We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - 257. How to Finally Forgive with Nadia Bolz-Weber
Episode Date: November 9, 2023Where does all our suffering come from and how can we free ourselves? Pastor, author, and speaker, Nadia Bolz-Weber, discusses how she finally became healed and whole enough to choose romantic love f...rom freedom instead of desperation. With her characteristic raw honesty, Nadia shares that the secret to her healing has been “honestly, a lot of pain.” Plus, Nadia leads Abby to a heartbreaking, cathartic moment of clarity – and shares a blessing that she wrote for Abby and all queer people. About Nadia: Nadia Bolz-Weber is an ordained Lutheran Pastor; founder of House for All Sinners & Saints in Denver; host of The Confessional podcast; and author of three NYT bestselling memoirs: Pastrix, Accidental Saints, and SHAMELESS. Nadia writes and speaks about personal failings, recovery, grace, faith, and really whatever the hell else she wants to. She always sits in the corner with the other weirdos, and she can be found a couple days a week inside the Denver women’s prison where she is a volunteer chaplain. https://thecorners.substack.com/ IG: @sarcasticlutheran 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)
Okay, Pod Squad, get ready for today. I am so delighted, already full of energy and wondering what's going to happen in the next hour because we have one of my faves, Nadia bolts Weber, here today. Nadia is an ordained Lutheran pastor
founder of House for All Sinners in Saints in Denver, host of the Confessional Podcast,
an author of the three New York Times best-selling memoirs, pastrix, accidental saints, and shameless,
all of her books are so flippin' good. She always sits in the corner with the
other weirdos, one of the many reasons we love her so much. And she can be found a couple days
a week inside the Denver Women's Prison where she is a volunteer chaplain, Nadia. Welcome.
And the corner's sub-stack. Don't forget the corner sub-stack. Oh, yes, absolutely.
Yes, if you want to get her writing now,
you have to subscribe to the corner sub-stack,
which we're going to talk about in a minute
because this is interesting what's going on with you
right now, Nadia.
First, I want to tell you a little story.
OK.
The first time I met you in real life
was at something called the Wild Goose Festival.
So Abby, I've explained this to you as
kind of like a Jesus-y Woodstock. Like a many Jesus-y Woodstock. So the first time I went to Wild Goose,
I was referred to in the community as the one who wore heels, okay? Because it was in the mud, rain, like a festival-type thing.
And so people kept saying,
oh, is she the one who wore heels to this?
And that is true that I did.
Why?
I didn't understand.
I didn't, it was like camp, I didn't understand.
I made my mom's friend lived in the town.
So I would go all day and then pretend I was gonna camp
and then I'd have my mom's friend pick me up in the secret in the back and take me to her house and put me in a room.
Wow.
It pretended I camped.
I pretend I was gonna camp.
Yeah.
I don't think anybody thought you were probably gonna camp.
So I was only knowing what?
Okay.
So Nadia.
I brought my baby Chase.
He was like 10 to wild goose.
I was obsessed with you.
You did a speaking event like in a tent
with Christa Tippett.
You and she were recording an on-being.
And the whole wild goose was always like,
Nadia's doing on-beings
or the whole Jesus' camp with Ststocky Festival, went to listen to
you too.
And you've talked a lot in that about gendering God as just He and sort of the damage that
that has done and continues to do.
The next week, I'm minding my own business at home, and I get a call from my son's Christian school.
This is why that happens.
Okay.
I never knew this.
Yes, my son is in fourth grade at this time.
He's in the principal's office.
OK?
He's in the principal's office.
I've been called a few times.
OK, like they've said, my mom doesn't believe there's
a hell principal's office.
My mom has tattoos and does yoga principal's office.
OK.
But this is the last straw.
My son has stood up and said to his Christian teacher,
I think we should be done with calling God He.
Let's think about how this is making everyone feel.
He quotes Nadiable, it's Weber.
That's it.
So I go to the principal's office.
I'm sitting there with the principal.
And we just agree that we have to leave the school that day.
I take chase out of the office.
And I'm like, I guess we can't go here.
I go through them.
You had to pull all three of them.
I pull all three of them.
I went two dishes class.
I went two Amas class, pulled them all out.
We walked out.
We started a public school the next day because of you.
I think I want to be careful listening to this podcast
because if I have large ramifications for your life.
Yes.
I don't know whether to feel more proud of that
or how many middle-aged lesbians are inseminary now
because of me.
How would you pick what to be proud of?
I know. I know.
Yeah, that's amazing.
I never heard that story.
Me neither.
You said, I mean, it saved us.
I knew that I knew the kids left school.
That's so funny.
