We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - 245. An Unforgettable Double Date with Andrea Gibson & Megan Falley
Episode Date: September 28, 2023Andrea Gibson returns with their partner, Megan Falley, for a gorgeous, hilarious double date with Glennon and Abby: An Andrea health update and what each has learned since Andrea’s cancer diagnos...is; How their chemistry ignited with Andrea’s questionable move on a sweaty dance floor – and the text moment Andrea knew Megan was the one; How each of their relationships with their bodies has been transformed by Andrea’s illness; Navigating a relationship where one partner worries constantly and the other doesn’t know how to worry; and Why love looks like peeing your pants, and how they keep putting themselves in the way of miracles. For our previous conversation with Andrea Gibson, check out: Ep 215 The Bravest Conversation We’ve Had: Andrea Gibson. About Andrea: Andrea Gibson is one of the most celebrated and influential spoken word artists of our time. Best known for their live performances, Andrea has changed the landscape of what it means to attend a “poetry show”. Andrea’s poems center around LGBTQ issues, spirituality, feminism, mental health, and the dismantling of oppressive social systems. Andrea is the author of seven books, most recently “You Better Be Lightning”. TW: @andreagibson IG: @andreagibson About Megan: Megan Falley is a queer femme writer and a full-time touring spoken word poet, author, and teaching artist. Her works include “Drive Here and Devastate Me”; “How Poetry Can Change Your Heart”; and the chapbook “Bad Girls, Honey: Poems About Lana Del Rey.” In addition to other accolades, Falley’s essays have been shortlisted for The Disquiet International Prize in 2021 and the Malahat Review Open Season Awards in 2022. TW: @megan_falley IG: @meganfalley 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
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And through the joy and pain that our lives bring, we can do our thing.
Welcome Pad Squad to an unbelievably beautiful hour you are about to be changed by these two people individually and
by their love together. Today we have Andrea Gibson and Megan Falley. If you have
not yet listened to episode 215 in the bravest conversation we've had with Andrea Gibson, please do go
back and listen to that.
In that episode, Andrea Gibson shared with us a devastating diagnosis.
They have a very important update to that diagnosis in today's episode.
Andrea Gibson, a bolder, based queer activist, author and slam poet, who has just been
named Colorado's new poet, Laureate. Y'all, I mean, poet Laureate is essentially the state's arts
ambassador. Serving as an active advocate for poetry, literacy,
and literature, Andrea will be participating
in readings at schools, libraries, festivals,
other events across the state.
It's just a huge, freaking deal.
And I guess that makes Megan the first lady of Colorado now.
Andrea is the author of seven books.
Most recently, you better be lightning.
Megan Falley is a nationally ranked slam poet and the author of three full-length collections
of poetry. Most recently her book Drive Here and Devastate Me. Since transitioning to writing
prose excerpts from her memoir and progress have won several first and second place national
prizes.
She runs an online writing workshop called Poems that Don't Suck, which has been heralded
as a degrees worth of education in five short weeks.
Andrea and Meg.
Hi, y'all.
I feel kind of nervous like we're actually on a date.
Yeah, that's what Abby keeps saying this morning.
She's like, I feel like we are actually going on a double date where we would actually be
friends with these people
What did you say she goes what if they don't like us? Yeah
What if they don't like us what if I say something silly and dumb
Which is likely that's usually my role so I
Occupy that corner of the internet. So me too you are off the hook my friend
Oh my gosh.
Recently, my job is to follow Abby around
and correct everything that she says
that's not politically correct,
even if we're just by ourselves in the living room.
So I'm a good time.
But the other day she said something
and I said, we don't say that anymore.
And she said, she said, I'm sorry,
it's just really hard to teach an old dog new tricks. And I said, we don't say that anymore. And she said, she said, I'm sorry, it's just really hard to teach an old dog
new tricks. And I said, we don't say that anymore. That's offensive to old dogs. And she goes,
oh my god, I am so sorry. Of course it is. One of our first arguments was when I called my
dog, my senior dog, Jerry Atrick, and Andrea, we learned the term is actually super adult.
dog Jerry Atric and Andrea, we learned the term is actually super adult. So, don't worry, Abby.
Yeah, we brought a poem about it together that we performed on stage. I don't know why I thought Jerry Atric was a problem. I don't know if it is, but she renternalized Hism.
Maybe, you're right. See, I have the same thing, Abby.
And the other thing that happens with me
is I don't know many words.
So Meg follows me around the house trying to teach me words.
Oh, that's also sounds fun for you.
I mean, how is that even possible?
You're a poet.
When I do not believe that.
I don't believe that for a second.
When I published my first book,
the publisher wrote me right before it,
what was going to print and he said,
Andrea, I want you to know that every poem in this book
has the same words and it just rearranged
in a different order.
And I said, well, that's because those are the only words
I know, Derek.
That's amazing.
So you too, this is going to be interesting because I know everything about YouTube because
of course I was prescribed and a respiratory by my actual doctor.
And then in preparation for this, I had not read Megan before.
I cannot believe how beautiful your work is.
Last week I went out onto my little deck and started reading your books all of them.
I had three of them.
And I came back in what like seven hours later and I was so sunburned. Do you remember
that? I mean, we literally went on vacation all last week and she was like, everybody
put their sunscreen on. And then we come home for one day and she comes in like a fresh
room. Megan, it's just so freaking good. You are so good.
You too.
I mean, my God.
First of all, talk to us about how you met.
So you, Megan, posted something on Facebook in 2011
that said,
I'm really fucking excited for Andrea Gibson. Okay, which meant that you were going to what?
Take us back to them. It was a show that I was going to see of Andreas. Yeah, that I had been
taken part in raising or organizing. And so that was, yeah, it was a little bit of my promo, but
And so that was, yeah, it was a little bit of my promo, but I, at the time, like when I approached Andrew
to do it, felt very, like this was completely platonic,
what I was saying.
I was just excited for the poetry at the time,
but in retrospect, I like looking at that.
Right.
