We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - 28. LET HER REST: We respond to the Pod Squad’s mind-blowing questions.
Episode Date: September 21, 20211. The one question to ask ourselves if we want to know if our love is really reaching our people. 2. How Glennon’s dearest friend Liz Gilbert taught her that a relaxed woman is the new revolution. ...3. Abby offers tips for bonus parents—and why she says earning her kids’ love has been the most rewarding part in her entire life.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
And because I'm a...
Well, hi, everybody.
Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things.
We have a special episode for you all today.
I don't imagine that maybe there's ever been a situation where a podcast has more
ridiculously amazing voicemails from the Pod Squad community.
If you all could listen to these questions.
We have flooding our inbox every week and stories.
It's so hilarious, heartbreaking.
It's everything.
And so we decided this week we are going to dedicate two entire episodes to your questions.
What?
Yeah.
It's so thrilling to us because we feel like we're just going to be hanging out with you all this whole time.
And so, you know, a few reminders.
the tricky part of Q&A's is that we don't have any A's.
Okay.
It is my deep belief that the reason why people ask me for advice so often is because I never give them any.
Right.
Like there's this idea that someone else will have the answers, but really we're each living
this completely unprecedented, unrepeatable,
experiment of a life, right? Nobody's done it before us. Nobody will ever do it after us. Each of us is
winging it completely. And so the only one who ever really has the answers, obviously, is us, right?
So anyway, we have your cues and then we have some responses. And mostly they're like, yeah,
we have some stories. Good call. That's correct. Yeah. Mostly our responses are same. Yes, retweet.
Correct. So we're excited to jump in. Let us, you ready, Amanda and Abby for these beautiful cues? Let's do it. Okay, let's hear our first one. Jody.
Hi, G. and sister, my name is Jody. I'm 53 years old. Over a year ago, I ended a very toxic 18-year marriage to an addict. It was my second marriage and this person was a step-parent to my two older children and we also have two.
children together. I've been working hard at healing my relationships with my older children
who despise this person and also helping my younger children establish all the good boundaries
necessary when you have an addicted parent. All of that is hard, but definitely the right kind of
hard. The hard thing I'm bringing you today is this. I have been in survival mode for so long
that I barely know who I am or what I want this next stage of my life to look like. So even though
there is tremendous relief with breaking that cycle and saying not this, I sort of feel numb.
Like maybe this goddamn cheated doesn't have a wild.
Like if I was Tabitha and they opened the cage, I would just walk out in my next to it because
it's all I know and I'm really tired.
How do I start thriving and living a joyful life that my kids will be proud of and want to
emulate instead of just surviving day by day?
Okay, that's it.
That's my hard thing.
Love you both and happy too.
Oh, Jody.
Does anyone else want to be best friends with Jody?
Jody Jody Jody.
Fully obsessed with Jody.
Jody wants to know how to be a goddamn Cheetah.
Okay.
But she's tired, right?
It's Jody's saying she's tired because she's been through the fire several times,
carried her children on her back out of the fire, probably more than once.
And now she's tired.
You know what I started thinking about when I was listening to Jody is something that one of my
dearest friends in the whole world, Liz Gilbert, said to me recently.
And she was talking about how women are always called to be fierce and tough and brave and
cheat alike and like, that's the revolution.
And she was like, you know what I think the revolution is?
I think it's a rested woman.
Where are they?
Like, where are the relaxed, rested women?
That's the revolution to me.
And I was thinking about this, the first memory I have of my entire life.
Okay, I don't have a lot of early memories.
But I know that this has to be significant because,
it's the one thing I can remember from being little. I remember being in kindergarten. I remember my
teacher, her name was Mrs. Peacock. Mrs. Peacock, remember? And I was in my kindergarten classroom,
and I had crawled underneath a table and closed my eyes and tried to fall asleep in the middle
of class. Okay. And a bunch of kids circled the table and were like poking at me because it's
ridiculous, right, to try to take a nap in the middle of the class. And Mrs. Peacock walked over and I
heard her feet and I thought she was going to pull me out. And she said, she didn't say anything to me.