I also remember in 2016, maybe it was like early 2017,
you and I were texting about something and I was like nobody knows
I'm in the middle of a divorce and you're like nobody nobody knows that I fell in love with a woman
how happy, how me want back and I'm like girl you can't be blamed for that
for that. That's. Oh my God. He's not just like, he's off me. I see your divorce and I raise you a lesbian.
Exactly. Exactly. Yes.
Fit through some shit. Haven't we?
Not yet. Yeah. Yeah. So I'm getting this sense.
I could be making this up, but I feel like you seem to be carbonated.
Like you seem a very alive. We have spent decades in sort of this like
trying to figure out how to do what we love and also be in the grind.
It feels to me lately. Like you are living a little bit,
like, you know how campy people live off the grid.
Like you seem to be living off the grind.
I am living off the grind.
You're totally right.
The way I put it is, I think that all my ambition
left with my estrogen.
Like, I just driven.
I was driven my whole life.
I've been this driven person and I'm entrepreneurial.
So I create stuff.
I make stuff.
I have new projects.
I get people excited.
I've just done that for so long.
And I don't care.
I don't care.
I don't have it in me to create anything else because I am very busy cooking and going
for walks and doing what I'm really obsessed with my new hobby, which is sacred harp singing. So every week I gather with this small group of people and we sing like colonial era music.
My dad, Abby, you would love that. That's so fun sounding.
Yeah, I'm obsessed with it and it brings me so much joy. And so my best friend in the world said the most graceful thing to me a few years ago when I was like,
it's hard to get off the carnival right of book publishing.
And so I was like, oh, I should figure out what my next book is.
And she said, Nadia, if you never write another book and you never preach another sermon and you never publish another essay, you will have already done enough more than enough.
needed someone to say, you know. I think when you do work that has a positive impact on people, it creates a sort of weight around, I have to keep doing it. And we don't have a lot of words of
grace. That's why I'm so obsessed with grace. It really cuts us free a lot of times. And anyway,
so there have been moments in my life when somebody has said something so graceful
that it really reoriented everything for me.
And that's kind of what happened.
So I don't, I don't know, maybe I'll write a book someday,
but the drive, I don't have anything else to prove.
I think that's what I feel.
Like I don't, what, oh no, I need to write a fourth
near time's best.
That'll do it.
Who cares?
That'll cure the God's title in my soul.
Exactly, exactly.
So part of it is I'm so extraordinarily well loved
for the first time in my life.
I'm in a very deeply, I'm so in love with Eric and it has softened everything about me.
So I don't do crossfit obsessively anymore.
I mean, I weigh more than I've ever weighed.
My hair is longer.
I sort of spend my time more slowly.
And I like it.
How is this relationship different than any other
that you've had that is having this effect?
I think that Eric and I have this thing where we get
that our relationship is like a huge treasure.
And so we try to value it every day like that,
and not take it for granted.
And so we've both been through a lot.
And we were together in 93, 94.
He was the boyfriend who broke my heart,
just like destroying.
And it was a whole thing.
It was like part of my story. Like if I had a new friend and I was telling
them about who I am, I would tell them the story of having my heart broken. Wow. You know, decades
later, I'll just tell you the story about which is this. We both got sober in 91. So 93 were very young, were newly sober. And I was so in love with him. I remember
loving how his hands looked. You know, oh, Lord, you know what I'm saying? You were gone. So I had
nothing going for me in my 20s. I had good abs, but really, that's it. That's all I had. So I thought, oh, this really handsome, sexy guy who's in this big alternative band, like
wants to be with me, that must mean that I'm worthy of desire, that I'm worthy of love.
It means I'll have a future. It means I'll have some kind of security.
So I attached so many things to being with him.
And so when he broke up with me, I was destroyed.
So, okay, fast forward to 2016,
we've had various marriages and degrees in children
and careers and whatnot.
And I was in a coffee shop and I bumped into his roommate from back in the day.
And he goes, Hey, you and Eric are both divorced. You should have dinner. And I was like,
yes, we should have dinner. And we've been together since then, August 2016.
And he went with me on a gig like three weeks in
or a month into our relationship.
And we're on the airplane and he just looks at me
and he goes, when did you forgive me?
And I said, when I realized how much of the suffering
that I had experienced from our breakup,
was my fault, was about how much I had attached to the relationship.
My suffering was from that so much more than from what you did.
And that's when I forgave you because it was more mine than yours.
So anyway, yeah. How many people think that their first breakup is still breaking their heart because of
the other person when really it was because that first thing is when you decided you were
worthy of anything. So if they leave, you're unworthy of anything.
That's right. Because he met somebody on the road that he fell in love with. And I was like,
okay, now all those things are true about her and not. Yes.
She's the one who has security and who has value and who's worthy of desire. And not me.