Oh, yes.
Okay, Andrea, when did you figure out that there was something going on between maybe Megan
and you?
How did it all work?
What was the deal?
So, Megan, we were both in the poetry scene.
So we had been friends for years and we were doing weird stuff together.
We were, we would, if I was on
tour and she was living in New York, I would come to her house and we would do dance
routines and make up parody songs and stuff like that. But I think that I, as you do,
I had the huts for Meg long before she had any fans for me. Yeah. Like, and I think that
it was sort of unexpected. I typically were, how do I put this?
I typically was attracted to women who were older than me
or much older than me.
I was attracted to super adults.
I still find super adults very beautiful.
But I had never been attracted to somebody
this much younger than me.
I mean, how old am I? 48. I'm at the age where Meg asked to tell me how old I am. I get it. And Meg is
in Meg is 35. And so yeah, it was surprising to me and do you want to take over from here?
It too was surprising to me. We've been friends for a long time and then we were on a dance floor in Oakland after
the National Poetry Slam and I'm dancing with Andrea who you can't really dance with Andrea
so much as like it's like a fire flight experience like creatures dancing around each other.
There's no like you can't like touch it or something. There's some kind of force field happening.
It's great.
I love it.
But so, yes, we're fire flying around each other
on the dance floor.
When I'm very enthusiastic in my dancing, which
is a euphemism for I sweat a lot.
And Andrea suddenly runs their hands down my sweat-slicked arms and then licks the palm of their hands.
Um, that is a move.
It was, yes, it was one of a kind.
It was one of a kind.
Oh, and I've never heard of this move.
No, no, I don't think it's been done.
And then never to of this move. No, no, I don't think it's been done. Um, and then never to be done again. They shouted above the crowd.
The last person I was with that was this sweaty
I was having sex with and then licking their hands.
So I thought, hi, I think something's happening.
Well, this is not a move I had tried before.
Nora was it a move I had thought about the second before I did it?
It just happened.
And then she for some reason followed me back to the hotel
because the move worked.
That's right.
Yeah, I did.
The next day I woke up with what I would later find out was
Jardium.
And I was serious.
So listen, I was doing a live Reddit interview
and my friend was having to type from the living room
while I sat on the toilet and hollered the answers to her.
And I kept saying to my friend, I kept saying,
Mac and gave me Jardia and my friend kept saying, nope, I think you got Jardia
from licking the length of your hands in a nightclub.
Yes, that's probably right.
She was a good friend.
And she was actually the one I told her.
I was like, this really weird thing happened with Andrea.
Like I told her right away.
And she's like, I'm not surprised.
Andrea's had a crush on you for two years or something.
Oh! What? It was not in my field of consciousness that that would have occurred. And then my life changed.
She didn't know a super adult would have the hot for her, I guess. Right. Now we know why you
were sensitive about that word. We understand now it's full circle. So you were like in your mid to mid to early 20s, Megan,
and at the time, I was 27 and Andrew was 27.
Okay.
Fine. I think something like that.
Yeah. Okay. I am amazed by that move.
I'm just going to say it.
Never have I ever done that.
You've met your match. I'll be one block. And wow. I ever done that. You've met your match, Abby Wombok.
And wow.
I mean, wow.
I feel like the listener should maybe not try that at home because I can't think of another
person who would have done that, but I would have allowed this to move forward with that.
That's right.
It might be special to Andrea to pull that one off. I was reading the room of you.
But isn't it don't you because there was some poem or post or now I don't even know what it was
but you were saying you marked that as the beginning of your relationship and it's like an
anniversary the night that you licked the sweat off of Megan. Yes I have the longitude and the latitude of the
club tattooed on my arms.
Okay, so it wasn't an original idea.
I told you it was Megan's idea.
I know.
Okay, I told Abby I wanted just to get that
free song. So we're already copying you.
But I told you that was Megan's idea, right?
Did I try to pass that off?
No, you told me it was it was their idea.
Okay, so you know you have the
hots for each other.
You know it's like very much working out physically.
But when do you start talking about,
is this real?
Are we having this?
Are we going to make this a lifetime romantic friendship?
What are the conversations like?
Well, I'd already decided it was a lifetime romantic situation.
I had just planned to be celibate and single for a year right before
that happened. And so I told her that. And we actually didn't really touch until I didn't
make it a year. I made it 11 months. And 11 months later, Do you remember the details in between?
11 months later.
What am I forgetting?
Well, one night, Andrea whispered,
I came to visit and slept in Andrew's bed,
but we didn't touch and they whispered,
I'm not gonna kiss you till I'm 40.
And they were like two months away from being poor or something.
So it had a build up for sure. And then when I finally asked her on a date,
I texted her, would you like to go on a date sometime and Meg responded,
sure, with who? With who? And she asked me the moment when I fell in love with her and I think, and she asked me the moment when I fell in love with her. And I think that was it when she wrote back with her.
And I thought this person's funny.
Uh oh, I love her.
Mm hmm.
Uh oh, I love her.
This person's funny.
Uh oh, I love her.
What was the story about the Lana Del Rey concert?
So that was the date.
I was a big one until Ray Fan. I wrote a little collection of poems about her and Andrea knew this and so asked me if I would want to come to Colorado because I live in New York at the time and go see her at Red Rocks. And if you don't know, that's the most incredible music venue in the world. So
I was very excited for that date with that person. We had front row seats. Yeah, it was
and then the morning of the concert, we wake up and I wake up like so early and excited and I
check my phone to see, okay, like what time does it start? How far is it away or whatever?
And it's May 13th.
And I see that the concert was on May 12th.
And I was like, wait, was it two nights and then no, or not two nights.
So we'd missed the date.
No.
But I sometimes I wonder like, I messed it up.
But I sometimes I wonder like I messed it up. Sometimes I wonder we ended up having such a good night.
Like Andrew was so worried.
I'd be so disappointed in stuff.
And we had such a beautiful night.
I think I just complimented you for like 10 hours.
