We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - 273. The Nine Truths That Just Might Heal Us with Laura McKowen
Episode Date: January 18, 2024Author Laura McKowen is back to share the nine essential lessons she learned in recovery, from accepting that it's not your fault to the importance of seeking community and reaching out for help. Wha...t it means to take responsibility and why accountability leads to freedom; How we’re all capable of everything – and how to get unstuck when you’re feeling bad about yourself; and The importance of being seen in your pain – and the transformative potential of helping others do the same. About Laura: Laura is the author of the bestselling memoir, We Are The Luckiest: The Surprising Magic of a Sober Life and Push Off From Here: Nine Essential Truths to Get You Through Life (and Everything Else). She has written for The New York Times and has been featured in The Wall Street Journal, The Guardian, The Atlantic, the TODAY show, and more. In 2020, she founded The Luckiest Club, a global sobriety support community. Laura lives with her daughter and partner on the North Shore of Boston. IG: @laura_mckowen 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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Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things. If you are here, you are brave because you did the exercise that Laura asked us to do in the last episode, which is to figure out what our thing is that is keeping us from
peace, freedom, truth, integrity, whether that thing is overworking, over shopping, drinking, codependency, whatever it is. You sat with yourself, you asked yourself in the quiet.
Two questions, how do I feel and what do I want?
Laura McHowan is the author of the best-selling memoir, We Are the Luckiest, the surprising
magic of a sober life, and push off from here, nine essential truths to get you through
life and everything else.
She has written for The New York Times and has been featured in the Wall Street Journal,
the Guardian, the Atlantic, the Today Show and more.
In 2020, she founded the luckiest club,
a global sobriety support community.
Laura lives with her daughter and partner on the North Shore of Boston.
Laura, if these people are ready to confront the thing that they want to stop in their lives,
to rip off the bandaid so that they can finally address the trauma beneath, how the hell do
they do it?
You have nine truths that you walk people through.
Can I repeat them now? Please
do sister. One, it is not your fault. Two, it is your responsibility. Three, it is unfair
that this is your thing. Four, this is your thing. Five, this will never stop being your
thing until you face it. Six, you can't do it alone. Seven, only you can do it. Eight, I love you. Nine, I will never stop
reminding you of these things. Can we start with one and two? Yeah. We talked a little bit about one
on the last episode of it. It is not your fault. Number two is it is your responsibility. And I think that you're framing a responsibility
is so correct and liberating because I think that we live in this world where responsibility responsibility feels like something we owe to others. And your concept of
responsibility not being a burden, but responsibility always leads to freedom.
Yeah. Can you talk about that? Because when we take responsibility, we are
taking our freedom back. Yeah. I first want to say about it's not your fault
just because it will set this up. So it's not your
fault. People have a very strong reaction to this, not surprisingly because of the sort of
glorified notion of personal responsibility that we worship in our culture and the
misunderstanding of what that means. So it sounds very victim to me to say it's not my fault. All that means is there are things in
your life that you could not control for everybody. You couldn't control how
you grew up, the environment you were in, your body, your appearance, there are
so many things you can't control. Okay, that's all that means. And just acknowledging that.
Because it sets aside enough of the burden
of what we think responsibility is
so that you can actually take responsibility.
Also, there's queerness, there's being different races,
there's ableism, there's other's a million things
for how you could have been born into the world
that we live in that caused you trauma.
But also, as a person who is an abby will laugh, semi obsessed with trying to figure out if I'm a good person
or a bad person, I don't understand. I'm constantly like, I don't know. I think I might be a really bad person. Is she a good person? Is he a good person?
How do we know if we're good and bad? Your moon situation?
Yes. Your moon metaphor has helped me so much, Laura.
Believing you are good is like believing in the half moon.
Okay, say that. That's Thomas Floyd Qualser,
or quote, that right for me, but I did not say that,
but yes, believing you are good is like believing
in the half moon, believing you are bad
is like believing in the half moon.
