has this kind of tentative face like, I don't feel comfortable with that. And I
with that. And I just noted it by overwrote her. It was like, no, I'm inviting. So at the end of the game, I say to Amy's mom, can Amy come back to the house with us? And she has
this kind of like really funny face on her. And she's like, oh, no, no, no, she has this kind of like really funny face on her.
And she's like, oh, no, no, no, she has something.
She has something.
And it was very odd.
I like sent something weird.
And I just mostly wanted to just run directly
out of the game with Alice and Sarah.
Because I was uncomfortable,
don't understand what's happening,
feel weird, everything's weird.
So then I see Alice and Sarah, I go up and talk to them and I'm like,
hey, Alice, what's going on?
And I find out that Alice has told Sarah that she doesn't want Amy to come.
And Sarah has told Amy that Alice doesn't want to come. And Amy has told her
mother that Alice doesn't want to come. Oh, God. And Alice is very kindhearted. So this
was kind of odd for the ecosystem. And I said, Alice, if we don't invite Amy, she's going
to feel bad. And Alice said, well, if she isn't invited, she will
feel bad. But if she is invited, I will feel bad. Why should I feel bad to make her feel
better?
Fair.
And I'm like, this is a very valid point. And I should at least feel equally empathetic
to my daughter's feelings as I do to other people's daughters'
feelings.
So I was like, okay, could you share with me why?
Because I know that this girl is nice to you and you like her.
And why don't you want her to come?
Why are you going to feel so bad if she comes?
And she said, I am scared that if Amy comes, Amy and Sarah will not want to play with me.
And I will be left out.
Well, left out inception.
Left out inception.
And it was such a revelation to me because, first of all, that she could put that into
words.
That instead of just being like, that she could put that into words. Yeah.
That instead of just being like, no, I don't want to.
She was like, I'm scared about being left out.
So better her than me, right?
And I was like, wow, so I look at this girl Sarah and I'm like Sarah.
Alice is clearly worried about Amy coming because she's going to feel left out.
Like do you think you could work together to make sure everyone's being included?
And God bless this little girl.
She puts her hand immediately around Alice and goes,
of course it was so sweet.
And then I say, look at Alice.
And she expresses that if she knows she's not gonna be left out,
she actually would love to play with both of them.
Oh my God, I have the chills.
It's crazy.
So then I brought all three of the girls together and all of their parents because now this is
like a weird thing.
Yeah.
And I'm like, okay, so Amy, you're probably having a lot of feelings because you heard
that Alice didn't want you to come over to our house.
And I just want to say that that is true.
Alice didn't want you to come over to the house,
but I need you to know why,
and that's because she was worried about you two playing
and leaving her out.
And so both of you were having the exact same fears
at the exact same time,
that both of you were worried about being left out right now.
And I think that we can actually solve that all together by making sure no one feels that way
and we all play together. And they were like, oh yeah, I know how that oh yeah, that really
stinks when that happens. I feel that way too. So then they all went home to the house.
And they also, because we have just put it out in center,
they were negotiating it themselves for the next four hours.
It was like every 20 minutes, they'd be checking on each other.
Like, is this good for you?
Are you having fun?
Do you want to play this game?
Because we're only going to play a game.
We're going to all play together.
And it just made me think like, I wonder how many times that the things that we do, the
things that I do that impact others that are experienced as meanness to others are actually
just acts of self preservation.
We think, okay, my emotional survival right now
depends on sacrificing someone else's because there's no way that everything can be fine here. And
so to protect myself, you're out. And I bet that's happening a lot more than we think it is. Yeah. But in fact, your situation, Abby, with your friends, it could have been less about, oh,
we don't want you here.
And more about, I want someone to pay attention to me.
And if Abby's here, my friend is only going to pay attention to Abby.
And I just want to be seen.
Like we all just want to 100%.
And it's so important sister,
that you had the bravery and the courage
to figure this out and then talk about it.
Of course, I probably went home
and I'm sure my mom was probably like,
well, they're just mean girls.