It's been transferred. We're both 54. The great thing about being in a relationship now,
We're both 54. The great thing about being in a relationship now, I don't need anyone
for me to have value and to know that I'm worthy and to have security and financial security. I don't I don't need him
for anything except that love connection and that's it. And that makes it have a buoyancy.
Yeah. Yeah. So how did you get there? What do you most attribute being a
becoming a human being who has all the worthiness, the security in
herself so that she can choose love instead of desperately need it. Yeah, just a lot of pain.
Yeah, that's why I love you.
That's why I love you.
It's so hard.
Why does it got to be so hard?
That's it.
That's the way.
Yeah.
On Substack, Liz Gilbert, she just started a Substack.
In honor of that, I posted a note, which is sort of like a Twitter feed type of thing on
sub-stack. And it was a picture of myself at 10. And I was like in order in honor of Liz
Gilbert's new sub-stack, I'm writing my 10 year old self a little note here, right? And so
it was before all the pain. It really was. It was before bullying and sorrow and sickness and addiction.
And I was like, part of me just wishes I could like,
protect you from all of it, from the betrayal and the sorrow
and definitely the cocaine and all of it.
And I want to tell you, like, never go on a diet
and, you know, like all of these things.
And yet, if I did, you'd be boring as fuck now.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think about my 10 year old self a lot.
And I also think about there was also a knowing
I would get here. Like deep fucking down because we didn't let all of that shit
take us out.
And so it's like, hey, you're gonna have a long road ahead
of you, you know you got this.
Abby, why do you think it's 10?
Why do you think it's 10?
You said 10 and I just went, boom, right to that number.
It's always around that. Every girl says that. It's 10, it just went, boom, right to that number. It's always around that.
Every girl says that.
It's 10, it's 11, it's 12, it's nine, it's right in there.
It's like that's where the split happens.
You're like living as a subject.
You're thinking about what you're seeing and then suddenly you have this double consciousness.
You become the object.
You think about how you're being seen.
And that's right. Right? You become aware of your body and the awareness of your body as this thing that's being understood separately from you creates this like dissonance in you that now you
have two things. You have yourself and you have your body.
And then you have to choose which one to protect
and which one to preserve.
So you become bisected, I think, at that time.
Yeah, you come kind of an actor.
And then suddenly we're all like 50.
And it's just this beautiful, recovering of this original self who had to go through
so much shit to just be back in the same place.
Because you eventually you become old enough to become unsolved conscious again.
Yes.
Yeah, and it's this interesting thing.
I don't think men do this as much. And I think that this
road that we take itself exploration, like it's hard as shit, it's a journey, it's suffering,
but we come back to, I think, ourselves where I think a lot of men, and this obviously is very
generalized, but I think it's a little true that they don't do all of the
self-expression in the middle. And so they just stay without maybe as much pain, I don't know.
Well, I think they aren't companion in the way women often are with each other, right?
I'm in conversations about all of this stuff with my closest friends all the time. And I think
my closest friends all the time. And I think they've really shown that
men tend to not have those really deep intimate friendships
where they're companion through that process.
I was a third grade teacher.
So I also got to watch this process happen
from the teacher's perspective.
And I saw it happen just as severely with boys. I could see it in my
mind right now more clearly. Like the boys have to act out masculinity. They have a bisecting also.
Imagine if men got together and talked about how when they were 10 years old, they were like
feeling soft. And then they had to put on this masculinity armor,
and they just never get to take it off.
Well, they have to pretend they're not suffering.
Yeah.
That's terrible.
Yeah. Auras is a 119-year-old independent watch brand based out of Holstein, Switzerland.
The brand has been certified climate and carbon neutral since 2021, and every year releases
a sustainability report.
Auras only makes mechanical watches, like the new ProPilot X-Calibre 400, and the new
ProPilot AlteMeter featuring a 3D printed carbon case.
Discover the full Aorus collection
at a retailer near you, or at oris.ch.
Aorus, go your own way.
So, Nadiya, you're in love.
You're living a little bit off the grind,
doing all of your...
What's hard now, like really,
when you think about,
whenever I choose a new way,
things get better,
but there's still fucking something.
Like what is your hard thing right now?
My ego didn't love it.
Yeah, I wondered.
Yeah, and that happened with the pandemic.
So in 2019, I was on 90 airplanes in seven countries.
That's how much I was touring.
And then in 2020, I was in my apartment.
And there are no upgrades in my apartment.
Yeah.
Minimal applause.
There's no United Club.
Nobody sending a car service.
I wasn't special in my apartment.
And I was sort of sickened when I realized
that I'd become accustomed to being treated a certain way.
I didn't notice it had happened
until the world changed so much that it was taken away.