She said to the other kids, leave her alone. Let her rest. And those words, let her rest. I'm just telling
you that it is serious. It was like to this day, it's the most beautiful thing anyone can say to me.
Like when I go to bed, Abby, in the middle of the day and I hear you say to the kids,
quiet.
Let her rest.
Okay.
So Jody, what I want to say to you, hold on a second.
I need to Google something real quick, Jody.
Oh, okay, Jody.
Here we go.
How many hours a day does a cheat asleep?
At least 12, it says.
At least 12.
cheetahs spend most of their time sleeping. During the day, they are minimally active. They prefer shady spots. Look,
Jody, if you want to know how you can be a goddamn cheetah at this point in your life, after you have done so many hard things for your children, for yourself, Jody, rest.
that's what Achita would do right now.
I think we're forgetting,
we just have to get to the point
where she's outside of this cage.
And if you find your way outside of any freaking cage,
you get to do whatever the hell you want.
If that is to sit down right next to the cage
and use it to hold your back up because your back's tired,
do that.
That's right.
If it is to go on a run,
Whatever it is, as long as you are, like, you've done the work.
You get to do whatever it is that you want, Jody.
You have just gotten yourself free.
That's right.
Rest, Jody.
Rest, you said you're tired.
Your body is telling you exactly what a Cheetah would do.
We are animals.
Your body is saying now I fought the fight and now it's time to rest.
Lay down next to that cage.
Let your children see a woman rest.
That could be the revolution.
I also think that it's, if it's rest, it's rest, but I think it's also like what Jody is describing
as trauma.
She has endured a chronic level stress trauma.
And when you do that, like your nervous system has these two parts, right?
There's the one that's like the fire or flight.
It's a sympathetic nervous system.
And that is the one that's activated during, you know, places of danger.
It sounds like Jody has traveled a lot of that.
and then your sympathetic nervous system is the one that kicks in and allows you to actually rest
and to recharge yourself.
But for a lot of folks, and this could be what's happening to Jody as to why she feels so
exhausted is that when you've lived so long with that chronic level of trauma or stress,
your nervous system can't continue to respond.
So you either get stuck in the totally on position where your body doesn't know the difference
between a perceived threat and an actual threat. So you're constantly in hyperarazzle, like you're up,
on, on, on, on, or you're in the off position, meaning that you are like fatigued and you can't,
your nervous system is not responding in either way. And I think that that, that's something that
helped me understand that I, I just constantly idle, high, high, high, high, high, high alert.
and other people respond to other ways.
So I think that it's also good for folks like Jody to understand that isn't a character trait necessarily.
This isn't like it could be your body responding very, very appropriately and taking care of itself in a way that was, that allowed you to survive the years of what you've survived.
And that may be paying attention to that and learning how your nervous.
system can cope with the next part of your life that you've created to be, not have the danger
you had in the first part is an interesting thing to explore because sometimes our bodies are stuck,
the inside of our bodies are stuck where our physical bodies are no longer.
And so learning about that sympathetic nervous system would be interesting for Jody.
Really smart.
Damn, I love that.
I want to learn about it now.
Yeah, that's good. Jody, we love you. And don't forget, we all want to be badasses for our kids.
Like, the best memories I have of childhood are just sitting on a couch and snuggling with my parents.
Like the things that we think we need to do to impress them, I don't know. I just think sometimes doing nothing and just breathing with your.
family is the most beautiful thing that we can do. So Jody, give yourself a long break. Let her rest.
And when she awakes, she will move mountains. Isn't that a Pinterest thing? That's for Jody. That's for Jody.
Or let her rest. And when she wakes, she might let her rest again. That's better. I like that one.
That's the poster I want. All right.
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Okay, let's go to
our next queue. This is Madison.
I would like to say, hi, Glennon,
and sister. My question
is sort of for Abby.
And I'm hoping that maybe
she can come back on
and help me
work through this one a little bit.
I am currently in a relationship, a long-term relationship, where my partner has children, and I'm struggling to sort of find what my role in this situation is.