You know, like that's probably where it ended
rather than trying to really get to the bottom of it
because these kids have now developed a much deeper bond That's probably where it ended rather than trying to really get to the bottom of it because
these kids have now developed a much deeper bond because now they're all aware that there's
this fear of being left out and so they're going to be much more conscious of it and then
they can negotiate it themselves.
It's so cool.
I do think we need to have a language for our kids around like around this.
Like there needs to be, I don't know, like a scoring system.
Like do you feel left out?
Like something that's like very common where there can be like a check-in moment.
And maybe there's a room to discuss left-outedness because that whole thing is so beautiful and
is ideal,
that the way that scenario played out sometimes
and for certain age group.
But there might be room to discuss left-outedness
with maybe kids who are a little older or as not
just always a problem to fix.
Because if people make choices about who they're going to spend their time
with socially based on what they really need in the moment, not necessarily based on whether
the other person who's being left out is worthy or not or mean or not.
But if sometimes it's about what I need right now, I'm having this person and not that
person, then there's room for a conversation about,
it not needing to be fixed all the time.
Maybe you're not there not because you're bad or not,
but because they needed something else in that moment.
Do you know what I mean?
Certainly when my kids were little,
I wasn't thinking all this way.
So it always felt like a problem to fix right away.
Like certainly you, you're being left out.
So you and you shouldn't be left out.
I think for me, I sometimes feel left out as an adult
if parties are happening.
I don't even wanna go to the parties, obviously. But I can still
feel left out because people don't invite me to things sometimes when there's going
to be drinking there. Because they know me and they know that I won't want to be there.
But maybe they don't want to feel awkward because they know the whole thing is going to be
revolving around drinking. And they know that if I'm there,
they're going to have to have this consciousness about me too.
So I am being left out of that,
but it's not because I'm bad.
It's because they want to feel a certain way.
Sure.
And so that doesn't need to be fixed actually.
You know about the Snapchat map sister, right?
So Snapchat is like the way that teenagers now are mostly
communicating. And there's a map literally like like you would see
them in your GPS on Apple Maps or whatever or Google. Yeah, that
locates where that kid is. So let's say your kid who you're at
home, you look at and you see all your friends in one place
and you're not there, you know at, and you see all your friends in one place, and you're not there.
You know that there's a party that you would.
We all know where all their friends are at all the time.
So there's no more FOMO.
No.
There's like, ConfirmO.
Yes.
Like, you, there's no fear of missing out.
It's, I'm just, real sure I'm being, proof missing out.
Yes.
Proof, it's so intense. Can we listen to the
voicemail from Stacy because I think that that relates to what you were just talking about Glenn.
Yeah. Hi, Glennon. My name is Stacy. My question is the seven year old daughter. She goes to
aftercare program yesterday that counselor said some of the girls are getting kind of clicky.
And I don't know if this is a problem.
My daughter has experienced being left out
when her neighbor was with a bunch of friends
and she was an excluded, so she knows
what it feels like to be excluded.
And my question is, how do we help the kids learn how to
include people that also know that sometimes they just want to play with their two friends.
And then if we do teach them to include everyone all the time, are we teaching them that they have to be responsible for the other kids feeling any discomfort?
Because I've seen that play out and I don't want to teach my child that she has to be responsible for other people's discomfort all the time.
This is such a good one.
I feel it.
I feel there's some truth in this.
I mean, I think there could be an end both of teaching kids to kindly express their needs
and wants.
There's levels of left out in us
and when we go into meanness and bullying,
we don't want you to hear meanness,
but I remember, you know,
in when I was teaching third grade,
trying to help kids express to each other,
I just need a little bit of time with Jason right now.
Or I don't like having a lot of people around. It's too loud.
So I just like to play with two people at a time, like really getting into what I need.
So it's less about the other person, but I do feel like when we obsess about our kids being
included in every single thing or including things in every single thing
We are teaching them that to not be included is a problem that they can't handle
Because if we jump in and fix things then what that is saying to the kid is oh shit
That was a bad thing. Yeah, it's so bad. My mom has to step in and fix it because this is unsurvivable
So I do think there's a way of
Not accepting bullying not accepting bullying, not accepting
meanness. Yes, but also teaching our kids that it's okay to want and meet and set up certain
social situations for themselves to meet their own needs.