And I thought, oh my God, I can't do this.
I can't stay at home.
I'm used to traveling constantly
being in front of adoring crowds.
And you know what I mean?
Being treated a certain way.
And what I discovered was it wasn't that I couldn't do it.
It's that I had not yet met the version of me
that could do it.
And that's who I met during that year and a half
of mostly being at home.
I met a whole different part of myself
and then the next one, the first time I got out of plane again,
I had this like meltdown.
I forgot how to pack.
I didn't know what I was supposed to take.
Like the thing I was so adept at suddenly was just gone.
And I thought, I can't do this.
I was like, no, I just haven't met the version of me
who can't, right?
And that's who I'm about to meet.
And so my, I think to not be publishing and doing quite
as much as all that, because to be clear,
I got off the book publishing bandwagon,
but that does not prevent my friends' new books
from arriving at my house every few days.
That's the thing.
People keep writing.
Then I have feelings.
Then I have feelings.
I'm like, oh God, why am I, I'm so lazy.
I'm too self-involved, or, you know,
oh, if I don't capture it again, it will be gone forever.
You know?
It's the it. So that's the part that that has been difficult. But I think I'm old enough, I do
see it when it's happening. It's little, you know, dialogue in my head is pretty short before I go, oh, I know what that is.
That's just, that's just my ego and it's okay.
And that's not the thing I want to be leading with.
And then I just kind of go for a walk
and figure out what I'm cooking for dinner.
Yeah, that is such a vital skill set
because you don't have to be a New York Times bestseller
to understand that phenomenon.
Like I live in a very like type A hustle,
parent like raising little mini people
to do whatever it is, the hell we think they're gonna do.
And it's like when you decide to be like,
actually I'm just gonna let them be whatever they are.
You can feel good about that in your house at night when you go to sleep.
And then when you wake up and see everybody else
doing all the things that they're doing,
you kind of have a panic attack.
So it's like, it's all well and good.
What do you say to yourself,
to bring yourself back to peace about what you've decided
when the scarcity, like tornadoes happening around you.
Well, I have Eric and my best friend Jody. I will tell them exactly what I was thinking, right?
I tell them things I just would never tell other people about terrible thoughts about others.
And my friend Jody and I spend four or five hours a week on the phone together.
She lives in Saint Paul. Also a 10-year-old self-throwback. You're like, what we need to spend
four hours on the telephone. I'm going to wind a cord around my finger. Anyway, we go on walks
and we talk for hours every week. So I'll just go, hey, can I just tell you something
I really hate about my personality just real quick? It shall be like, yep, go for it. I can
say that the most honest, not spending it, not filtering it, things to her about myself
and things I think and things I fear and jealousies I have or whatever. And she never thinks less
of me because she really knows the whole so well that I never at risk of that turning back
on me. So I think having that in my life allows me to metabolize that stuff pretty quickly.
I have a question about this connection between ego
and self-esteem, because I've been on this exploration
since retiring.
Of course.
And I think that I have attached so much of my physical output
with self-esteem and love and worthiness and enoughness.
And all of that, all of playing and the things that I do,
I'm trying to figure out how ego is good for me and not
because I think we all have one.
It's all there, right?
And how we can kind of balance and keep it in check.
What are ways that you in this world of being off the grind?
How are you finding self-love and your worthiness or your self-esteem without
overplaying the ego and tapping into the shadow side of ego?
Yeah, I think I know when I'm in ego in a way that doesn't serve me when I feel defensive.
If I feel defensive about something,
it's always, that's not my true self.
If I feel like I have to justify something,
that's not my true self.
There are these signals that go, oh, that's not,
and it's okay.
Like, there's no escaping it.
I think that's like so important for us to get.
Yes.
You cannot escape the shitty parts of yourself.
Right.
You can't do it.
And I have been in subcultures that like to pretend
you can and they're toxic as fuck.
Yes.
So, Evangelical Christianity.
Oh, I'm just living in victory with the board.
You know, it's just like, doesn't
even mean anything. And you just, and they believe in like progressive sanctification. You can just,
if you have quiet time with the Lord and you're a good disciple, you can actually, I think it's a
form of atheism to be honest because it's this idea that you can sanctify yourself so much that you never need to call on God for help.
You never are standing in the need of prayer. You're never somebody who needs mercy or compassion
or forgiveness. That's for other people. So I don't trust it in like Christianity and I don't trust it in the yoga, new age,
spirituality scene either.
These are two faces of to me the same thing.
When I, I love yoga, but I do not trust yoga teachers
who are affected.
Like when they have that, like, oh, the painfully good,
they talk with the passive-aggressive half whisper
and they really try to act like nothing ever phases them.
I just assume they're a monster.
I do.