The whole moon is there all the time.
The whole moon is there all the time.
And so this is what helped me about it,
is that because when you are a person
who lived with, as an addict for half your life, and then you become sober and you're being
good, you don't know if you're a bad person who's now acting good, or if you were a good
person who in the beginning was acting bad. Okay. So when you're both frauds and you're
both frauds, right? So that's what every time I make a mistake or I'm late or do something I'm scared shitless because I think what's happening
It's amazing is that my badness is being exposed
so I
Went through something a couple days ago and I made a mistake with someone and I
felt so awful
Because I thought this is bad. I'm a bad person and I remembered so awful because I thought,
this is bad, I'm a bad person.
And I remembered your writing and I thought,
no, no, no, no, what's happening right now
is this part of me is being illuminated.
Mm-hmm.
Like the moon.
Right now, I did this thing.
It's a full moon right now.
Yeah, it was like full moon.
It's not like, why did I do that?
I'm a good person, why did I do that?
No, I was like, oh no, I did that because there's a part of me that's like selfish and kind of scared and nasty.
That's why.
Because there's a part of me that is those things and that part's being illuminated right now,
but everybody has a part of them that is that thing.
So now I just need to apologize and not be in a shame spiral about it.
Yes.
I'm so glad you said that because for me, I could not have written that chapter until I was eight years sober because one of my therapists joke, we named my coping mechanisms because it makes them
funny and easily identifiable. And one of mine is categorically wrong.
easily identifiable and one of mine is categorically wrong.
You're just categorically wrong or bad would be another way to put it. You're just bad. You're wrong, you're bad and so you take the blame for everything.
And you're just a bad person and sorry, the yuck feeling that you get when you
like what you just described. I lived in that for, like, all of my life,
and it's really only started to clear now
in the last couple years of sobriety,
and it still gets me, but I get what you mean.
And the thing that I have to remind myself of
and that everyone needs to hear is that what Abby said earlier
is something that I wrote in We Are the Luckyis, which is we are all capable of everything.
Not because you're uniquely bad or you're a defect at the factory or like some people have it
and some people don't. No, we are all capable of everything. It is sometimes called the shadow. It's in everybody.
This is another reason why addiction is such a gift or any
initiation through letting go of your thing and going through the pain of that because you can see
because you can see how fallible and vulnerable you are as a human being, and how capable you are of darkness.
And then also how capable you are of light and goodness, and that those things are always
there.
But when we go around acting or trying to just be good and believing
therefore that other people are bad, we are always going to be stuck and we are always
going to be in this personal hell of our own because we can't avoid the fact that the
moon is fall. Yes. We just can't.
The thing about it's not your fall is like,
I resisted this and resisted this and resisted this
because this is not the culture I grew up in.
It was very, you know, personal responsibility at all costs.
We are not a victim.
We never act like one and there was a whole gaslighting
layer there around like like, just not acknowledging
reality for people, but accepting that it's not my fault, specifically the addiction, was
very hard for me. So I want to really let people know that this doesn't have to come easy.
You don't have to actually believe it. Just maybe consider that there is an entire system that you were born into.
There is an entire family that you were born into.
There's an entire culture.
And to imagine that everything good or bad that has come from your life is a result of
you. your life is a result of you is not not only absurd and unhelpful, but it's kind of ridiculous.
Like, that just is true. You are not. You are not. God, you know. So it's almost like a logical leap more than a like heart spiritually.
Let's just look at the facts here.
Let's like look at how things really work.
It's a surrender.
It's a surrender.
Yeah.
And this is why, again, going back to why I wish everyone was in recovery is because
unless you have seen that the limits of your own capability
and your own will and your own control, you are always going to think that you are driving
everything.
That's right.
That's right.
And you will have no compassion for other people.
Yes.
That's right.
Yes.
Let's go to number two.
I feel like I could talk to you about every single one of these for 16 hours.