Totally, because if they're trying to please this inclusiveness, then sometimes they're leading themselves
in the vein of trying to make sure everybody's included.
So trying to teach your kids kindly,
how to not only ask for what you want,
but also be in a place where you're not mean
when you do ask for what you want.
It's hard though because we want to teach our kids so many things about connectivity,
but also that they can handle being left out. I think that you're right.
I know.
It does get tricky because I remember as a teacher, then there's, where's the line?
Because there's often a couple of kids that are always left out.
Yeah.
For reasons that are beyond their control,
and that's not okay either.
We're kind of talking about two different things.
When we're talking about inclusivity,
that is like a posture towards the world.
When you're like, I hope that my kids are people
who have an eye for the person who's being left out
situationally. To be able to look and see, I can tell that person doesn't have
someone in this moment. That person is sitting by themselves. That person is
new. I have the ability to do something about that in this moment,
to change this person's moment for them,
and to risk a little bit of my social capital
to make this less of a circle and more of a horseshoe.
That feels very different, a different conversation,
and that's an orientation towards the world,
and that's a training of your eye
to see things that other people don't see versus I feel like I can't ever invite best friend A over
without best friend B. That's a very different analysis and so I think a culture of inclusivity where we're looking for those folks is very important,
but it doesn't mean that we need to always go down the checklist and include everyone every single
time when we really feel like some some private time with person a, living in fear of being labeled a mean person
is just as awful as being a mean person. It's just your intentions. I'm 44. I still feel like this once a week. And explaining to your kids like, this is just the murky waters you're going to
be waiting in for always. And we're really sensitive to it, and our bodies and our minds are designed
to be really sensitive to it.
So this is going to happen a lot, and it also doesn't necessarily mean anything in any
particular instance.
Yeah.
Doesn't mean anything a lot.
This person could have just run into that person and they've gone home.
And in our heads, we make it a whole story about how now you're on the outs.
This is an inevitable part of life,
resolve it in yourself.
Think about it when you're thinking about other people,
but also I think we as adults can be less cagey.
I just feel like sometimes we,
even with our own friend groups, or even when we're navigating
this on our kids' behalf, it's like we try to disappear when someone can have the feeling
of left out.
It's like we just go dark or go like as opposed to being like, we're getting together
with these people.
Do you have time next week to get together?
Or, you know, Alice is having a over today,
so we can't make it.
We love to plan another date with B.
I just feel like we hide,
and then that makes it so weird for everyone.
Yeah, rather than trying to explain it.
There's a way to explain to kids
because I feel like this way is an adult
what you're saying about a posture to the world of inclusivity. I think there's a way of explaining and
understanding things that we have like front yard experiences. Like our front
yard experiences are, you know, times like where there's everybody's around.
And those so those can be at the school, those can be at the neighborhood, those
can be in the cafeteria, the library, whatever.
And during those times, we have certain ways of being, which are open and we make sure
that everybody has a place.
We make sure that we are including people.
We look for the lonely kid.
We think about who's probably lonely in this situation.
Those are like front yard experiences, but there's a different level of intimacy
When we say okay now we're coming inside
You're coming into my foyer. Who are those kind of people that make you feel comfortable when you're in your foyer You're not are the way inside yet, but like you get to decide those people and then and then you have those people that are like at your kitchen table
Like who are those friends you get to decide as you invite people further into your home and your life, who makes you feel the most, that you can
exist the most. You actually don't have to exist the most in the front yard. Like that's a different
communal experience, but then you get to decide who you invite further and further in. And we can't, and probably shouldn't, force kitchen table experiences on our kids or
ourselves with people that make us feel like we have to abandon ourselves, not to abandon
them.
Yeah.
In the front yard, it's a little bit different.
Yeah.
But I think when we force it on them at the kitchen table, they are learning to then abandon
themselves so that they don't
abandon the other person.
