We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - 5 Ways to Be More Present: Indigenous Wisdom from Kaitlin Curtice
Episode Date: March 9, 20231. How to listen to the signals our bodies give us, and other concrete strategies to hold on to being human. 2. The healing power of honoring and reconnecting with our little girl selves and with our ...Mother Earth. 3. How, if all else fails, we can practice presence and embodiment by talking to a house plant.  4. The traumatizing effect of purity culture, colonization, and assimilation, and how to come home to the wholeness of our core nature, desire, and wisdom. 5. Concrete, everyday acts of rebellion that help us regain what we lost, and restore us to who we really are. About Kaitlin: Kaitlin Curtice is an award-winning author, poet-storyteller, and public speaker. As an enrolled citizen of the Potawatomi nation, Kaitlin writes on the intersections of spirituality and identity. She is a wise and vital voice on decolonizing our bodies, faith, and families, and the freedom and peace of embodiment - finding wholeness in ourselves, our stories, and our lineage. Her new book, Living Resistance: An Indigenous Vision for Seeking Wholeness Every Day, examines the journey of resisting the status quo by caring for ourselves, one another, and Mother Earth – and is available now. Find her on Twitter and Instagram at @kaitlincurtice. If you want to hear more about Embodiment, please listen to the We Can Do Hard Things episode 168 Sonya Renee Taylor: What If You Loved Your Body? 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)
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
Today is, as our friend Allison says, a real TR, which means a real treat.
Her mom used to say this is a real TR, which was supposed to be short for treat, but actually
it's longer than treat.
It's a little confusing. Anyway, today we have a real TR, our dear friend,
Kaitlyn Curtis. Kaitlyn Curtis is an award-winning author, poet, storyteller, and public speaker,
as an enrolled citizen of the Potawatomi Nation. Kait Caitlin writes on the intersections of spirituality and identity.
She is a wise and vital voice on decolonizing our bodies,
faith, and families, and the freedom and peace of embodiment,
finding wholeness in ourselves, our story, and our lineage.
Her new book, Living Resistance, an Indigenous Vision for
Seeking wholeness every day, examines the journey of resisting the status quo by caring for ourselves, one another,
and mother earth, and is beautiful and is available now. Welcome, Caitlin.
Thank you. I'm so happy to be here with you. We are delighted.
I learned so much from your story about
assimilation as a violence that disconnects us from ourselves and that
compels us to erase who we are. And then the process of deconstruction
that you walk us through that seems to me to be kind of the digging through the rubble to
unearth and remember who we are and you offer so many concrete tools because all of that seems so
aspirational and wonderful, but it's really hard to find an inroad there if the whole world is a relentless
effort to separate us from our humanity,
then it's almost like our whole life
needs to be a relentless fight for the wholeness.
Yes.
So can we start at the very beginning
before we need to remember,
before we got dismembered?
Can you talk to us about your life before you were nine?
Yeah, and yes to what you were just saying it's so hard and I just want us to learn to be human together
That's what I want more than anything and that really involves every aspect of who we are when I was young
I learned how to balance a checkbook, but I never learned how to listen to my own body
I never learned how to
Engage with mother earth, you know, and those are the things we learned we come to a certain age and we're told okay but I never learned how to listen to my own body. I never learned how to engage with Mother Earth.
You know, and those are the things we learned.
We come to a certain age and we're told,
okay, here's how to be an adult.
Here's how to enter the capitalist system
that we have set up here for you to be successful.
And right at that moment, that is a disembodiment
because we're taught to sort of
enter into that harshness of the world
and lose the softness of who we are,
even as kids.
And so I was a sensitive little kid.
I was the baby of my family.
My sister's nine years older than me.
My brother's seven years older than me.
My family moved a lot.
My father worked for the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
So he was an indigenous police officer.
And so I was born in Oklahoma
and we moved back and forth from Oklahoma to New Mexico
multiple times.
And then we ended up in Missouri
in this very small conservative town in Missouri.
And so it was really interesting,
but my childhood was marked by poverty.
We lived in trailer parks.
We lived in a lot of different places that were difficult.