For every single one.
But let's go to number two.
So we've accepted that there are things in our lives
that we cannot control.
We have accepted that it's not our fault.
And also it's not their fault.
Yeah, the things that happen to them.
Tragically, number two is the bad guys, the good guys.
Because I'd be OK just ending after one,
which is why I've been sober.
I've been sober for 20 years.
20 year fall, two years.
And I am on the first step.
I'm considering, I'm considering step two.
Okay.
It is not your fault.
It is your responsibility.
Sisters obsessed with this one. So it makes sense, sister, I'm obsessed with it. It's not your fault. Do you like responsibility. Sister is obsessed with this one.
So it makes sense sister that I'm obsessed with it's not your fault.
Do you like how it's like one and two?
Let's not even talk about one.
I know it's like, I know it's your response.
She's so funny.
She's so funny.
She's so funny.
She's so funny.
She's so funny.
She's so funny.
She's so funny.
She's so funny.
She's so funny.
She's so funny.
She's so funny.
She's so funny. She's so funny. She's so funny. She's so funny. She is an aside. I thought I would not learn anything listening to Susanne's to be all and it
totally blew my mind and I love her. But now it is so any a gram three to be like let's just go to
the responsibility part because this is so fun. I love this. I love that it's my responsibility
and I rock it. Specifically the idea of responsibility that I'm obsessed with is your framing of it
not as you take on the burden of responsibility to fix all this shit. Responsibility is a
taking on of your freedom. You say responsibility always leads to freedom. Yeah. So responsibility is there's an important distinction that I make.
It's you are not responsible for everything, but you're just responsible for your experience.
And even that needs to have a few caveats because some people are in environments where they
can't control what's happening around them and to them. But at the base level, let's just call the inner
symptom of our minds.
We have to be responsible for that space
and finding where we have a choice,
acknowledging that where we are making choices versus where we aren't or can't.
And choosing, even if we are consciously choosing things that we don't like, that we don't
necessarily want, that we have to do, we are in choice about it. Meaning like yeah. A lot of
people confuse obligation and duty with responsibility. Like I'm so responsible,
but I'm so angry, I'm so resentful. I've done everything right. I do all the things I'm
supposed to do. That's not taking responsibility for your experience.
That's right.
Taking responsibility for your experience,
the hardest and probably the most important thing
you could do is to ask for help,
which is counterintuitive.
The number one most important thing
that most people can do to take responsibility for
their experiences to ask for help.
So saying, I don't have this.
I am out of depth.
I don't know what to do.
That's like the ultimate act of responsibility.
I know, it's cringe.
That's so cringe.
Because to me responsibility is the opposite of like,
things are happening to me.
And therefore, there is only one available response
because what is one to do when all of these things
are happening to me? So my response is a foregone conclusion in do when all of these things are happening to me, so my response
is a foregone conclusion in light of all of these things.
Exactly. If you are just working so hard to be good and you are doing all kinds of things in your life
that aren't who you actually are or what you actually want. You're doing them to be good.
And you're calling that responsible.
There's no freedom there.
Nope.
Because responsible means able to respond.
And able to respond from integrity.
So if you're just reacting all the time,
responsibility is the pause between the stimulus and the reaction.
The yes or no, the yes in my life for that or the no in my life for that.
Responsibility is stopping.
Signing. How do I feel? What do I want?
And then responding. If we are just hitting balls back like a tennis thing, tennis game,
then we are acting from our subconscious. The Carl Young, if we do not take responsibility
for our life, we will, we will, what we do not bring into consciousness will come to us as fate. Things will
just keep happening to you. You will keep stating the same narcissist. You will keep having the same
interaction with your mother, the same dynamics will keep showing up in your relationships, in your
life, in every part of your world. Because you are not able or willing to ask yourself what your
part is in what's happening. That's right. So that is where responsibility comes
in. It's not, I have to take on the weight of the world and fix everything. It's what
is my part and the part I can control. And where do I have a
choice? And am I choosing that? It would just so interesting because it's the opposite of how we
present responsibilities, the opposite of it. Totally. Totally. We use personal responsibility as
like this cudgel. Like just beat people down like you're not where you should be because this is
where everybody who you know is and you should be because this is where everybody who is
and you should be there by now or whatever.