And I'm not sure that's correct.
I think there is a compromise, honestly.
I have learned that.
I don't walk around talking about orangutans in the front yard all the time.
I think there is a different me that is in the front yard.
I don't want to have to care that much about, you know, worrying about everyone's at the
kitchen table.
I want to just be able to be me and I think that's probably what kids are saying.
Honestly, sister, the reason why your situation with Alice worked out is because the adult
in the room got the kids together and figured out how to communicate this stuff to the
kids in a way where they could hear it, and then they could actually negotiate it afterwards.
But also worked out because Alice was like, I do really want to be with both of these
people.
I just want both of these people to want to be with me. So that's a very different type of story. If she would
have been like, actually, I think there's kind of a jackass. This would have been not
that outcome. And then it would have been a lot hairier. I just think that's one aspect
of things, which I think often the quote unquote mean girls,
the quote unquote, clicky things are more about like, I am so desperate to ensure that I am not
the one on the outs that I'm willing to go along with anything that will keep me on the ends.
If it means keeping that person out to keep me in,
I'm willing to do it because it's such a survival instinct. We should do exactly what you
did with the little ones as much as possible. But I think what we learn as they grow is
that trying to fix everyone's left-outedness is a little bit like rearranging shares on
the Titanic. Like left-outedness is coming no matter what. It's like what you said at the
beginning. There are some things in life that are so beautiful that they by nature have
an opposite that comes with it. It goes back to me telling my little one, like,
okay, that's great, you're in love,
but you're gonna get crushed.
Like, you know, love is so amazing.
And it's terrifying because it has this opposite,
which is less, or expressing yourself and showing yourself
is so beautiful and amazing,
but oh my God, it has this opposite thing,
which is criticism, which you will experience
if you have the beautiful thing, or go and explore, but oh my God, it has this opposite thing, which is criticism, which you will experience if you have the beautiful thing or go and explore.
But then there's this thing called homesickness if you do or, you know, try, try, try,
but then there's this thing called failure or grow up.
But then there's this thing called nostalgia or look for friendship and belonging and
that delicious feeling.
But there's this thing also called left-outedness and disconnecting. And it's like, we can fix it in a million different ways, but that only lasts for so long,
and then there's this time where we have to just say, oh my God, I can tell you're feeling that thing.
Let me tell you about when I feel that thing, because you just have to meet each other there. There's no fixing it. It's coming
back every other month for the rest of your damn life. And it might be sometimes because
they just forgot you or it might be because they actually don't like you. It exists as
the shadow side of connection. And so we just meet each other there. And that is because you are a human.
Yeah. Exactly. It will feel so overwhelmingly awful. And it's supposed to. Let me explain
to you why. Yes. Like there's nothing particularly wrong with you. And there is nothing particularly
fragile about you that you feel this awful. It feels that same way to me. Happened to me last week. I think that is the answer and it's also the answer
when they do it to other people and other people get really upset. It's like,
oh, that's what they were feeling. It doesn't mean you should have done anything
different. It means that they're having this huge strong reaction because
they're need to feel connected as just as strong as yours. So you can
understand why they're having that reaction.
Remember last week when it happened to you?
It's so visceral and we experience it so much
that when we see our kids go through it,
my heart starts racing, my breath starts,
like it feels like I have to fix this.
Anything that happens, you know,
if I just see it happening in front of me,
I am, I am done. Yeah. And so, and that's a very real thing too. But there's these studies that show
that if you do the totally natural thing where you rush in and try to fix it, you know, like you
get on your phone and start texting and be like, good, don't worry, I'll just set up a plate it for tomorrow. Don't worry, I'll figure all this out.
That they already have shame and embarrassment
when this happens to them.
And one of the reasons they don't tell us about it
is that they don't want us to think
that they're incapable of making friends.
Exactly.
They feel like they're incapable of making friends. Exactly. They feel like they're incapable of making friends already.
And so they're already ashamed
and they're already embarrassed.
But when we rush in as if this is a crisis
and a problem, then they're like see confirmed.
Yes.
This is a big problem that I had this happen to me.