We've been together for over a year, and we do lots of things together.
But I find myself kind of always feeling like the thing that doesn't belong or, like, the awkward buddy of the group, and especially with his son.
I really have a desire to be a more supportive and like emotionally involved figure in his life,
but I'm not sure how to start to make that transition and help that relationship grow.
So if Abby or Blennon has any insight into how to start to open up that world and forge that path,
I would love to hear it.
Thank you so much.
Mm, Madison. Wow. Well, I've got a couple of thoughts on this. First of all, sweet question. And the fact that you're asking this question makes me know that there's some real possibility here. I believe that we use the word bonus parent, but most of the world uses the word step parent.
phrase. It's the one of the most selfless acts of love when you find yourself in a step parenting
role because there are all of these confusing dynamics at play. How old were the children were
when you came into the family? How was that marriage before you came into the family? How was
the divorce? There's so many things that differentiate each situation that my experience is going to be
different than yours, of course. But one thing that I know really did help me was having a partner
in Glennon, who was and is capable of wanting to have the conversations around what my desires are
and what her desires are. So here Glennon was with three children, and Craig, by the way,
having the co-parenting trio that we have makes things in so many ways so, so beautiful and so much
easier for the person like me stepping in. But Glennon had been raising these children and Craig
had been raising these children in many ways, I think in hindsight, to accept somebody like me
on some level, on some deep, deep level. And let me tell you, it wasn't.
easy. Like when I first got to the family, Tish and Chase and Emma, they were, they were of course
sad about their family being now different about this new person walking in the door.
But I had to look at it from their perspective. Like if you really want to have a relationship with
this son, this son of your partners, you do kind of have to take some of the arrows or some
of the frustration or fear or anger on some level.
Imagine being these children and imagine their life being flipped upside down
and then go about trying to heal it.
Like be capable and present enough to understand that if you do want what's best for these kids,
it is a balancing act.
Like of how much do I put myself out there?
And like, quite frankly, step parenting, you're always putting yourself out there.
And you're never going to get, like, I mean, you might never ever get the credit, you know?
Like, I have had to come to accept that, like, our kids will probably never call me mom.
They call me Abby.
But, like, when they're out in the world with their friends, I actually just heard recently that they do call me mom to, like, to out their world.
And I just, like, I about died.
I about fell over when I heard this news.
And so, Madison, I know this is a long and not helpful.
answer probably on any level. But Glennon really did help me. I would say talk to your partner
and tell them about your dreams for the way that you want to interact with their child,
with this child and how, what kind of a relationship do you want so that you can be both in it
together, that you're not feeling like, you know, because part of the responsibility of this
partner is to make sure that the path that they are allowing you to walk isn't riddled with
fires along the way, you know, like that you have a clear pathway to be able to, and it's then
up to you, right? So have the conversation with your partner and then figure out what this child
loves and help create environments that this little kid can go out and express this love. And
And then the more you get to see this kid experience the joy of life, they will start turning back to you.
They will start looking to you to make sure that you're watching.
That's good, Abby.
It's really good.
That's all I got.
That's enough, girl.
That's what I got to say.
But also, I'll just say this, there is nothing more rewarding in my life, nothing that I have ever been able to accomplish in my life than
being able to know that my children love me.
Like there's also like you, you being the biological parent and Craig being the biological parent,
there is a level of openness to both of you that has allowed me to come into the situation.
So I think that that you allowing me to feel like I have an entitlement to this mother.
claim, like that is a big part of why I've been able to actually feel like these children's mother
on some level. That's why I think it's so brilliant that you mentioned to Madison that one of
the most important things to do is talk this to death with your partner. Because the two partners
set the stage for the bonus parent success or failure. Right? It's it's aligning those intentions
letting, I mean, for the biological parent, letting go of some of that gatekeeping of like,
but I don't know, there's like something we, it's a process for us too.
Mm-hmm.
To say, energetically allow permission in each, to change dynamics, to change patterns,
all that stuff necessarily happens when you really and truly fully let another grown-up human
being into your family dynamic.