And yeah, which is my ideal date.
So listen to this. This is what Megan wrote about that night. Yeah, which is my ideal date
So listen to this. This is what Megan wrote about that night. I woke up Christmas morning excited checking her site for the details Lana
Only to realize the concert was the day before you thought I'd be so sad
But I spent the evening falling never look back in love with you. That was eight years ago today
best concert I never went to so much music. Fuck!
That's not even a poem of hers.
That's a fucking Instagram.
She burps this stuff.
I swear to God what you were saying about her writing earlier.
I think that she is maybe the most talented writer I've ever known in my life and it is
so easy for her.
I could pull my hair out watching. and it is so easy for her. I could pull my hair out watching.
It's just so easy for her.
I do not have that relationship with writing at all.
Well, and you only know so few words.
And she knows so many.
Because if I'm reading and I get to a word,
I don't know in a book, I think why on earth
did this writer put this word in here?
Like this is ridiculous, I'm not going to get it.
I skip it and I move on.
I like that.
So look how much success you can have as a writer
with knowing so few words and reading so little.
Really?
Are you not a big reader, Andrea?
You know, I used to read constantly all the time.
And then I went through a period with Lyme disease where it was difficult with my vision to read.
And then so I stopped reading for a while.
Now I listened to a lot of audiobooks and stuff like that.
I read poetry, but I rarely read these days, and it's even been, it's been much different
since my diagnosis, too.
I describe it to Meg as like, I just don't want to spend my time looking down.
I just want to spend my time looking at the world.
That makes a lot of sense. Is Megan the one that told you your diagnosis or no?
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I didn't diagnose Andrew.
Oh, cancer.
Well, trying to figure out what diagnosis we're talking about here.
I have a whole collection.
We decided beforehand because Andrew would still be under anesthesia when we found out what
it was and we decided beforehand that I would tell Andrea. Yeah. And so I woke up and it was my mom
and Meg beside the bed and Meg has all of these, saw so much that I didn't like she was there
watching my parents reaction, all of this stuff that I had no idea about.
Actually until I started reading the memoir that she's been writing.
And so I woke up and Meg told me and she knew exactly how to say it.
And I just felt okay.
Hmm.
Yeah.
How are you doing Meg lately? How are you handling everything?
Do you want to tell them your news? Oh yeah, I can give you an update on my health and then
it would that be helpful first. So I think the last time I spoke with you all, we went into the doctor,
they said that at this point it's considered incurable, and they could offer me some drugs that had just come out of trials or were in trials.
That could potentially prolong my life. The problem was that they had very little chance of me responding to them, and they came with like a slew of side effects scary ones.
And so I, we, I didn't do anything. I was like, I'm not going to, because I was feeling so good, you know, physically, so good.
I know if I wouldn't have known I had cancer and I didn't want to go back on drugs.
So it took me a couple of months.
I did some alternative treatments and it took me a couple of months to figure out what I wanted to do.
And I was just trying to be patient with it and not be so terrified of the cancer that
I just jumped on something.
I had friends doing tons of research and looking into things.
We got this tumor test back that said that I was a really good candidate for the drug that I really didn't want to do.
And I really didn't want to do it
because its primary side effect was that it can take
a lot of your vision.
People describe it as if you completely fog up your glasses
and you look that look out to your glasses
that's sort of what it can be like and it can be permanent,
like even if they take you off the treatment, it can stay.
They said they couldn't guarantee that it wasn't.
But ultimately, that was what was holding me back.
And then one day, I realized that I had to sort of check my own abelism, because I had had this idea in my
head that if I couldn't see, then my life wouldn't be worth living.
And then I started thinking about folks who years ago started asking me to put image descriptions
on my photos online.
And people don't know you can do that in the background of all of social media, which I've
been doing ever since,
and I started thinking about those folks. And I'm like, I'm not going to not opt for an option
that might prolong my life because I might not be able to see like millions of people have beautiful,
beautiful, full lives and can't see. And so I went on the drug after I had that realization.
And the first treatment, we didn't quite know what it was doing.
And then three weeks ago, we went in and got
the results of my second infusion.
And this drug is like a chemo, but it's different.
It doesn't go in and take everything in your fight,
every fast growing cell in your body.
Directly targets full eight receptors in the body
and they're in the eyes.
That's why it impacts your eyes.
But we went in three weeks ago and we found out
that my cancer marker after the second treatment
had dropped all the way down to the number it typically is when there is no evidence
of disease in my body and that was after the second treatment. I could feel the tumor on my rib
and my liver. I could feel that it was no longer there like I had been talking about it a lot and
Megan, I we couldn't believe it. And I go in tomorrow for another infusion.
And we could go in tomorrow and they could say,
OK, it's growing again.
This treatment isn't working.
But as of right now, the last information that we got
was that my cancer marker is way, way down.
And I can feel it physically that this tumor is no longer here.
So that's where we're at with that.
And that drug had, what did they say?
It had just come out of trials a couple months before
and it had like a 30% chance of me showing any response at all.
So that's where we're at.
It's part of our happiness today.
Yeah. Okay. Okay. How are you Megan? You know, that day, I actually pulled over to the side of the road, got out of the car and jump for joy. And I don't think that I'd ever physically I've heard that term before jumping for joy. I don't know that I never actually seen it in action. But I think even more than that, what's true is the last, and Andrea talked about this before
with y'all, but I can corroborate the story is that the last two years have been some of the happiest
years of, I mean, definitely our relationship and lives. The night before, or maybe two nights before
Andrea's second surgery after the first recurrence.
I bought it convertible because a while ago,
because when Andrea was sick,
it was like a way to be out in the world
when we couldn't really be out in the world.
And we were driving at night
and somehow, you know,
Shania Twain's still the one comes on
and we're like full blast singing it to each other just in the
streets of Colorado like ignoring any onlookers complete. I would say Andrew is the most earnest singer
because it's like real eye contact and it's oh no yeah yeah exactly gunning it. It's a mix of... So, yeah. I guess it's like the arm lick.