And this is something very wrong, as opposed to like,
damn it, really, that sucks. I'm so sorry. Tell me about it. I'll tell you about when it happened
to me last week. We add shame by fixing it because what they knew before was this almost feels unbearable.
I'm so sad. And then we can either meet them there and say, oh my God, I totally know this unbearable feeling. I've had it.
Here's when I had it.
Then we're both just sad together.
But if we add, oh my God, I'm calling Johnny's mom.
Duh, duh, duh, duh, duh, duh, duh.
Then we add, oh, you should be ashamed of this.
This is so bad that your mom has to fix it.
That's how bad it is.
Oh God, it's so hard when your kids go through the things that trigger you from your trauma.
And I think that that's what this is like we're trying to fix this thing because we don't want them
to experience possibly the most human experience. This is really like that paradox one.
Most human. It's just so human. And so let's teach them how to work through their feelings of this
because then they won't attach their worthiness to whether they're getting included or not,
if they're able to actually work through some of it.
Oh, and it's all such a bandaid because truly, we're never going to save them from this feeling.
No, that's what I really all were doing is having a full on panic attack.
Anytime we see it about to happen and being like not today,
Satan, and we try to get in front of it. But it's just leaving it for another day.
It's like what you said. Satan's like a day tomorrow then.
Right. It's like at the table at lunch. If today is not their day to be left out tomorrow,
will be. And we are just so desperate for it not to be today that we're doing the
same shit the kids at the table are doing are like whatever takes to make it not my day.
Exactly. But we instead of just being like today's our day.
I feel like we've been talking a lot about kids and that's like a self-protection. We're like, oh, these poor kids.
I know.
I think we should talk about this happening in adulthood because really the loneliness
we talk about it as kids because it's easier in some ways even though we pretend like
it's harder but the spikes in Lonelynics actually happen in the 20s, in the mid 50s, and in the late 80s.
The kids are not as lonely as we project them to be. We are as lonely. That's where we are making them.
to be. We are as lonely as we are making them. But I do think if we talked about it differently earlier, we would understand it differently as adults. Exactly. Do you know what I mean?
I think if we didn't avoid it like the plague, when we were little, it wouldn't be something
that felt so devastating as adults. It's what I don't see that we could understand it.
If we could talk about it about ourselves now
as this is inevitable and sucks
and you just have to endure it,
then we would probably be less likely to try to futilely
save our kids from it.
Yes.
So let's hear from Danielle.
I need to get down on my way from work and all doing testing. So, let's hear from Danielle. when I was a little kid, if I didn't get invited somewhere or anything like that, I think
people kind of say, oh, that's normal, she's little and she's heard by that.
But I still feel that way as a grown 20s, something year old adult, from 20s to 70s going on 28th this year.
I guess you could say, with me, girls at work, And I used to be friends with them and now I'm not.
And we've not a wanna be, but it's just,
I'm still human and I still just wanna be included.
And feeling left out is probably the worst feeling
in the world.
So I just wanted to call you guys and say thank you
for the part and that I love you all.
Thank you.
Danielle, I love Danielle. I have a whole story in my mind about Danielle already.
Fuck those bitches at work. Okay, why don't we go with that? Sorry, but you can cut that if you want.
Yeah, I love you. I just, yeah, and I love Danielle.
Okay, so here's what I'm thinking about Danielle.
I love Danielle.
I feel like she probably had her own orangutan as a kid.
I'm with Danielle.
So she says that she was within with the quote,
mean girls at work.
And now she's not, which means that probably Danielle tried
to be in with the mean girls, whatever that means.
I'm not claiming that term.
I know it's problematic.
I'm just responding.
So I was thinking when Danielle was talking about what
Bernet talks about Dr. Bernet Brown
about the difference between belonging and fitting in and that most of us just try to fit
in, which means we look at a group and we say, okay, what are they doing?
What are they wearing?
How are they talking?
And then we change ourselves to kind of be like that, to be with them.
And so when we do that, we get like a false sense of belonging.
It's not real belonging.
It's fitting in.