Responsibility culturally is have you met
your achievement framework metrics?
Exactly.
Yes, have you hit your home run, right?
Right, right.
And it's really the opposite.
As opposed to are you doing your life on purpose?
Yes. Are you? That's what responsibility is.
To the extent that you can, based on your particular, you know, this is not to say you can just create
the life you want. Like, I don't believe that. But within the framework you have, have you taken
the time to decide how you feel, what you want? When the world comes at you, are you deciding?
Yes or no?
On purpose.
Yes.
On purpose.
What I wrote in the book was, am I aware of how I'm contributing to my suffering and
the suffering of those around me?
Am I doing what I can to decrease that suffering?
Am I willing to let go of what I can't control and change what I can?
Do I have a sense of freedom in my heart and in my mind?
And if not, what's the next step that I can take?
The freedom part to me is the biggest, because if you genuinely know that to use an A phrase that your side of the street is clean,
you are genuinely showing up in, according to your values, you are telling the truth, you
are admitting when you're wrong, you are noticing the patterns of your own behavior that contribute
to the dysfunction around you or the suffering of your life and others.
There is a freedom in your mind when you know that you are doing that.
Yep.
Yep.
And when there's not, you feel resentful, you feel angry a lot of the time. So here's some good tip-offs to know
if you're not in responsibility and there's no morality around this by the way. It's like
a tool you can pick up. Yes. Are you angry a lot? Are you resentful a lot? Do you feel
out of control a lot? Like things are just happening to you.
Those are pretty good tip-offs that you're not taking responsibility for your experience.
And it is a hard pill to swallow.
Yeah.
I can't believe we're only at two.
Shit! Okay, three. It is unfair that this is your thing. We kind of talked about this in the last episode, but this is really just about
needing to be seen
in our pain and our sorrow and having someone say
I'm so sorry and this sucks
It's like emotional honesty really because for me it was all pretending. It's like emotional honesty, really.
Because for me, it was all pretending, it's fine.
I'm fine, everything's fine.
I shouldn't feel sad about letting go of this thing
that is killing me and ruining the lives of the people around me.
I shouldn't feel sad about that.
Who might have feel sad about it?
I just need to fix it.
And this is acknowledging like this just sucks.
It's painful.
I learned from Tara Brock, when our pain and our sorrow is not witnessed, we don't feel
real.
And when we don't feel real, we feel in human.
It's the one of the worst things that we can feel is to not feel like a human being, like our experiences valid.
And when someone just says to you, this sucks, and I'm so sorry it's happening. It's not fair.
God, it's such a relief and it's so simple. So it's just that acknowledgement.
Yeah. So it's just that acknowledgement. I love it. Until you get that affirmation, until you really can have someone see you in that and you
can accept that this is not fair, then all you're going to be doing is circling around in
that it's not fair. Yes. Like it is a condition precedent to getting beyond that to just be like,
the reality is this is not fair.
And I can live here for the rest of my life,
or I can accept that this is not fair and continue down the road.
Yeah. Like, and like the other things,
lift number one and two, three and four go together.
Like it's unfair that this is your thing, but,
but sorry, it's your thing. This is your thing.
Yeah, it helped me so much to think about, I was thinking back on my early recovery this time
and last time and all of your talking about your obsession with, okay, there's two doors. One is the door where I'm drinking.
The other is the door where I can drink.
But I refuse to believe that there is not a third door.
Yes.
That is, oh my God, I don't know how to explain to you
how much that is always what I'm thinking.
I'm saying.
But I know.