You're like, who can get away with this by you?
But it was just so completely earnest and we were having so much fun and it's been,
you know, we've had so many dance parties and so much, so much access to joy and way more than we had before all of this. So that's not to say like,
you know, when the doc, we had the day where the doctor said it was incurable and I'm, you know,
weeping and can't speak in the office, but that night we're dancing. And I think this is less maybe a skill of mine and more of a, like a genetic
anomaly, but I really don't worry.
I wanted to ask you about that.
Because that feels aggressive and ridiculous.
And what is that like?
And what is it like to be a person who doesn't worry with Andrea?
Yeah, I office it's attract. And I think though you do worry a lot less. Now, I think
I it might be an ADHD thing. I don't know, but I really am dealing with whatever's in front of
me at the time. So when, as Andrea said, they were feeling really well when that's happening,
And as Andrew said, they were feeling really well when that's happening. Why would I exist in a moment that's worse?
I don't know.
It just, I think I'm probably lucky.
Like I want to say, like, I worked really hard to get here, but that's just how my psychology
works.
And I wish it was a gift I could give to other people because it seems easier.
Okay.
I have a question because I think this is interesting. When I met Glenin,
I would have considered myself at least when I got sober. I would consider myself somebody who
just does, I'm not a big worry word. Like, that's not what I do. I think that. Very much like you.
And Glenin is on the opposite side. So, of course, we attracted each other. And now that Glenin is on the opposite side. So of course we attracted each other. And now that Glenin is in therapy and is starting to release and see in surrender control.
Her anxiety and worry is lessening. I don't want to miscarcise.
It's lessening. And so I am starting this interesting balancing act.
I've started to think more proactively, more about the totality of our ecosystem because
I know deep down that she isn't doing it like she used to.
She's like the protector.
She's the one who's going to worry for us.
So I wonder if that dynamic is any way similar for you to.
I think that Meg has never worried. I mean, I used to think, what is the species of person? You know, it is just so odd. And at times I found it rude.
I just found it problematic. I found it dangerous. And until I had the experience of letting go
of control and surrendering to this whole experience of cancer and then realizing, wow,
like life is so much more doable. And not only that, but what you're talking about, Abby,
I feel like I have far more access to actually showing up to
You know the fact that the planet is burning and that sort of stuff while I'm not worrying
I think that we think that worrying is what will help but that wasn't the case for me
I think that maybe it is for some people but yeah
Meg so if you're only focused on what's in front of you
Okay, so that works well on what's in front of you
Okay, so that works well if the thing in front of you is good
What about when the thing in front of you is bad like
You got good news. This is good news Yeah, I don't want to gloss over the ridiculousness of the I'm so happy for you
So before when you get terrible news, are you also only surrendered to what's in front
of you in the terribleness?
Because hope is kind of like worry, but the opposite.
It's jumping ahead to like the next thing.
So do you do that when what's in front of you is terrible or is your strategy, I'm going
to be completely surrendered to what's in front of me, whether it's positive or negative?
That's a great question.
I don't know if you have a better lens on me than I would in that way.
I do think I lean hopeful, but that doesn't mean, you know, when I'm in the office and
the oncologist is saying that thing, in my brain, I'm not
saying that's not true.
I'm accepting what she's saying and having my emotional response to it.
And then I think maybe a bit later in the day or the week or something is when I'm saying
like, look at us now and we're dancing and we're so in love.
So, yeah.
I guess I hold the hope more than other things,
but I don't feel like it's coming from a place of utter denial.
I also, Andrea, to me, is the most miraculous person
I've ever known.
Like I feel like timing and miracles and stuff
just happen around them and because of them.
And I was thinking the other day about how
when the doctor said it was physically impossible
to run a four minute mile,
like there were just like physicians,
you know, said there's no way your heart would explode. And then somebody did it.
And then tons of people did it because it happened for the first time.
So I think my perspective in all of this is to keep putting
ourselves in the way of miracles.
And that if they happen to anyone, it's certainly Andrea.
So I guess I do lean hopeful. But the worry thing never worked for me. to anyone, it's certainly Andrea.
So I guess I do lean hopeful,
but the worry thing never worked for me.
It just shot on whatever moment I was in.
Yeah, it's never worked for any of us,
but that doesn't keep most of us from persevering.
I think that that's wonderful.
Do you feel surrendered to hope right now? Or do you feel scared of hope?
Is there any part that braces for the hope not being real?
Do you feel scared of it or are you fully embracing it?
I know a lot of people are terrified of hope
because they feel like it can be a let down.
I've heard that a lot,
like it's further to fall or something.
And for me, I don't have that experience
because hope makes the present more beautiful.
And so I think when we're worrying, we're sort of
preparing ourselves to handle a future emotion. And when I'm just remaining hopeful,
I'm in control of the emotion that I have right right now.
Mm-hmm. It's good. Mm-hmm. You're so sane. What was your conversation when you left that freaking doctor's office with the markers being so low?
Like what do you two say to each other?
Yeah, I'm like, I'm at home.
We were probably trying to find a minute to talk because my best friend was in the back.
See it screaming about how wrong the doctor was.
And the conversation, I don't know if I said this out loud
to you, Meg, but it was the very first time
that I had the thought since the two years
since I had been diagnosed.
It was the very first time that I had the thought,
I might live, and I don't know why I had that thought. I said,
I don't, I don't know how. I know that it's like, I don't know what it is, one percent chance,
but I felt into that one percent chance. And then our conversation, I was largely about being in
my hands now. Like I had given my power away and in regards to my choices and I knew
from that point on it was my choice to make and in our collective choice to make like that,
I would make those choices with my friends including my screaming best friend in the back seat.
We walked out of the hospital, we were over in the coffee shop. There was immediately got coffee or tea.
Immediately got tea.
I think I may have written you about this, Glennon.
Yes.
We're in the, we're in line at Starbucks.
And this man and I both asked for the bathroom key
at the same time, or the bathroom code.