I'm like, oh god, stay away from that person.
But I had the shokit teacher who came in once
and he goes late, which is rare.
He's a couple minutes late.
He goes, I'm so sorry.
But I was having a fight with my
teenager and I threw my yoga mat across the room before I got here. And I was like, oh my god,
I'm going to have to tear. I'm going to have to tear. Exactly. What do you have to do?
So it's sort of smeared all over us. And it shows up in really sneaky ways through different like influencers.
This idea of we can somehow transcend the shitty parts of ourselves.
I don't think so, or at least I haven't yet.
So everything is still there and it's part of the whole package of me.
And the whole package is pretty great.
Whole package is pretty good
and has managed to survive some stuff
and be of aid to others
and make some pretty good jokes.
And you know what I mean?
But also can be very self-centered
and in ways that other people don't realize
and can be kind of sneaky about getting what I want
and making it seem like I'm being generous, whatever.
I mean, I have all the things.
I know that one.
And they're all still there.
They're all still there.
And like, I, myself a steam's intact.
I have, I'm pretty good self-esteem.
And boy, I really don't mind telling people the kind of awful things about myself.
And I actually think these two things are related because some things can be a little embarrassing
I guess the shittier parts but I'm not ashamed of them. And in fact it would be evidence that you
do not have a solid foundation of self-esteem if you could not tell
those things.
I'm crazy, totally.
Absolutely.
Because it'd be fake.
And if you didn't tell those things and you had a solid self-esteem, it would be quite
precarious feeling all the time because eventually someone's going to find out those things
and goodbye to that.
For softly, that's right.
That's exactly right.
I also think when I look at Nadia
and you say, ego is not the thing
you're following the most, right?
I see the fact that Nadia is still doing
what she's made for.
She's just not doing it in a, look at me. I need everyone to pay attention to
me way. You're a chaplain at a women's prison and you're writing beautifully. You're just not
begging the world to pay attention to those two things constantly. Yeah.
Is how it feels to me. But you haven't stopped doing what you do so beautifully.
Yeah.
I mean, I do have a very particular calling.
I have a lane that I stay in.
But yeah, I think I just don't need the adoration
of all the people anymore.
And also, it's so mean out there.
You know, there's so much unkindness towards people
who put themselves out there.
And I just don't
really want to be exposed in that way anymore.
What is it about the women's prison that's so important to you?
Oh, I just love them so much.
What you see is what you get, you know, and they're not pretending life is something other
than what it is.
And boy, you learn a lot about our society,
spending time in prisons.
There's an underclass that we warehouse.
I don't know how else to put that, but most of the women
are profoundly undereducated.
They come from poverty.
They don't have any education in their families at all. They have learned
to survive with a certain set of skills within systems of addiction. And yet, there are
these complete humans, you know, who have their own stories and their heart and their humor.
I kind of feel like if it doesn't float in a women's prison, you shouldn't say it.
You know what I'm saying? Like there's so much bullshit out there. If there's something that I
wouldn't say to them, then maybe it's not worth saying. Like what? Oh, like I think about what you
say about the opposite of fundamentalism is not atheism, it's humility.
Yeah, right.
Okay, here's something that will not fly with them.
There's a lot of stuff out there about manifesting.
Yeah, you know, power positive thinking,
manifesting this idea of name it and claim it.
Well, the woman who I sat next to on Sunday,
I said, oh, you had your babies.
She had, last time I saw her,
she was pregnant with twins.
Last month.
And now she's not.
And she had two little boys
and then handed them over a half an hour later, right?
So you want to have a conversation
about manifesting with her?
Who is your community now?
My community has just always been in diaspora.
I have a couple of friends here in Denver, but my community is a group of women who
have been by each other's side for years and years and years.
And we're going to be in Nashville next week for
Linesia's art opening. I think there's eight of us getting together. So I have extraordinary
individual friendships that I value very highly. But I don't have necessarily
community. Although the sacred heart scene is kind of a community. I mean, I just show up and I'm part of a group, which I like, and I'm not special.
Has anyone ever said to you, what doesn't kill you makes you stronger?
As if our pain was supposed to become a sort of divine
purpose or everything happens for a reason, when in reality we may never find reasons for
why bad things happen or reasons for why good things happen even though our culture insists
on finding them. Well, we have a podcast for you. On the Everything Happens podcast, Kate Boller, who I love, talks with people about embracing
the tough stuff and finding comfort and shared experiences.
They are such heartfelt and often hilarious conversations.
I love this podcast.
I love this woman.
She's doing such important work in the world.
And if you're a week and do hard things or I bet you will love Kate Boehler.
Find everything happens wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm just obsessed and want to talk to you about this.