No, truly, I mean, in hard decisions,
in all that you can know, it's this or this,
and you will die believing that there might be a third door.
So this is like really important in all decisions,
not just sobriety.
Can you just say what is important to you
that people know about number four?
This is your thing.
Yeah, I mean, this is all about acceptance.
That reality is reality.
The third door for me, we didn't cover this, but I didn't stop drinking the morning after
leaving Almannemana hotel room.
It took me a whole year after that.
Yeah.
And I was in what I call purgatory, which is like, you're straddling two worlds.
And I was looking for the third door because I just could not accept reality.
And I mean, there is no third door.
I will give everyone that spoiler alert.
There is no third door.
Sometimes we face what is in the true Greek tragedy sense of the word, dilemma, where neither option is good or feels good.
And yet we have to make a decision.
We have to take one foot out of one world and put both feet in the other.
And so this is just about acceptance and it's a process.
It's not a light switch.
I love, love, love, Cheryl Straits.
Line of acceptance is a small quiet room.
And I think of that constantly when I am trying to accept things that I don't want to
accept.
It's a process.
But there's also on the other side of that, on the other side of this is
your thing. If you can allow that to land in your body, it will hurt so bad. It will break your heart,
it will seem like the end of everything, and it might be. But you will also notice that there is relief.
There's always relief and that's how you know.
And now I think even at this point in my sobriety,
it took me I think a while to get here,
but I kind of wear the acceptance of it
as like a badge of honor now. Yeah. Like you wear the acceptance of it as like a badge of honor now.
Yeah.
Like you wear the acceptance of that this was your thing as a badge of honor?
Yeah.
Like you were really fucked up and it's like, okay.
Yeah.
You claimed it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I like put like a period exclamation point at the end of the sentence now.
Like this is my thing.
And it also keeps it very close to never forget. Like the fact that I can wear it with an honor
is like, no, no, this is your thing, dude. Yeah. Yeah. It's amazing that this is your thing is not a once and done. Like I know it's all every day like Laura I am what 27,000 years in I am in another lay of recovery I understand everything I talk about it all day
I'm doing and I still this morning will be upstairs going I mean it's probably like
probably don't need breakfast today. It's probably okay. Yeah, like, wow.
And then I still have to be like,
oh no, no, this small quiet room
of you have lost privileges of deciding.
Yeah, permanently.
This is why number nine exists
because we have to continually be reminded forever
and ever and ever.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, so tell us about this will never stop being your thing until you face it.
So it's one thing to accept that this is your thing and that's huge.
But we have to actually do the work, unfortunately.
And what that means is a little bit different
for everybody, but it's always something about self-awareness.
What we just talked about, how am I contributing to this,
to my life?
What's my part in things?
What's underneath it?
So that big boiling scab that we've been talking
about, usually trauma. What's under there? Like, what happened? How did this happen? And
how did I get here? What is this pattern of lying? Like for me, that was the biggest part,
is what is this pattern of lying? and why? Where did it start?
And what I found was so much more benevolent and kind than what I thought.
It wasn't that I'm just a lying cheating piece of shit.
It's, I was afraid.
I was a kid who didn't have choices.
And so I did what I did to survive. And it worked.
And we just keep going. We keep doing what works. So you got to face it. And there's
a few different parts that I identified, five of them. One, and this would be what the work consists of, or is around these principles.
One is acceptance, acceptance of self and acceptance of everything else.
Two is honesty.
You've got to learn to be honest.
And this goes for everybody.
For me, that is the bottom line measure of sobriety now.
Am I being honest with myself and other people or am I not? And if
I'm not for whatever reason, if I'm holding a little bit back for myself, or if I'm outright
lying, I'm not well. I'm not sober. And that will happen long before I ever pick up a
drink or do anything else. So honesty, learning how to be honest, because it is a learned thing,
connection, which is very annoying to me. I don't like it. I need it. We all need it,
but I'm not, you know, I say all the time. I'm like, not a joiner. I'm not warm and fuzzy in
groups. All the yummy, wonderful, lovely things that people say that they get out of connecting with others in
a group and recovering all that.