And then we looked at each other, and we literally
sprinted in a race to see who we
beat each other. And then we both get there at the bathroom and we're just falling over ourselves
laughing. And in one of those moments where I'm like, I'm laughing, like I cannot tell you the amount
of times in these last two years that I just, I'm laughing. And how am I laughing right now? Like how am I laughing right now?
So I remember right after your first surgery,
Andrea would actually,
laughing became very physically painful
because they had scars and organs and stuff removed.
And the amount of times Andrea was saying,
ow, stop because we were laughing so much.
It was like such a gift for the surgery
because it was almost like this alarm of, hey, you're having joy right now. You're having joy right now.
No, no, no, that's pain.
That's pain in a way like a constant reminder of joy.
And she brutalizes me with her humor. Like, I can't have a cold around her, I can't have a stomach ache, I can't do a surgery and be around this person because she makes me laugh so much that I get so mad because it's so painful and I can of her harmful. It's awful.
And so I told her if I ever get COVID, she's, I had previously
wanted her to stay and get COVID with me.
But now she's gone.
She's kicked out of the house.
It's there.
You laugh in the midst of all of it.
Your love story is otherworldly.
It's so beautiful.
Do you fight like normal people, even in the midst of all Your love story is otherworldly, it's so beautiful.
Do you fight like normal people,
even in the midst of all of this drama and trauma,
or is that something that goes away,
like it doesn't matter?
Well, we used to fight before this like abnormal people.
Okay, we used to fight a ton.
Oh, yeah, there's poems about that.
Interesting diagnosis.
Yeah, we celebrated fighting in a way.
Yeah. Or we found a way to in writing and stuff,
but it went away.
I mean, of course, everyone's gonna have some stuff,
but it, the amount that any arguments,
all of the petty-ness just really reduced so much.
And I think what largely happened
was our appreciation for each other
kicked into high gear with the diagnosis. What would you say?
I would say that we used to argue a lot. I mean, especially when we were going to the time of
the pandemic and we were both home alone and with each other almost 24 hours a day.
each other almost 24 hours a day. And then after the diagnosis,
it was, I tried to explain this,
but it was almost as if I was seeing Meg
as if she were a new person.
And I had heard this thing years ago,
oh, I think I learned it in college
of our greatest human desires to be known.
But there was something about right when I was diagnosed
where I realized
that the best way to know somebody is to unknow them, to see them as a mystery, to not expect
the same patterns. And what's really beautiful about that is, as soon as you stop expecting
the same patterns, that energy almost creates this world in which the person no longer does the thing anymore
or has more of a capacity to not do it.
But I remember just being overwhelmed with just watching Meg walk through the house and
thinking, who is this person?
Like who is this mystery walking around in here?
And I had years ago heard a poem by Mary Oliver talking
about her partner at the time, and it was called The Whistler.
And I think they had been together for decades.
And then one day Mary walks downstairs,
and here is Molly Whistling.
And she had never heard her whistle before.
It's such a beautiful poem.
It just talks about how there is know, there is so much to
uncover in a person, even decades later we only know a fraction of them. And I feel like there was
something about that energy of just feeling like you were new. But the other thing is, is we both
grew so quickly in such a short amount of time. And I've seen friends who, you know, one person is growing and the other person
isn't in a relationship sort of falls apart.
And I think that we both grew in the exact same moment
and we're growing, have been growing since.
And so that has, I think that's a lot of what is kept,
our love feeling very vibrant.
Do you have certain conflict styles?
What would you say each of your conflict styles is?
For sure.
Well, I'm always right.
See, that's hard.
Yeah, I'm always right and perfect and then thus when somebody has a problem with me, I
have to tell them why they're wrong.
Right.
You're like a lawyer and you prepare your case for yourself
instead of trying to actually fix the conflict
because that's what I've learned.
That's actually not conflict.
Boyar sounds like you have to prepare.
This is just logic.
Oh.
Mm-hmm.
Wow, you just did it to me, so I did it.
Mm-hmm.
Wow, you just did it to me. So I did it.
Um, yeah. And I, Andrea, you and the past have been like much better at learn to define it as going to the basement. And so I always think of conflict as this
is what we're doing for intimacy. Like if we're going to we're going to do this so we can
be closer so we can understand each other. And I think when Meg and I got together, she had
this idea that if you're in a very healthy relationship, you never argue, you never have anything to process.
And I don't do the same thing now, but for a lot of years, I could think of no better
way to spend my day than to spend three hours processing one tiny thing.
And so she fully understood how I was actually right about everything.
It's like it's not enough for me to understand you. I want to overstand you.
Yes, and Meg, talk about your opposite inclination.
Well, you've actually always said it's almost like I'm a husband in this way.
Like I, you know, I'm kind of like let's put on the TV and like kick back and this is fine.
Yeah, be emotional.
I've gotten better at it and you've gotten better, I think, at relaxing a bit too.
But Andrew actually helped me learn by prefacing some of our arguments with, I'm bringing this up because I want to be closer at the end of it and not really opened me up to
the whole talking thing
It's good and you know what your kind of your attachment style was and Glenin's attachment her ability at the beginning of our relationship to show up in our conflict and say,
to me,
I'm not gonna leave you. I just really need to talk about this thing that's happening and it's really important to me,
but I'm not because I was just afraid,
huge fear of being left. It's very cool that they were able to do that for you, Megan, to get you onto the side of this processing lesbianism
that she loved.
Oh, and you too, like the gorgeousness of it,
having a safe container of like, yeah.
Yeah, removing that thorn of potential abandonment
where only your defenses are gonna go up.
And totally, I think that's a good takeaway for anyone.
Yeah, Glenn and I fought a lot in the early days
and like the first like two years.
It was like throttle on and we were just like
in a total power battle.
And then I don't know what happened.
We just went dead inside.
I just think it stopped.
We were just like, oh, you're not going anywhere.
I'm not going anywhere.