So, you know, all the signs and the kitchens and the influencers selling the programs about
the you are enough.
And I honest to God, I'm not even judging.
I just don't know what the hell it means.
I don't just intellectually understand what anyone is talking about.
Let me say, you are enough.
And your concept of wanting to preach the good news that you are not
enough makes so much more sense to me. So can you just take us down that train a little
bit about how we're not enough and that's quite all right.
Well, I think where it comes from is just the constant messages about how we should be
something that we're not, you know, throughout our lives, and that feeling we have of shame
that comes from living in a culture that's saying that constantly.
So I think that's where the, you're, you're enough thing is.
But for me, it, it, it's related to the thing where I think progressive sanctification
is a form of atheism, where I wanted to write an anti-self-help book called You're Not Enough,
but there is enough, and it doesn't have to be you. Foundationally, the longer I've been at a
seminary, the more simplistic I've become as a theologian. And so this is my basic sort of cosmology.
It's simple.
If you guys been watching these web telescope photos
and kind of paying attention to them,
there's a problem.
No, I want to survive.
So.
You watch Brava.
Yeah.
Same, same.
Same, same.
I mean, the universe is like 13 billion light years across.
There's no way for our human brains to really conceive of it.
I would have been a pretty good medieval person just believing in like the dome.
Yeah.
You know, just like what we could, I'd be good with that.
I'm fine with this.
But apparently it keeps going for real far. And so, you think about how far that is in the only place that we know for sure has the
conditions to support life as we know it is here.
This one weird little blue spec is the only place where there's puppies and pizza, you know, like Beyonce. Just
here, that's the only place. And we get it, and we get it, we get it, which is just
mind blowing. Okay, so I think that all of the cosmos creation, everything, came
is an act of divine love. I think there's a source from all of it, which is divine and ineffable. We can't really
understand it totally. It's so big, but I think it's almost like God wanted to be known, and that's
what creation is. And so we all come from the same defined source.
And then while we're here, living our lumpy lives that we're also full of inconsistencies
and desperately in need of grace and mercy all the time and fucking up and being extraordinary
and all of that, when we don't have enough, when I don't have enough compassion to be the kind of person
I want to be, there is enough.
That source I came from is available to me to draw upon.
And so I get a draw upon my own divine source through prayer or meditation or whatever it
is.
And that is enough.
And so I don't have to be.
Like I don't have to have all the love,
all the compassion, the mercy, the understanding,
the companioning.
I don't because I have access to this unlimited source
of it in the divine.
And then when we die, somehow we return to the source.
That's all I know.
I mean, I could get into a gazillion other things
because I'm like a Lutheran theologian,
but like, basically, that's what I believe.
And so when people go around going,
I actually don't need access to anything other than myself.
I'm like, well, that's awesome for you. I desperately need
more than just me because I feel like if I am all I have and all there is, I feel fucked. I just
do. And the way that that plays out in community, I also love so much because you can take that like macro
huge approach and then also look at like,
even your little community you build around yourself
of friendships and be like, today I have no patience,
I have no tolerance, I hate everything.
And your friend can show up in your thoughts
and be like, I've got it for you today.
And it doesn't mean that yours is superfluous
because yours is absolutely
critical for the next time around when you have it for the next person.
There's a story in the New Testament where there's a whole crowd in Jesus' house and
these friends brought their friend who's sick and needed healing. And so they opened up
a hole in the roof and they lowered their friend down to Jesus to be healed.
And I'm always like sometimes we're the ones lowering our friends down and sometimes we're the ones being lowered.
But it's a team sport, you know. So we do, we need each other. I actually, this might be weird, but you know Annie Lamont.
So she texted me.
I just want to look really quick. She sent me, she goes, do you have one minute? Can you say why community, which is so unnatural for some of us narcissistic loners, is so necessary for our souls slash humanity slash healing.
This is the text I give for me.
Just watch it.
Just watch it.
Just watch it.
And I said, here's my answer to Annie.
Because giving and receiving is the economy of our souls.
We must give and receive help and love and forgiveness.
And because the Lord in his mercy created us as
fleshy musical instruments and no matter how hard I try, I cannot sing harmony alone. By ourselves,
we are unreliable narrators. We need the eyes of the other in order to have a halfway accurate
view of the world. Yep. Okay, I want to read to you the text that Ann Lamont sent me.
Which season of Love Island should I start with?
So that's what she thinks of us.
Nadia.
Same thing.
And that's what you call the power of community.
Community. Do you still have anybody to forgive?
Oh, I wish I could say no.
So I still do 12-step work.
Thirty one, how many years?
I bet thirty, I don't know.
Thirty three years.
Thirty three, if 91 was the day.
Okay, thank you.
Thirty two, wow.
And I still do that work.