And if you're holding, if the, the OG parent is holding too tight to old patterns,
to old dynamics, which is understandable when families change, you hold on to something,
that creates, kind of sets the stage for failure for the new person.
So I think it's just, I love the opening the conversation constantly and being super
honest with the other partner and being in it together because I think sometimes it's set up
as, oh, how do I, I, the bonus parent, fix this relationship with the child, and that's too much
for the bonus parent. That's not, it's directionally incorrect. Like, this is, the struggle,
the work should be with two adults setting up the stage for success for the kid. That's right.
So good. All right. My name is Katie. I would like to ask, after,
being in a relationship with infidelity and moving on to being with Abby,
how do you trust?
How do you trust that she is going to hold your heart safely?
Even when she says all of the right things and does all the right action, how do you know?
And that's my question.
I love you guys.
Thanks.
Bye.
I can't wait to hear this answer.
do you know, Glennon? I love so much listening to these questions and then my brain, all it does,
because I don't live in the real world, I live in the imaginary world. I just need you to know that
every single one of these callers has an entire backstory in my brain immediately. The things I have
created for Katie in the last 45 seconds about Katie's life. Okay. I want to say a couple things about
this trust issue. I think that we were just talking about this, Abby, this weekend. We were just
talking about trust and how most of my life, especially the second half of my life, is about
trying to figure out how I can trust the universe a little bit more, like how I can just relax
and stop being so anxious and suspicious and certain everyone's going to screw me over constantly.
And some of that came when I met you, Abby, and you live differently than that.
You generally feel like people are doing the best they can and that we can trust people
and that things will work out, which is just a batshit crazy way to live, right?
Things don't work themselves out.
I work them out.
And if I don't work them out, they fall apart, right?
So this is the general way I live, which is why I'm sweating constantly.
One thing I want to say to Katie, I just want to directly answer her question about love, first of all.
This is probably not Abby exactly what you want to hear, but the truth of this matter is that I don't know much for sure.
If I had to bet my life on whether like Abby was going to betray me at some point or break my trust or something, I would, at this.
point bet my life that she wouldn't, okay, that she would never betray me, that she would never
break my trust. But Katie, I'm also going to tell you that life has surprised the shit out
of me many times, right? Like, there have been things before in my life that I would have
bet my life upon, that in fact, I would have lost the bet in the long run, okay? So what I do,
know Katie is that I'm pretty sure that Abby's not going to betray my trust and I've never met
anyone in my entire life that has earned my trust more than Abby. But that at the end of the day
is not what I hang my hat on. Okay. What I do know about my life and about you, Katie, since you
actually were, you know, cognizant and alive and vertical enough to make this call is that no matter
or what has happened to me in my life.
And how many times I have been betrayed or how many times I have been gobsmacked by people
or life, I survived.
What I know about myself is that I have become a 45-year-old woman who is no longer
afraid of fires in her life because I have proven to myself over the past few decades
that I am fireproof, that no matter what happens, I will survive.
So my piece, Katie, and I hope your piece, is not, it's not dependent upon what Abby does or does not do.
My piece is fully dependent on my track record that it all, I know that it can all follow.
apart and that I will, it won't be pretty, it doesn't have to be, but I will remain standing.
Good back, Katie.
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Hi, Glennon.
I have followed you for many years, and I love your work, Glennon,
and thank you for the contribution you're making to so many people.
I'm a parent and a sister to queer folk, and I loved and cried through your podcast episode, Queer Freedom.
However, I have a contention with one small part of it.
You said that you can't say you love someone and then make choices that show hate to them.
I have a different opinion.
I was in the evangelical church for many years, believing the party line that being gay is a sin.
I have since left that church and now see the deep damage I cause.
I hurt my gay family members with my conservative beliefs and choices, but
I did still love them.
In your book, you said that your family did not feel loved by you when you were deep in your addiction.
By the same logic, one could say, since you made hurtful choices towards your family,
that she didn't love them.