I don't feel that way.
For me, it's more of a practical thing.
Of course, I do desire connection more than anything.
I mean, I do need it, but I'm talking to the people out there who kind of cringe at
that, like, I get it, like connection, but I don't want to do that.
And then there is embodiment, which I don't think you can heal without involving the body.
I don't think you can face your trauma, your past, your history without involving your
body because your body has so much more information than your mind.
And then service.
And service is a tricky one, especially for women, because they feel like their entire life is service. And like, what do you mean I need to be of service? If you just learned how to be honest
with yourself and others, that is the biggest act of service in the world.
be honest with yourself and others. That is the biggest act of service in the world.
Just existing as an honest person in the world. You're here. You've checked that box. You're good. So rare. God is so rare. It is. I know. Honestly. And it's like, that is a continual practice for me.
Yeah. Oh, God, yes. I try to be impeccable with my word one year after I read the four agreements. Right.
20 years ago, it was the hardest year of my life.
I know.
Way harder than giving up drinking.
Mm-hmm.
On this number five for a shortcut to get an idea
about how you begin to face it.
Laura has a question.
She said, what would you say if you weren't trying to be strong?
What would you say if you told the truth?
If you just think about that for a second,
what would you say if you weren't trying to be strong?
You might start to get a glimpse of what you need to face. Yes, I love that.
Yes.
You can't do it alone.
Also in one.
Bummer.
Big capital B bummer.
Want more.
My least favorite.
Is this the community piece?
Yes.
This tell us, yes.
Yeah, I mean, it goes back to what I said about responsibility.
And for me and for most people, I know asking for help
is the ultimate active responsibility.
I couldn't get sober alone.
I tried very hard.
I did not want anyone to see what was happening. To me inside of me, and none of that,
I always wanted to keep an extra like 10% 20% for myself. I'm just not going to show you this.
And look, you don't need to be that way with everybody, obviously, but yeah, you can't do it alone.
obviously, but yeah, you can't do it alone. Like one of my best friends, named as Jim Zartman, and he says, there's sanity in community. Yes. And I love that.
And I've learned that from him. That we sometimes are not well.
And I think Amal Mott said something similar,
like just as long as we don't all go crazy
at the same time, like we're good.
And if you are in community of people
that are paying attention to you
and paying attention to your life
and you're paying attention to theirs,
and they can tell when you're not okay,
and they can stand in and they can take some of the
weight, right?
And then when they're not doing so well, you do the same.
There's sanity and community.
Another way to look at that is like, my mind does not always tell me the best things to
do.
Like, I had to learn how to date and be in a healthy relationship by listening to other people.
Like, me tell an experience of what happened and have other people who had my best interest in mind
reflect back to me what had actually happened because what my mind would tell me what happened was so colored by trauma and all of my shit
that it was skewed.
Yeah.
It was not right. And so if I didn't have the sanity that came from community, I would just keep repeating
the same pattern over and over and over again.
And also, if you're worried about not having a community yet, that was me when I first got
sober.
I did not know where to turn.
I didn't, I didn't ever consider going to an A A meeting and actually what ended up
happening is I got a DUI and the world found out about my problem before I
could say I need help. And so I then decided I was just going to tell my story.
And what I found was with the response from people is when I realized that A, I wasn't alone, and then I felt like,
oh, this isn't just something I have to suffer with silently.
I can now go and find these communities.
So sometimes you don't know what communities go to
or how to ask for help.
Sometimes just saying the thing out loud,
without asking necessarily for help is like, I've got this problem. Yeah, that's good
Yeah, the amount of the amount of people that have come to me that said me to me to me to like the phone calls the the
voicemail the one I got one voicemail after I got my DUI and it was from this former teammate of mine and
It touched me so deeply because it just made me feel less alone.