And yesterday I was having this long conversation with Eric about the stuckness that I'm feeling
in a particular area in my life.
And he said, I think you need to finish writing your resentment inventory that you started
last month.
And that felt like an act of aggression against you.
But I do think he's right. So I do have these
resentments that they almost always have to do with me feeling betrayed by someone.
And I know I need to do it. And I just am fighting it. And I know he's right. I have to like
process that stuff. It's not great to hold on to. So I would love to say, oh, now I'm free from
all of it, but I still have work to do. Can you explain to the Pad Squad what the resentment
work, like what you're saying, for people who aren't familiar, because I think everybody
would benefit from this stuff? Well, okay. So I'd say one of the worst lines in the
big book about the Holocaust in Monomus
is when it's talking about people who've heard us
because what the program tries to get you to do,
even though it's the last thing you wanna do,
is to look at how you participated
in something that hurt you.
Because it's the worst, it's so gross.
And yet it's the only freedom we're gonna get. I'm like I've never gotten free by detailing over and over what
someone else did. Those those stories try as I might. Totally and I'm a fairly
good red reticent. So the thing is if I tell you a story of a grievance story of
mine, I promise you at the end, you will feel the same.
Yes.
You will be like, how dare they.
You know?
And, but, and I think my ego, back to that, my ego, thinks that's the path, is by getting more and more hostages, you know, to my story. And yet, I have a situation in my life.
I won't go into the details, but I had this story locked.
I had it locked down.
And this is how you know you're trapped.
If you're telling the same story, the exact same way
to grieve and story, the exact same way,
to multiple people, you are trapped. You are in amaze that you can't get out of.
And actually, in the court system, the way they know somebody
as a reliable eyewitness is that they actually change
the way they tell the story a little bit, right?
If you tell it the exact same way over and over
without varying, it's manufactured on some level.
You might have been there,
but you're not a reliable witness anymore.
Oh, because you're reporting your own story.
You're not reporting what happened.
Because if you report what happens,
memory is valuable, but your story can't memorize.
You're no longer an active memory.
You're in a rehearsed thing.
Okay. It's the same with us.
Like if I am telling the exact same story,
the exact same way over and over and over again,
and I don't even ever vary it, I'm locked down.
I'm in the maze.
And if I want to get out,
the only way is to go,
how do I tell the story differently?
So we can, I've found for myself,
if I can manage to tell the story a different way
using the same set of facts,
but tell a different story that's equally true,
I'm on the path to freedom.
And normally, the retelling of the story
in a different way has to have me
as not just the innocent victim.
Oh, I know it's the worst. So here's the worst line in the big book. It says,
looking at people who've heard us in our resemblance, if we look back far enough,
we will find that at some point in the past, we made a decision based on self that put us in a position to be harmed by them.
Okay, does that stand up in women's prison?
Yes, 100%, 100%.
The ones who are free,
because I do some stuff in men's prisons too,
the people who are the freest inside
are ones who have been able to go through
a restorative
justice program.
So where in restorative justice, you have to sit, the people who were the victims of
the crime and the perpetrators of crime, have to sit with each other's stories, even if
they conflict.
And you have to honor where that person's coming from.
You know what's interesting about the restorative justice thing is
liberals and conservatives both like it.
It's very unusual to find this because conservatives like it,
because there's like personal accountability and liberals like it,
because there's so much humanity in it.
It's looking for the humanity, right?
So, yeah, it does stand up. But you have to do it
in a way that isn't the sort of blaming the victim way. So, you know, it's not saying it's your fault.
It's, I think, fault and participation or involvement are different, right? So I just want freedom.
And I get really, very, very attached to my grievance stories.
And it never helps me. It just doesn't. So I have a situation in the past. I had that
story. It was more and smooth through telling. It was really locked down. And four years
after this one situation completely blew up, four years, I, to myself, was willing to admit what I had done to help create the situation.
Four years.
To myself.
And then I was like, oh, you know what?
I was not honest in this situation at the beginning. I was manipulative in this way at the beginning.
And that really set it up to go the way it did.
And as soon as I was willing to do that and I admitted it to someone else, all the resentment
I felt about the people involved, it was gone by like 80%.
Wow.
Wow. I am like, my mind is blowing right now because,
so I just recently got into therapy,
trying to like really like go after like my dark side.
I'm like positive patio over here for the most of my life,
but like I just haven't really paid any attention
to my dark side.
I just want to be there when she comes out sideways.
Yeah, she's coming out.
She's coming out.
Not yet.
She's coming out right now.
Not a lot of fun of her.
And then it's like, what the hell is happening?
Can we just be happy again?
So one of our kids who have been going through a little bit of a heartbreak, and this particular
situation with our kid has actually been really hard for me.