But I know you did love them.
It was just mucked up.
So my question to you is, if you could still love and do harm when you were an addict,
can't someone with misguided religious beliefs love and do harm,
please let me know your thoughts.
Sincerely, Helen.
Good luck with your podcast, and thanks for all you do again.
Helen.
See, this is the problem with having super smart people in your community.
Like, this is constantly the problem is that they are asking very tough questions about things that you may or may have not said.
And with such grace, like I love.
With such beauty and grace.
I mean, I want to do a whole episode.
on criticism and questioning and ways to do it where that makes the other person want to engage
in ways to do. Anyway, Helen is a really beautiful example of offering dissent in a way that
invites more ideas instead of shutting down. So I think that I guess, I want to hear,
there's going to be a million. There's no answer to this question. There's just ideas and
responses. The question being, you know, can you love someone and, you know, can you love a queer
person but also judge them for their queerness, I guess? Can we love and judge or love and reject at the
same time? What I would say first is that we all have to decide for ourselves what the word love
means, right? So if you mean, can I have warm feelings about someone?
and then also have a dogma that rejects their, their, their identity.
I guess, like, I can't tell you that, that you can't have both of those things at the same time.
But that's not what love means to me.
Love is something that's very specific.
There's no such, I don't, I don't do cheap love.
Like, I don't believe that love is just a warm feeling that I have.
So I can say, oh, I love her, but I just, you know, I disagree with her family and her being.
her identity and I think God's going to send her to hell. No, no, no, no. And I, to me,
love has to do with a fierce celebration of what a person is. And so my, I'm sorry, Helen,
but I would stick with my, when you're saying, could I, I said I loved my family when I was an
addict, but I was hurting them. I think the question would have been to ask my parents,
do you feel loved by Glennon? And I think that Helen, the question, the question, the
question would be for you to ask your queer family when you were in the evangelical church,
did they feel loved by you? You may have thought, I'm loving them, but in the end, does that
matter? Does our intention mean shit? If the impact is pain and rejection? But I loved my family
when I was drunk and ruining their lives all the time. Like, so what? What does that mean? I had warm
feelings for them while I was actively hurting them. Love is as love does. Love is as love is received. Love is
love feels. To me, the question about whether we are loving should be asked of the receiver.
Right. So I think that while I love you, Helen, deeply, I think the question is the answer for me is a big no.
I don't think that, you know, I think about the definition of things a lot.
I think we all just have to decide what love means to us and then we can answer that question
for ourselves.
You know, Abby and I had to spend a lot of time figuring out what a friend is because, you know,
can we be friends?
We had the situation where we had friends who we enjoyed being with.
But we knew that those friends were also people who were actively.
voting and rallying against our family's rights and well-being. And it was very confusing to us because
we felt like the culture was suggesting to us that, well, you can be friends and disagree.
But that felt bad to us. And so we decided, actually, no, that can be something else,
but a friend to us, we don't believe in the word friend as anyone other than somebody who would
stand with us when they're standing right in front of us and somebody who would stand with us
when we can't see them in a voting booth or whatever. So I just guess we all have to decide what the
word love and friend means to us and answer that question for ourselves. And I think it might be,
it's interesting because I think what Helen's trying to get to is like I felt a deep and real
love for them. So what we're not saying to her is that that love wasn't real. Like,
What we're saying is that when there's a barrier between the deep real love you feel,
your intention and deep real love being received as an impact, often there is a barrier there
that is preventing it from being transmitted.
Right?
So in Glennon's case, that was her addiction, that that was a wall, that real love went in,
but real love did not come through.
And that in the evangelical party line, you, Helen, might have been giving forth all of your love, right?
But this evangelical barrier of a belief that that had to sift through was not allowing it to be received as real true love on the other side.
So I think that's another way to think of intention versus impact is, is there a, is there, is there.
there a barrier? Is there a boundary? Is there a wall between the love that I'm sending out that
that perverts that love, that changes that love to make it not be received? Because it doesn't mean
it was invalid on either side. It means there is something that you haven't done the work to
deconstruct to allow your love to be received as real and true. And the only way to find that out
to is to ask the people who you think you're loving, right? Because, because as you said, sister,
it can be very real for you when you're offering it. You're not a good judge of that.