Belonging you have to be yourself.
You have to truly be accepted for who you are to have real belonging.
So fitting in is just as much self-abandoned as anything else.
You're still alone because you fake version of you.
And you don't get the benefit because you're chasing that belonging.
But what her research says is that you actually
don't even get the gratification of that belonging because you know that you're not being yourself.
So that doesn't count as being seen exactly. So it's like a double whammy because if you didn't try to fit in at least you'd have yourself.
At least you'd have your you wouldn't have abandoned yourself.
But the fitting in is a double whammy
because you've abandoned yourself
and you're still not getting the belonging.
So it sounds like maybe Danielle tried to fit in
and then probably she couldn't fit in anymore
and so she probably messed up the status quo
of that group and got rejected.
One way or another, whether that happened
in big ways or small ways.
So now she's on her own again, outside the pack.
And she looks at the pack and she still feels sad.
She still feels the sting of left-outedness, even though she was in and now she's not
in for probably authenticity reasons.
So I do think that there's different levels of left-outedness.
And one of them is like what we would have referred to in the Dr. Becky episodes as it's
growing pain because she's looking back at that group and she knows she feels a sting,
but she knows she doesn't want to be back with them.
So it's discomfort, but it's true, good, growing pain discomfort because it's not self-abandonment.
Like, for example, I feel left out sometimes now because I've made these decisions for my recovery
to not do professional things. And so I look at my Instagram or whatever, and everybody who's in my
lane for the last year is doing all of these things all the time. And I'm never there and I'm never doing the things. They're in important places and I know that I'm not supposed to be there.
I know that I have made a decision that is best for me.
And that doesn't change the fact that I look at those things and I feel like I'm becoming
irrelevant and everyone's going to forget about me.
But it's a different version
because I know I'm not self-abandoning.
So I think that Danielle is feeling
a version of growing pain.
That is such an important point you just raised
because I think the more we talk about this
as just a very natural consequence of experiencing a thing.
It doesn't get confused with, oh no, I feel so shitty.
That means I'm supposed to be in that group. Oh no, I feel so shitty.
That means that like I'm missing out on a place where I should be.
It just means you feel so shitty
because that is a natural consequence
to any perception of you not belonging.
Like they did these studies where the whole
like brain imaging stuff, where it was a video game, okay?
So two bots on a video game, and you're the third bot,
and you're in the video game throwing the frisbee to each other
among the three of you
Then the scientists change the setting so the other two bots only throw the frisbee to each other
You're in a freaking video game. You don't even know who these people are. You don't care about frisbee
and the brain's reaction is the same as an interpersonal, real life situation of being
left out.
Yep.
It is just a natural reaction.
You're now jealous of two bots throwing a pretend bot Frisbee back and forth.
It doesn't mean you're supposed to be in that group.
It doesn't mean you're supposed to be in that group. It doesn't mean you're supposed to be on that stage.
It's just a physiological reaction that is inside of you.
Yeah, you're just a little, it's like, it's a little bit of heartbreak.
And that's not a problem.
That's being human.
Danielle is just experiencing being a human being who is made for love and connection
and sometimes looking at it and feeling like it's not her day.
Yeah. I just want to say because we're kind of making up the story, what we think has happened
with Danielle. No, I know Danielle.
But going along the lines of this story, Danielle, I think that one thing that I've learned
with all the teams that I've been on, because there's a lot of clicks and groups in every
work environment in the world.
And some of them you're in on and some of them you're out on.
And I think that what I have found with the teams that I've been on in my life is if
you just don't abandon yourself,
you will find someone that also doesn't do that.
They're gonna be the people that make you feel good
about yourself, that don't make you feel like you have to change
or warp into something that isn't true to you.
So this might also be like an opportunity.
I know it's heartbreaking, I'm not trying to bright side this,
but this could be a kind of a unique opportunity for you
to look around and find maybe somebody that I don't know.
You normally wouldn't go sit and have lunch with
or you normally don't talk to on a regular basis.
Strike up a conversation.
And also, I'm so sorry.
And I really want to kick those bitches out.