We're just gonna talk. I think we were trying to change each other. I think we were trying to change each other for two
years. And then we both stood strong. We did. Good job. And then we gave up. And then we're like,
okay, we're going to let you be you. Yeah, I guess we're going to let you be. Yeah, we surrendered.
Good for you. There's a song like that, but I thought we thought it was happy at first. Why
don't you be you and I'll be me. I don't know. We thought it was happy, but then we realized it was a breakup song.
Wait, what song is that?
I'm not sure.
James Bay.
James Bay.
Yeah, it's good.
Oh, God, that song is so sad.
It'll just crush you. What do you feel like you have the learn?
Like what do you know that you didn't know before?
This whole journey, the cancerage, all of it.
What do you know now that you will take with you that you would never have known?
And this is not about that.
Oh my goodness.
I'm right now trying to write a book about it
because it's so, so much.
I'll say a few things.
The first thing that I learned was that I had,
I had so much self dislike and self hate that I wasn't conscious of.
I never would have thought of myself as somebody who really disliked themselves.
I thought that I had quite a bit of confidence.
After the diagnosis where I started to have insights into things
and I had a genuine experience of self love and I could feel it in how I interacted
with the world and everyone I encountered.
I realized that loving myself was the same as loving
every living being in the world at the same time.
And so that also brought me this insight into the fact,
I mean, it's a bumper sticker that is cringey
for some people, we are all one,
but I could really viscerally feel the
lack of separation between us and that we are sort of just all moving energies through
each other. I think that's the first one, the second one was that I had had this idea
that challenges weren't supposed to happen in my life, that if something hard happened,
then it wasn't supposed to be there.
And I started thinking about nature and how, you know, if lightning strikes a tree down and a squirrel
loses her nest, they're not raging against the situation. They're just creating with what is there.
And oh, and this other thing that I do, I started doing this pretty soon after my diagnosis,
where I started thinking about in regards to challenges, I read this thing that said that
there's this Celtic belief that we choose the challenges in our lives before we were born.
And I've also heard people have had near-death experiences say that they were shown that when
they were in this other realm. And I started, or not if the idea helps you take it and it definitely helped me.
And I started interacting with everything that came my way as if I had chosen it before
I was born.
So I could interact with it with curiosity instead of just stories about it being unfair.
And there's just, there just, there's so much.
I mean, I could talk forever on what had changed.
But I would say at the core of it was a sense of self love
that I had never known existed.
And I just didn't know how shame was the lens
through which I was seeing much of the world,
much of my life and the paint people around me.
Almost like I was circling back into my wounds and my psyche to and to look through those wounds
before I looked out at the world to decide what how I was seeing something out there. And now it almost
feels like an experience of being life looking out at life and wanting to, whatever parts are Andrea just in my best moments
feeling them just completely fall away. I think I said something to you last night that was
good. We're about to fall asleep and we've been doing this thing where we'll just be like loving
glances and we'll just like look at each other in the eyes
and silence. So how you would look at your dog basically and it's really, really nice. We've
invented a new love language, I think. Love and glancing. But I did it to Andrea. I said it to
Andrea yesterday and Andrea goes, okay, now drop away all of your humaneness and look at me directly from your soul. And I was like, what the fuck?
I love that.
Listen, I think what they're talking about and the book that you're writing, Andrea, is
I'm so excited to read it because what you're talking about is something that I've been
complicating myself and not to the degree that you have, but with extreme sports and having
to push your body.
Like, you have to make up this whole different narrative to do hard shit.
Yeah.
That's what you're doing and you're doing it in this beautiful, energetic way, like what
we need to figure out here. And because we're all down here,
and the tree gets hit by fucking lightning and falls down and your house is in there. And
you're like, I got to rebuild my fucking house. I can be pissed at the lightning the whole
time I'm rebuilding this house and or I can just be like, all right, where's the wood?
Yeah, absolutely. And I think that what you're talking about in regards to like athletics,
I think both Meg and I have encountered this in the last two years that there
are ways that we're pushing ourselves physically.
Like I'm working with this one alternative doctor who is trying to educate my
immune system.
And so I'm working out three times
a day. And then I'm also doing like cold plunges that I hate. And I think that there is something
and Meg as well has been doing this stuff. And I think that there is something about doing that
kind of thing that actually then teaches your emotional self like to have resilience. Yes,
that's what's happening for me with that fucking cold plunge. She always wants to do this stuff and I'm like, no, thank you to all the wellness.
I'm just trying to actually, like, do I have enough serotonin? I might level one. Okay, I don't
need to be well. But the old plunge, it's because it teaches me how to stop freaking out and just breathe. And
that's really what I need to do all day. So that's why I think it's helpful. I know, but scientifically,
it's also a huge difference. I don't know, but it's the dopamine and, you know, your
body is like learning how to fight for its life for those three minutes. Yeah. And a little bit after. And it's amazing. Yeah. And also when
Andrea said to Megan, please just now drop yourself and look at me like you're so looking at
a soul. That's what I mean. When I say to you, I need it to be more care bear stare.
I like that phrasing way better. The care bear stare. You know, when it's like you're shooting
rainbow love into my eyeballs.
Like if I'm not seeing enough Care Bear stare, that's what I mean. I'm gonna do like a soul.
That's gonna work with me as a baby's baby. Yeah. What did you say to Andrea when Andrea said
the thing about look at me with your soul? I think I said what the fuck? Yeah, that's good. And then last the only
response and turned over and went to bed. She didn't know she didn't. She tried to do it after she
said that. She tried to do it and she did it in a way that again made me laugh so hard. I was in
like in pain. Oh, I think I flipped my hair and did it completely demonically. Yeah, yeah. So good.
OK, I have a few more things that we must get to in the next few minutes.
Number one, I need to know what Megan has learned that she will take with her.
I also wondered, did you all bring a poem about each other?
Oh, yes.
Thank you.
And then thirdly,
thirdly, um, will you come back, Megan, to talk about your work? Oh, shit. Like, will you do? Would that be okay?