Like, I know for me, I don't want to just insist that I'm loving my children well. I want to know
from them is it, are you receiving it as the love that you need? That's all that matters.
I love the idea of not thinking of love as something that we offer our way, and that's it.
We're loving.
It's like love is a verb.
Love is personalized.
Love is specific to people.
It's like when you feed people, you don't feed everybody the exact same thing in the exact same way and expect everybody to be satisfied.
Like people are different.
And I just.
I really like the idea of considering the success or the power of your love as judged by the beloved.
Yeah.
I mean, for, I'm listening to this and I don't feel like I fit into either of those neat categories you've already discussed,
but I'm immediately thinking of the way I love my kids and the barriers between the outrageously real love that I have for them.
how it's received, you know, if it's through the barrier of judgment or if it's through the
barrier of expectations, how is all of that energy that I'm pouring out that I believe is coming
full throttle at love, how is it being received, you know? Yes. And like, I think it's a brilliant
way to think about it with kids. I mean, I was sitting, I have this one child who
loving her just looks way different than loving anybody else.
in my life. And I was sitting on a couch the other day. What she really, I wanted to talk about all
of these different things. What she really wanted to do was describe in minute by minute detail to me,
the last horror movie she watched. Okay, she's like super, super into horror movies. And please
understand, like, think about anything I'd rather not, I hate everything about the situation. I'm in a
hostage situation with a child who's, but that is how she feels.
loved by me. And what I wanted to say is, dear God, can we talk about your life? Can we talk about
like what's going on your mind? Literally anything other than this. Literally anything other.
I want to pull the fire alarm. Again, like, and then, and then, and then, and then.
But that, I guarantee at the end of that, she felt closer to me. And I just don't get to choose.
Let's move on to the next one.
Hi, Glennon. Hi, Sister. Hi, Abby. My name's Annie, and I was calling because I just finished listening to your sex episode. I'm sorry, I'm emotional right now. I'm not sorry. I'm emotional right now. And I just wanted to sincerely thank Sister for the honest conversation, especially about when your partner doesn't want to have sex with you.
Just for some background, my husband had an affair about two years ago.
And immediately after, we had a lot of sex.
And then about a year and a half ago, it abruptly stopped.
A lot of it is related to some mental health struggles that he's been having.
And rationally, I know that.
but it still really, really hurts.
So I just wanted to thank Sister for bringing that up.
It was so validating to hear that.
And I just want people to know that they are not alone in it.
So thank you.
Love you guys.
Looking forward to the next episode.
Bye.
Annie!
So, y'all, we, this is one of our first of,
hundreds. Annie, thank you for leaving that message. And I just want to say to Annie, that your message is one of
hundreds of messages and emails that we received with a story very, very similar to yours and to mine.
And I think that this is something that given the response of people that A, is happening so much, so frequently.
And B, that people are not talking about.
Can you give some context, sister?
Oh, yes.
So what I was-
Because I just want people to remember about that.
So basically what I was saying in this X episode is we were talking a lot about how,
you know, in heteronormative relationships. It's the conversations very often revolve around.
Oh my gosh. My husband always wants to have sex with me and how do I deal with it? And I never want to.
And it's so, it's such a chore. And I know that struggle in my current marriage. So I want to say that
clearly, but I also know the opposite struggle in my prior marriage where I was not desired and
basically just kind of deserted sexually. So I, and that is something that that rarely, if ever,
do people talk about it? And more so than not talk about it, I feel like women are often discussing
the opposite problem and so you feel like a real outcast and odd in your own relationship and then
an outcast and odd in the social dynamics where people are discussing their sex problems.
So I think that what we do know is that hundreds of people responded exactly like Annie.
And we also know that statistically 20% of couples are in sexless marriages.
And we don't know, you know, who is kind of the one who is experiencing that as abandonment in those
relationships.