So this is a good time to say that there are two responses
to this kind of isolation.
And one is aggression.
And so that is Abbi's response,
where it is like, forget these people. I will
see them in hell. The second one is the acclamation. So where you're like, okay, I will just make this
work no matter what. I am, I'm going to just acclimate it. And that's the one that Glenn had said.
I'm thinking about Danielle and what you're saying, Abbey. And there's this strategy that the
Danielle and what you're saying Abby and there's this strategy that the research suggests for kids that's instead of a family tree that when your kid is feeling some isolation to
make a friend tree.
Whatever you see the most, which is why there's always, you know, the school isolation or
the work isolation for adults, ways so heavy. Because if you're only looking at that one group all the time,
you feel like you don't have any connection because that's where you spend most of your time.
But they said that kids should, and this is probably a good idea for adults,
true, is to make a friend tree. You know, like your friends that you've had for a long time,
your friends that might be in the neighborhood,
or even potential friends,
people that you see on your walks,
people in the neighborhood,
and people you're interested in,
and just make the tree,
and then sit down and figure out,
oh, well, there's actually a lot of folks around,
not just this one branch of the tree
that is working for me right now.
And how can I, instead of using my attention
to perseverate on this one branch that is not sturdy right now? How can I invest in these
other branches? Because really the connection is what you need. You don't need connection
to those people on that branch. You just need to find your connection to to someplace and more
often not it's there. We're just not looking at that branch because it's not
the branch that is activating the pain center of our brain and at top of mind.
Yep. Also buy a chainsaw and lop off the branch of the mean girls. Well, it's burning in your witch fire.
That's what popularity, like everybody,
we think we're gonna get over that in elementary school,
but no, in every office and every whatever,
there's like a group that would be the equivalent
of the popular group.
That just means power.
Those are the people that have our wielding power
in one way or another.
And usually the way people wield power
in social situations is there's somebody that gets
to decide through the way they look,
through what they say who's in and who's out.
That's how to wield power.
That's actually not real.
The person who's deciding, I have the power
that you're in or out.
We can look at those people and just say,
no thank you.
It's like obsessing about the one, the person
that says it, the one mean thing because you want to change their mind. You want to change.
So then you give all of yourself to the person that's the least worthy of yourself. If there's
one person rejecting you in a spot, I think what you're saying is so important, there's probably 20 other people around
that if you just turn your head.
You know the Jesus thing that's like,
if somebody slaps you, turn the cheek.
Turn the other cheek.
Turn the other cheek.
I always think about that in terms of
when you turn your head, you're looking at something else.
It's not necessarily turn the other cheek
so they can slap you again. Jesus is like, turn the other cheek so they can slap you again.
Jesus is like, turn the other cheek so you can see Barbara over there,
eaten lunch by herself. Instead of focusing on Tanya over there, who keeps slapping you.
Turn the other cheek and find yourself someone who's not going to slap you.
We don't have to give people that power all the time like we did when we were in third grade.
That's right.
You know, we can just say actually, there's a million portals to connection and friendship
and you might be teasing me by opening and closing this little barn door that you have,
but I don't have to try to get in your barn door anymore because there's a lot of other
doors. I think that the idea too,
that we're giving our worthiness to this group of mean girls.
And like, right, exactly.
It's just, it doesn't make logical sense,
but we still want it.
It's like the freaking mouth to a flame.
And yet it still feels that bad.
Yeah.
So like, when our kid comes home and says that that happened,
it doesn't help to be like, fuck those mean girls.
And when Danielle has this happen,
I mean, probably feels good to have a happy warm-box,
say fuck those things.
But it just is that shitty.
And there's no, there's no fix to it.
Oh, God, that sucks so bad.
It should be so bad.
But I do need the fuck, I mean, I'm,
well, I need all the thing.
When I feel really left out, I want a good friend
or Abby or whoever to tell me all of those things.
Like, I want to hear that there's other portals
and that I don't have to,
but I also want to hear fuck those mean girls.