Like it has, it has, I'm gonna start crying now.
Like, it has broken me in a way.
Like I'm so fucking mad.
And I'm like, this is too, this is too close.
I shouldn't have this experience for my kids heartbreak.
Like what the fuck?
And I'm now understanding that watching our kid go through this has completely brought
to the forefront the way in which I contributed to all of the heartbreaks of my own life.
And it is fucking flawed me.
And I watched the way that the world is and the way that and it's like,
fuck, you did this to you.
It wasn't about that person. It was me.
Well, okay, here's the advanced course.
Is forgiving yourself.
You know, is forgiving yourself. Is forgiving yourself.
I was just like this little scared person
and I didn't know and I just wanted to be loved.
Of course, that's right.
And like having so much compassion for that
and going, woof, and I was participating in this thing
that ended up hurting me
and I have so much compassion for that version of myself
and why I felt like I had to do it.
I'm really happy for you.
I know that sounds horrible,
but I'm really happy for you
because you're doing the real shit.
Every time I talk to you, there's just magic
that's all I'll say.
And I am really grateful for who you are in the world and I just love
you. Thank you for this hour that's been so healing for the person I love so much. A lot of the people
that surround Nadia, these are people who you know maybe like a lot of the Pugs Quatters who have
been hurt by church a lot because of queerness, but for a lot of different reasons.
Nadia, what would you say to all of the love bugs who because of queerness?
Yeah. Have really been sort of told that they are not part of that
community that you're talking about. You know, aha, Here it is. Here's that blessing I wrote for Abby.
Oh, yes. Oh, yes, I do.
So it's not, I'm gonna read it. Is that okay?
Please.
Because I feel like it, I mean, it's specific to you, but I feel like it's also.
Okay, here it is. A blessing for Abby. Abby, you said that when you got hurt, your body let you down and you felt mortal for
the first time.
I get that mortal refers to being subject to death, but there's another definition I really
love, which is belonging to this world.
So for you, Abby, I offer a blessing of that belonging.
I bless the young queer girl who felt she did not belong in the pews of a church
that told her she was an abomination. Because the real abomination is an imaginary
hell created by anxious men unconvinced of their own belonging. But you, you belong here.
I bless the athlete who did superhuman things on the field,
who collected more goals and trophies and titles
and wins than anyone else.
When you tried to buy your belonging with excellence,
that deep loneliness was proof that you are so much
like the rest of us and you belong here.
I bless your divorce, which is no more a curse
than marriage is a reward.
I bless the pain that you tried to medicate away.
I bless you for holding so tight to what you thought made you lovable.
I bless that moment in jail when you sobered up enough to realize that no,
the breathalyzer wasn't broken and you were just a very drunk, very dangerous woman,
even when it sucks you belong here.
So I offer you a blessing of belonging, Abby. very drunk, very dangerous woman, even when it sucks you belong here.
So I offer you a blessing of belonging, Abby.
May you luxuriate in your ordinary humanity.
I'm so glad you are here with us in it.
So may you wake up each morning, stretch your mortal body
and hear love whispering you belong, woman.
Mm.
Amen.
So, thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Did you hear that she said that divorce
is no more of a curse than marriage is a reward? Holy shit. Pod Squad. I mean, obviously go to Substack and follow this woman.
Thank you. I'm so glad you're happy. I'm so glad that you have this love for Eric, but
just also for you.
Yeah. Thank you. I appreciate that. Oh, I wish I could give you a hug, Abby.
My wife's really good at that.
Thank you.
I want a hug.
I don't know.
There's just something about, I mean, I'm going to keep crying, but I just think that there's
something so important about somebody who sees queer people and who is of God, like the
real one, you know, not the one I grew up with.
And I just feel like I could just pour myself out to you.
So thank you.
Well, you have my number.
You're welcome to call it.
Thank you.
All right.
Thanks, Nadia.
Thank you so much.
By Pod Squad, we'll see you next time. If this podcast means something to you, it would mean so much to us.
If you'd be willing to take 30 seconds to do these three things, first, can you please
follow or subscribe to We Can Do Hard Things?
Following the pod helps you, because you'll never miss an episode and it helps us, because
you'll never miss an episode, and it helps us because you'll never miss an episode. To do this, just go to the We Can Do Hard Things
show page on Apple podcasts, Spotify, Odyssey,
or wherever you listen to podcasts,
and then just tap the plus sign
in the upper right-hand corner or click on Follow.
This is the most important thing for the pod.
While you're there, if you'd be willing
to give us a five-star rating and review
and share an episode you loved with a friend, we would be so grateful. We appreciate you very much.
We can do hard things, is produced in partnership with Keen's 13 Studios. you