But it is very, very frequent.
And so thank you, Annie, for bringing it up.
And I just think that a lot more people are having this issue than are talking about this.
Yeah.
And, Sissy, I just want to say thank you to you.
because what I want everybody listening to know is that we actually recorded that whole episode without that part.
And Amanda listened to the whole thing and said, hold on.
I am listening to this, thinking about all of the women for whom this is going to be a painful conversation because we haven't addressed this other part.
And I need, I have experienced it.
And for them, I need to get on and we need to record this new part.
And I just love that so much.
And I'm grateful to you, sister, for working so hard to make sure that we're all seen.
It's brave.
I love you.
I love you too.
Beautiful.
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Okay, next please.
Hi, G, my name is Ellen, and I work with young people.
and many of the youth I work with
are exploring their identity,
sexuality, and gender expression.
I recently spoke with someone
who told me that these people should accept reality
and stop joining others in trendy things
like being non-binary or gender fluid.
I believe that it is the youth who will help us
expand our definitions of gender, sexuality, and self.
I love your fierce acceptance
and was just wondering what your thoughts are on this topic
and how we can go about changing the world
instead of putting our youth into boxes they may not fit in.
Thanks so much.
I love your podcast.
Bye.
Sister, what are we going to do with all these trendy non-binary folks?
So jumping on the gender bandwagon.
So trendy.
Like it's like a false eyelashes or like a cool headband.
Because it's so cool and easy to be gender non-binary.
Yeah.
Okay.
So this is so fun.
You know, my idea of fun is things like this.
So can, can, will you jump on the train with me?
Because it's, chew, chew.
Let's go.
So this, okay, we talked a little bit about this on the first episode on Tuesday.
But I think we just need to talk about this because this idea of trendy suggests new and different than what always has been.
And I think it's just really important contextually to understand that we literally lived in a pre-sexual or
orientation world for all time until about 160 years ago.
So like trendy is sexual orientation, not the reverse.
So, and we also think of heterosexuality as being an always like given normal default
status and that queerness being somehow new or abnormal.
But actually they were created as we talked about at the very, the exact same moment.
It was in the 1860s.
It was a legal concept in an article protesting German sodomy laws.
So those were invented at the very same time.
But because we had a very strong need to establish and defend normalcy at the time,
it was a very strong priority because it was the rise of the middle class.
So all of our social institutions, government bureaucracy, police force, all of that.
There was a new economic social dominance of middle class, which had a vested interest
in defending this idea of normalcy in themselves.
Okay?
So in opposition to that power grew out of normalcy as being heterosexuality.
And that was left alone, only defined as normal.
Heterosexuality became this physiosocial disposition.
So that became deviant, abnormal, broken.
And then that homosexuality.
So that became a personhood, an identity, whereas heterosexuality was left alone, normal.
All of these, what was formally just something people did became something people are.
So, and that all happened very, very quickly.
Now, the labeling that everyone is viewing as trendy now arose out of queer people's response to this definition from outside of themselves.
So they urge this new self-definition.
And now we have the articulation of all these sexual identities, which is at one point, like a very good thing, right?
Because people find community, describe their identity, find their people that they want to be in relationship with.
All of that, it's very good.
But to Ellen, I say, all the, you know, the folks that you're talking to, we have too many trendy definition of sexual orientation.
It just blows my mind because I'm like, how.
do we how do we have damn near enough? We don't have enough. We have infinite, okay, infinite human
possibilities of desire. That's right. As a number of people that we have is the amount
of possibilities of desire that we have in the world. And at the highest, highest count,
we have 21 orientations to organize, to organize all the people, all the people. All the people.
And sister, can we talk about how ridiculous it is in the first place to like make categories for people based on what they prefer?
Like, why do we choose sexuality?
Why don't we just choose colors?
Well, we do that too.
We do that too, actually.
You're all the people that prefer purple.
You're stuck with that forever.
Where are all the people that prefer blue the most?
You're stuck with that forever.
Like, it's so strange.