Because yes, I have pages and pages of questions, like, I
just so many things I have to talk to you about. So would you
just come back just and talk about your poems
and your freaking, that your nonfiction,
what are they called?
Are they called essays?
I forgot.
I know essays.
This is such a weird word,
but I think that it's what they're called.
It makes them sound boring,
but they're true stories, chapter,
extrovert stories.
I don't know.
And drive here and devastate me.
And though, which, like all of it,
I just, I won't talk about all of it. So you will. Okay. Yay. That's good. So now we can talk about
the other two things, which is number one, what you have learned.
Thank you. Glennon. First of all, I'm very excited. And I do want to show you that you did
send me that compliment on my writing on Instagram. And it is absolutely my phone background.
Oh, I wasn't going to be that
torquy but it's actually really inspiring me
every day so thank you. I thought you were going to show me that I had meant to
send you a DM and I had posted it on Instagram because I've done that before so
I thought that's what you're about to show me so I'm so happy. You did it right.
Okay great. I've been I think blessed to be the main sort of
benefactor of the trickle-down theory of Andrew as wisdom and knowledge for the
past two years. So everything that they said I will co-sign as having impacted
me as well, especially the idea that a situation happens and then there's
a motive prescription of how we're supposed to feel.
So that's not true.
That you can get the cancer diagnosis and sanctioned.
I a-20 at the top of your lungs.
That's definitely been a learning. But I think the main thing that's sort of individual for me is
when Andrea sort of got this news of like, you have to really take care of your body now. And
our bodies are just so temporary. And one night night we were talking about a
asterisans and thing like is it hard to lose your hair or eyebrows, whatever.
And Andrea said, I just want to have a body. I don't care what it looks like.
And I had spent my, you know, since I was nine years old hating my body.
And feeling like I could hate it and shame it
into some kind of submission or just,
I certainly never thought of it as a temple.
And something about Andrea then being throttled
into this place where like taking care of your health is so crucial and there were a lot of ways in which
Andrea 13 years older than me on chemo post-historectomy with cancer and Lyme disease all of this was actually healthier than me more energy and everything. And I never expected what happened to happen, but I suddenly started to
really love my body first and then take care of it subsequently. And I realized like,
I had a theory that shame and hating yourself were not the ways to
heal anything, but I think then I really learned it
in real time and that's been, yeah, a ride for sure. Wow. Yeah. Okay, so I asked if they would bring
a poem that most that made them think the most about each other,
most encapsulated the other. I think you should go first.
Andrew is so profound and beautiful and quite a bit longer than mine and mine's making fun of them. So, okay, so now we're going to see what the Shania Twain experience was.
what the Shania Twain experience was. This is how we roll.
I am deep and she makes fun of me and that's what is the glue that keeps us together.
This was originally a 15-minute poem.
I'm hoping I got it down to four, which is still a bit longer, maybe three.
We'll see.
But it was one that I wrote after my diagnosis.
And people argue with the first line,
but Well butrin is used off label for ADHD.
This is called guardian angel fish.
I'm nervous.
Like the first time on a mic.
I'm nervous.
I'm nervous because I know I'm going to cry.
Well, butrin works wonders for her ADHD, but she calls me well Gibson because I make her happy.
I make her happy. Is there anything left to do in this life? I don't think so.
Except maybe adopt a fourth dog, which we both know she will find because I pull over when I see a stray But she pulls over learns parkour, scarls of building and pole vaults between rooftops returning with another furry bundle
Freckling her in fleas
She also follows me everywhere I go
I don't mind that it's only to put lids on everything. I don't what can I say? I'm an open person
that it's only to put lids on everything I don't. What can I say? I'm an open person.
So is she?
She doesn't just see people at their best.
She sees people at the best they haven't been yet,
which is why she loved me long before I loved myself.
Thank goodness, I figured that out.
Beating yourself up is never a fair fight.
Those gloves fit no one right,
and she always deserved the me
who didn't have to squint
through bruised eyes to see her clearly.
And how could I not want to see her clearly?
As she pulled dances on the tractor,
Moe's are lawn in the bikini,
rolls out a red carpet to escort the mice back to the pasture,
teaches spiders how to weave their webs outside.
And the ants, okay, the ants, she slaughters with every weapon she can find,
but I forgive her because she forgives everyone so easily.
Watching her do it is like watching paint dry.
There's nothing to see.
Everything is just more colorful after this morning,
while I was trying to figure out what kind of fish everyone in our family would be
I asked her what she would be and she said very seriously hold up. Let me Google the sexiest fish. Oh wait the most beautiful fish
Oh wait, there's an angel fish. I am the angel fish. I
Know there are more fish in the sea Very beautiful ones, but she's a catch.
I will never throw back because there is no one like her anywhere. She mines her own business.
Changes her mind as often as she needs to, and she never, ever lies, which irritates
me because she also edits my poems. Can't keep the look off her face when I use ad
verbs. How could I not write the word
beautifully? Well, she's sitting beside me, but beautifully doesn't bug her nearly as much as
honestly, which I honestly began half of my sentences with. And she's worried that suggests the
other half of what I say is a lie. But here's what I figured out today. I am a liar. I lie all the time.
out today. I am a liar. I lie all the time. The other day I said, we will all have to say goodbye sometime. That's not true. Saul Williams was right when he said only believers in death will die.
I don't believe anything could take me away from her nor would I want it to, but it wasn't always
like this. There were many months, we were more
flammable than Instagramable, but we were creative about it, spent an entire summer arguing via
badminton so we could drive the birdie of blame at each other's skulls. I was going to leave that
out of this, but this isn't only for us. It's for everyone. We can convince to not wait for a tragedy
to stop calling it zero, zero, when it could so easily
be called love, serving love.
I had no idea how much would change when all that mattered.
Became all that matter.
These days, our biggest arguments
happen on our daily walks near the lake. I always want to walk back the same way, which she doesn't know me but told me I was ordering the wrong drink.