I want, I like people who give me the whole
kitten, caboodle,
response it. I feel like we need all of it. We need the
mad. We need that this isn't about your worthiness. We need the everybody experiences this. This
is just the shout out.
It's all true because all of it is true. Every single piece of it is true.
As long as it's not screw them, forget it, they're terrible as if that dismisses the D-
Oh, no.
Pain center of your brain where it's like they are not worth it and also this does feel
that bad.
Or where's yet they are worth it because not all people that exclude you are mean gross.
No, just to exclude you are terrible.
No, but sometimes you need somebody to have the strong part of your back when you're
experiencing this left-outedness and this loneliness.
I got broken up with one time and my mom, she heard me crying and she came into the room
and said, you know, she doesn't deserve your tears.
And this is a big deal for her to say because it was about a girl as many years ago. And I needed my mom to be like, fuck that bitch.
You know, like I needed her.
She said it nicer, but I needed that.
I needed somebody to solidify a little bit of like,
some sort of power back in me, because you lose it.
And then somebody else can help and give it to you.
And then that girl's mom could have been somewhere going,
honey, you know this isn't meaning your needs.
Like it's the right thing to do.
It doesn't matter, it could be right for everybody.
You just need your little crew to have all of the reactions
for you.
So that your parts can relax.
You're like, oh, I've got it all covered.
I've got my crazy mom.
I've got my reasonable dad, whatever it is.
So it's actually really helpful.
And the reason why that felt so good to you
is what your mom was doing, replicated what she just did to you.
Yeah, your mom's saying fuck that girl.
Means she's out.
She's out of our circle.
She is done for us.
And it's like, she kicked you out of your circle
and your mom kicks her out of y'all
circle. And now you're like, even Steven lady. Yeah. You're not
gonna compete. Balance in the scales. You can't leave me out. I left you out. You can't
fire me. I don't even work here. Oh, y'all, I don't know.
It just comes back to the beautiful thing, doesn't it?
It's like these things are, are end both.
And being made as a human being who's so badly once,
the longing and connections,
there's gonna be moments of such beauty with that.
And there's gonna be moments that feel so cold.
We're not gonna get it all the time.
Yeah, sadly. And it's going to get it all the time. Yeah.
Sadly.
And it's just universal.
It happens every day and I don't think you'll ever arrive at a day where that doesn't
happen to you anymore.
It's not like a maturity level.
Just like a couple days ago, I was invited to this place.
I felt so special to be invited.
And I was like seven women and then four of them rolled up in a car all in the same car.
At the same time, I rolled up by myself and another car.
And I was like,
I mean, it just happened.
I just got out of the shower just now.
And I thought, Tish and Glenin were in the bedroom, chit chatting.
And I was like, what are you guys talking about? and I thought Tish and Glenin were in the bedroom chit chatting.
And I was like, what are you guys talking about?
And I run in there and Tish goes,
mom's not even here.
And I was like, oh, I felt left out for no reason.
There was no left out in this.
That's what I like about the PUD Squad.
It's there's so much room.
Everybody can be here. Yeah. And nobody's here. Yeah. It's like
my ideal scenario. Yeah, you have to click. Yeah. You are choosing to be here and everybody's invited.
You can sit with us. Yeah, you take your seat. Daniela gets the first. Daniela gets to sit. That's
right. Daniel sits wherever the hell she wants. I would like for the pod squad with this topic
to just talk to us.
Like how do you deal with left-outedness?
What are you hearing in this that we're missing?
How do you talk to your kids about it?
How do you decide when you get to include exclude people?
Just talk to us.
I love this topic.
747-205-307.
I need to know some of your regrets
in trying to handle some of your left-outedness
for you or your children.
Yes, please help us.
Just be selfless and tell us what you did
so that we don't have to watch the same lovely valley.
Not because it's funny. I just think that it's important that we don't have to watch the same lonely valley. Not because it's funny.
I just think that it's important that we learn from each other
of maybe some of the things of what not to do.
And the circumstances.
In the best case of it's funny.
Yeah, that's nice.
We love you, Pod Squad.
You belong with us.
We'll see you next time.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
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