Well, it's not strange because it's bait because the people who have the power to just to define what is normal.
and abnormal get to use that.
It's not arbitrary.
It's not arbitrary.
It's not arbitrary.
It's strange but not arbitrary.
So, so, so in,
but this is my question.
It's like if, so a recent UK poll
found that fewer than half of 19 to 24 year olds
define themselves as 100% heterosexual.
Okay.
And that is not because.
They had, like, engaged in queerness.
They hadn't physically acted upon that.
But it was that they didn't need to cling to this idea of heterosexuality as their
barometer of normalcy.
It's like not only do those categories fail to fit who we are as individual people.
And, you know, they inevitably require leaving some of ourselves at the
door as we try to fit ourselves into these boxes. But it also feels like, have we not outlasted
the need to reinforce normalcy? I feel like the way that I see this generation is not like
getting on a trend. The way that I see this generation is pointing out the emperor has no
clothes. That's right. Like the way that I see this generation is that they understand that we've
made all this shit up. Yep. That if all of these categories are arbitrary and all of these
identities and even gender is horseshit, right? It's just completely arbitrary and made up.
It's their performances, mandatory performances that somebody gives us. These kids,
many of them are saying, we don't want to perform. That's right. We're not going to perform
the roles that you are giving us anymore. I think, first of all, we're just trying to
to get back. The new generation is just trying to get back to the 1860s before all of us adults
fucked it all up. They're so old-fashioned. And then what I would also say, Alan, is those who are
coming to you with some of this, oh, nine-biner, it's just laziness. People don't want to change.
People don't want to have to learn something new. People feel just like exhausted. And like,
we're not going to, like, let them be lazy. We have an answer to the laziness. I do not care.
We can just get rid of all of them.
It's like when James Baldwin, they asked him,
what do you think gay people will be like in the future?
And he said, no one will have to answer that question
because it answers a false argument.
It's right.
It's the wrong question, right?
So let's just, hey, lazy people, we're with you.
This is so trendy, this past 160 years.
We're just going to get rid of it and let people be themselves.
That's right.
You can't do hard things.
You can't do hard things.
We can't go.
Y'all, we got to wrap this up and we got to go to the Pod Squader of the week.
This is Meredith calling from the South.
Lennon, Amanda, and Abby.
I love this podcast.
If I had a vote, I would vote on having it own five times a week.
This country isn't a mess.
And that's because we've never talked about hard things.
I grew up in the 50s and 60s where nothing was discussed.
The elephants were all over the room.
And now those of us who are in our 60s and 70s are having to still figure out the things that happened to us that we weren't ever able to talk about.
So don't let anybody sway you from your past.
You just keep talking about hard things.
I love you.
I think you folks are hilarious.
I'm a sporty spice.
And I just, I love everything that y'all talk about, even though sometimes it is hard.
here. Take care. All right.
Oh, my guys. Meredith. Meredith. Meredith.
Meredith calling from the South.
I love.
Don't she just wish that you could call Meredith? I want Meredith to call every day. I want that
pep talk every day. Meredith, you can do her things like leave a message for us every day, please.
Every day, Meredith. No pressure.
Five times a week, Meredith. Do what we want.
Meredith. I just want to say thank you.
Okay. To all of you. I mean, clearly,
Mostly to Meredith, but also to all of you, we love you. Seriously, we could listen to your voicemails
and your stories and your questions all day. And we will. We will listen to them forever.
Thank you for listening to us. We will keep listening to you. Together, we can do hard things.
And we'll see you soon. I give you Tishmilton and Brandy Carlisle.
I came out the other side
I chased desire
that was mine
I continued to believe
that as I'm
because we're adventurers and heart breaks
a map
a final destination
we lack
They've stopped asking directions
To places they've never been to be too
We can do a hard
A brand new star
Sometimes things fall apart
I continue to believe
The best people are free
Took some time, but I'm finally fine
Because we're adventurers and heart breaks
On a final destination
We stopped asking
To play never been
And to be a little hard
To play never been
And to be a little hard
Yeah.
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