The back of my hand where I first wrote her name so I could remember her birthday when we were
still friends. The back of her arms where she tattooed the longitude and latitude of where we first
danced, the birds flying backwards back to the cold just like her racing home from her lunch in the sun when I called to tell her
what the doctor had spotted on the cat's game.
When I call cancer, the big C, she is the only one who knows.
I mean the big ocean where we met our own Titanic
and didn't sink.
She even managed to convince me it was a good idea
for us to dress up as Jack and Rose on Halloween, though my baldness
was in no position to pass up an opportunity to wear a wig. I was a bit nervous to play the part
of the guy who dies. But I wasn't really Jack. I was Rose and her heart was the door that opened so wide, it tore off its hinges and kept me afloat,
even as I woke up from surgery and asked her what they found. Anyone who thinks poetry is frivolous
has never needed someone to tell them something unspeakably hard, beautifully. My guardian angel,
beautifully. My guardian angel, my guardian angel fish, you will never not be swimming beside me, we will never not be swimming beside each other just like I
will never be done writing this very long love poem for which this is only the
prologue baby. I've barely begun.
Doesn't it just make you want to be pay attention
like they do are you okay?
But was I know okay Megan? That's was just, I know. Okay. Megan.
That's my personal favorite of theirs.
No bias or anything.
I just,
maybe you don't know that Titanic is my favorite movie.
It is Abby.
She was super.
Abby, it's my favorite movie in the entire world.
I saw it three times in the theater.
Oh my God, I can't. I cried so much that the woman sitting behind me, I went with my mom. I mean, it was nine
and she suggested that my mom take me out of the theater and I turn around and go, no!
Holy shit. I've been reading about how when you die, you meet these guys, who knows if it's, who knows what's true after,
but that you have guides that help you move through
the afterlife and two nights ago I asked Meg,
who her guides would be if she has any sense of who
her guides are and what did you say?
I first I said the spice girls and Andrea
sort of rolled their eyes at me and they're like,
no, come on I'm serious and I'm like I'm serious.
It's the spice girls and then the two people who died holding hands in the bed and the
Titanic and went down together and then Andrew goes, that's brilliant because it's so
her and those are absolutely her gods.
Megan, can we hear yours?
Absolutely.
Mine is on the lighter side.
I've written a lot of love poems about Andrea.
I think a whole section of this book is love poems,
but this is about one of two or three times
that Andrea and I have been writing our tandem bike
and Andrea peed their been writing our tandem bike in Andrea
peed their pants on the tandem bike. So yes.
Oh God, I love this one. The love of my life has pissed themselves upon our
tandem bicycle exactly two times, both while crossing a major intersection and
leaving me to haul the clunky metal beasts between my legs like a dying horse across the glaring
traffic alone. While they sit on the curb laughing like a
stalled engine and a wet spot blooms on their tiny perfect
ass. All the while they're shouting, I'm having a panic attack,
I'm having a panic attack. As if they were the one left for
road kill.
Earlier, we were debating the clock of love.
How one's heart becomes a flat tire
once someone has seen you for the lemon you are
or no longer peels their eyes from their book
when you undress.
All day I've been thinking I'm a lousy poet,
so I'm looking for the metaphor here.
Is love a tandem bicycle?
Both people with one destination in mind,
but someone always a little ahead.
I'd prefer to think of love as a sociable bike,
side by side.
But love is more honestly,
the swatch of urine on the pants,
born from a blushing, a bliss, a surprise,
sometimes uncomfortable, often embarrassing, but how when it comes,
you know you are going home.
Oh, God.
Oh, my gosh.
I mean, oh, my God, you too.
Okay.
So good.
Andre, you said you could talk about this forever.
I just hope that both of you talk about this forever.
It's all the world needs.
That's all you have to do for the rest of your life is just love each other and then
fucking tell us about it because there's nothing more beautiful than you two.
And the only reason I'm not panicking now is because I already got you to commit to another day.
Yeah.
So obviously this is over.
I can pause it and then just ask you guys questions per hour.
We can do another double date.
We'll get put it on the books.
Oh my God.
Please.
I will say before we got on because I read on tame, but in the last two days, I've been
listening Abby to all of your interviews because I wanted on tame, but in the last two days, I've been listening Abby to all of your interviews
because I wanted to know, feel I knew you
in the way that I knew Glenn and Thurard writing.
And you at one point self-reference
what you were saying is boring.
And I was like, who is this lunatic?
To think that any of this is boring.
It was really beautiful.
Thank you, that's really sweet.
I'm just so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy for you both.
I'm so happy for you both. I'm so happy for
the recent news. I'm so happy that no matter what, if it's terrible news, if it's happy news,
if it's wherever you are, there's so much joy in beauty. It's super rare. The world needs to
know more about you too and how you're living within this. And we love you and Hadsquad.
We will see you back here next time.
Thank you so much, y'all.
Thank you.
I love you guys.
Thank you.
We love you back.
I love you.
I love you.
I love you.
I love you.
I love you.
I love you.
I love you.
I love you.
I love you.
I love you.
I love you.
I love you. I love you. I love you. it would mean so much to us.
If you'd be willing to take 30 seconds to do these three things.
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I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlyle.
I walked through a fire, I came out, the other side.
I came out the other side
I chased, is I here, I made sure I got what's mine
And I continue to believe
That I'm the one for me And because I'm mine, I walk the line
Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak some map A final destination
That we stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do a heartache
I hit rock bottom, it felt like a brand new star I'm not the problem sometimes things fall apart
And I continue to believe
The best people are free
And it took some time
But I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers and heartbreaks on land
A final destination with land
We stopped asking directions
So places they've never been.
Come to beloved we need to be known.
We'll finally find our way back home.
And through the joy and pain that our lives bring. We can do a hard thing
This perfect, sure isn't hard, breaks on my mind. We might get lost, but we're only in that.
Stop asking directions from me. directions. Some places they've never been. And to be loved we need to be long.
We'll finally find our way back home. And through the joy and pain that our lives breathe
We can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things I'm a bad man