I'm so glad you said that. The other thing is you don't need like it only ever starts with one
person. Yeah. I think people imagine that they need an entire squad around them or a giant group of
people. And ultimately you do kind of build that hopefully, but it just starts with one person telling
the truth to one person. Yeah. And I like how you put it that way. And it goes back to the whole honesty thing.
Like if you can just start to tell the truth a little bit,
you will start to have community.
Yes.
That's good.
Because there is so much freedom and honesty,
we all want it desperately.
We all want it.
But we don't know how to do it it or we're too afraid to do it.
But man, the people that are ready for you and the bad news, so we don't have to do it
alone, but tragically number seven is that only we can do it.
Yeah, this just could, I almost had this chapter be that sentence. Only can do it. Okay.
Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. No, but it's so important because it's so important
because you can convince yourself that if you just go to enough things, if you just show up at enough
meetings, if you just to, because it's the we, but then it's the I in the center of
the we that has to go home and do the work and not drink or not do the thing. Like there
is a fierce, there's a loving we, but there has to also be a fierce full of dignity, full of integrity,
eye to withstand the time to get back to the week. That's a beautiful way to put it. Because
personally, like you said the other morning, if you're sitting there going, I, you know,
I could do without breakfast, it's not necessary. You could probably get away with it.
There might not be anyone to stop you.
That's right. Even maybe if Abby, for example, could stop you, she might not.
Because it's yours. I was using a lot of excuses for drinking,
keeping a lot of doors open that no one really knew about but me. And I realized
in those moments, like, no one is going to stop me. And I realized in those moments,
like, no one is going to stop me.
There was a trick where I'm alone on a plane.
And I could drink and no one will ever know.
There, no one is gonna sit on my shoulder, unfortunately,
and tell me what to do and make sure that I do it.
So yeah, it's simple but very difficult,
only you can do it.
And not only will they not be there to save you from yourself,
there will always be one million reasons why you could return and you should
return and the people in your life might most often be the ones that are
convincing you you don't have to. Oh, thank you for saying that. Yes.
The crab effect that you talk about with the pulling you back in, I had a friend go through
this and she kept talking to me about like how it was unfair that the, oh, no one was supporting
her and trying to convince her she's fine.
And, and, but that is the only you can do it.
There's going to be a million reasons why it would be
excusable for you not to and at the end of the day, the freedom of the responsibility is that
your ass is still the one deciding. Yes. I don't tell me about the rest of them.
Glad you brought that up because that's more often almost what happens is the crab effect is is basically like if I can't have it you can't either and
When crabs try to leave a bucket like the other crabs will try to pull it back in and when we try to change especially when we try to grow especially when it's
Breaking a pattern of our family or our unspoken agreements in our friends circles or in our relationship
It's met with a lot of resistance
because it's scary at one, you know, it threatens the attachment, but also it's human nature.
It's like if I can't have it, you can't either.
So I'm so glad you brought that up.
Okay, let's end with eight and nine.
Okay.
Eight is I love you.
And nine is I will never stop reminding you of these things.
Yes.
I love you.
Or you are loved as I changed it for the community.
This one's hard because love is often just like too big
to wrap our minds around the idea of loving ourselves or
that other people love us. It's too far of a reach. But we can find love or think about love
as moments where we've had acceptance from somebody, moments where we've had grace show up in our lives, undeserved
favor, which is what is grace or the definition of it that I like.
You know, we get something we didn't deserve and we didn't expect, but it happened.
I think of that as love.
And the fact that we exist at all, to me, is proof of life.
It's proof of something.
And to be able to hear that, to hear you are loved, or I love you, I put it at the end
of all these things because these things are hard to hear.
A lot of these things are very hard to swallow
and hard to hear, but at the end, I love you.
You are loved, period, end of sentence, right?
It's beautiful.
And then number nine, I will never stop reminding you
of these things is just, this is not a once and done,
this is a continual process forever and ever. If you stay in it,
you get to stay in it, right? I love that one too because it's not the threat of like,
this is your list. You get to read it once and if you don't get your shit in the pile,
I am out the door. It's like, this is your list for today. If you come back tomorrow,
needing the list to get us, I'll give you the same right.
Yeah, like the more I learn the less I know, I have to remind myself of these things constantly.
And we get to keep doing that. We get to keep practicing.
So when you were young and you suspected that you had some weird big energy going on inside
of you that was going to inevitably have to come out, you were so right.
Thank you.
You were so right.
I mean, I just believe you.
Thank you.
I am so grateful that you answered the call to the ripping off of the bandaid, allowing the wound to heal and using your big energy
because I can only imagine the people that you're helping.
You're really good at this.
Yeah, thank you.
You've helped a lot of us.
Yeah, thank you.
Thank you.
It's funny, I got like choked up there
because I've never told you this story, Glyn, and I don't think.
But after the wedding incident, when I had, I knew I had to get sober,
but was searching for the third door, and things got really,
really, really dark before they got better.
And I would spend a lot of time in my apartment alone,
because I was afraid to go out and drink.
And I found your blog.
And I went to your bio page and I don't remember
anything else you said, except for you said,
I think it was like the first sentence,
I am a recovering bulimic and addict.
And you just said it.
And I was like, I want that. That's what I want right there.
I want to just say that.
And I wasn't sober yet.
And it was kind of funny because I started writing and blogging
like then, even though I couldn't say I was recovered anything.
That's what I wanted so bad.
I wanted to be able to tell the truth. And I couldn't say I was recovered anything. Yeah. That's what I wanted so bad.
I wanted to be able to tell the truth and I wanted to say it was like my future self reaching
back and like pulling me.
And it came from stumbling on your blog.
And so you've always just had this incredibly special place in my heart because of that.
You showed us how to do it.
Your soul talk said, I want that.
Yeah, that.
I want that.
Laura, we are the luckiest.
We are.
We are just the luckiest.
OK, we'll give Alma a push off from here.
She's so lucky.
Awesome.
Thank you.
That's your new book, Push Off from Here,
is the newest one. We are the luckiest was prior to that and can you just real quick finish that relationship's book because
is that what happened? I was hoping we would talk about that, but come back. Come back. I will come back. Yes. I call it my second sobriety.
It was way harder. Wolf. Love addiction, codependency, I don't even know all the words, but it was total dysfunction.
And we are familiar. I know. I know. I listen along. And we don't talk about it.
Like I say all the time, the fact that I'm in a healthy life giving life affirming relationship is as big of a miracle
as me putting drinking.
Same.
Well, you come back soon and talk to us about this because it's anytime.
Obviously.
Obviously, that's the next frontier of sobriety.
sobriety at first is relationship to self.
And then we have to try it in the field.
Yes.
It's not terrible is what it is.
It's one thing to abstain from doing the thing
that you're pretty sure is going to kill you. It's a whole other thing to go out there in the
Wild West and come mingle with other humans and intimacy. That is crazy. Yeah. It's so much deeper to
it is the ground zero. Yeah. Yeah. So I'm writing it right now. It'll be out in 2025. So but I'll come.
Okay.
Thank you so much. I love you too. Abby, my daughter is just beside herself that I got to talk to you today.
She's a huge fan of her player. Well, you tell Alma we love her and I would love to meet her one day. I hope you do.
She would pass out.
She's 14.
She just got to high school.
She made the team she wanted to make.
She used to do badass.
She went all in two years ago on soccer and I'm so proud of her.
So, good for her.
She's proud of you too, Lauren.
Thank you.
All right, Paz Gwads.
See you next time.
Bye. Thank you, Laura. I'm glad you're here. Thank you. All right, Pads, Quads. See you next time.
Bye.
Thank you, Laura.
Bye.
Bye.
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