We ate commodity foods as an indigenous family.
We had all those markers of poverty,
but we also, my siblings and I would make like news shows
and we'd make up commercials and we loved music.
Our whole family loved music.
We loved movies.
We loved art. So it's always a mix, right? It's music, we loved movies, we loved art.
So it's always a mix, right?
It's always a mix of these things that you remember.
And when I was young, I also just remember.
I love to reenact the scene from Beauty and the Beast,
the Disney cartoon, where she's out in a field
like blowing the dandelions into the air.
So I would just go into my backyard singing
the same song over and over,
waiting for the wind to take the
seeds off the dandelion, which it didn't. So then you spend like two minutes blowing it out
getting lightheaded, but I just kept singing. It was my life. And so having this interaction with
magic and nature, you know. And then it just kind of begins to get away from you or trauma
enters. And then for me, I realized that television,
these characters on these movies and TV shows
that I loved were like my safe space.
I think that I coped with them.
I spent my time with them.
I did my homework alongside them every day after school.
And so these characters in my favorite movies
and shows became the safe place for me.
And that was up until eight.
So we had lived in Missouri for a few years.
My parents got divorced when I was nine.
Then what happened?
My parents divorced.
My dad is Potawatomi.
So my Potawatomi heritage is from that side of my family.
And so my dad, it was abrupt.
He just said, I have to leave. And he left my brother
and I were at home and he went, he told us. And it's like those out of body things when you're a kid,
you don't quite understand, you don't quite grasp it, but I still have the memory of it, you know.
And Kate, when you just said out of body, it's so, and you said a minute ago, that trauma separates us from our bodies. And that is
what happens. It feels out of body because when trauma enters, we exit our bodies. Yes. And that's
just a body man. It's so interesting because I remember as a kid, when that particular trauma happened,
what I wanted more than anything was to feel close to God, to feel close to myself, to feel close to my family,
like some sort of safety to hold me.
I remember just sitting in my room praying,
like, God, I need a physical touch right now.
Like, is there a way?
Is there a way you can just like become real arms for a second
and give me a hug?
Like, I'd really appreciate it.
I had those moments and it's so interesting now
trying to practice embodiment, recognizing how my body,
all these years has given me signals.
Our bodies give us signals.
They're always saying something and we don't learn
how to listen to that.
So my parents divorced my dad moved to Oklahoma
and so we did visitations with him.
But it was hard, it was hard for me as a kid.
I didn't feel connected anywhere, really.
And so it really was just this continual severing.
And then severing and grasping at the same time.
You're losing things, you're losing yourself,
you're losing pieces of safety,
and then you're just grasping at the same time
for anything.
And so a few years after that,
my mom got remarried to my stepdad,
and he was at the time a Baptist pastor
at this little church in our town.
And so I grew up in the church.
We grew up going to Baptist churches.
Both of my grandmas on each side were Southern Baptist secretaries. It was a part of our life,
but becoming a pastor's kid is it a whole other level. And it just is what it is. And I was already like
well into the people pleasing stage of my existence. So I was ready. Like I was ready to be the best kid.
And you were grasping.
You were grasping the new thing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Best, the best little worship leader,
the best specials music singer.
I was ready.
I was doing it all.
So the church did become my safe space,
but also my space of assimilation and pain
and severing the ties to understanding what it means
to be potawatomi, and just in a family
that doesn't know how to talk about it.
Colonization has taken those healthy conversations from us.
It's taken that presence away of figuring out who we are
as indigenous people. So a lot of us have to
find our way back again as adults. That happens a lot. It's so fascinating that the medicine becomes
the disease. If you are disconnected, you've lost the connection to your dad, you've lost the
connection to your native culture and you're yearning for that. You need it. So you're reaching out
and here comes the evangelical church that's like need it. So you're reaching out and here comes the
Evangelical Church that's like, we'll give you every connection you want. But then it's further
disconnecting you in many ways, eclipsing all of those parts of your identity.
Yeah, that's the painful part of specifically that church culture is that I was safe, I was loved by the people in my church.
I would never say I wasn't, but in that process, it was still colonization.
It was still assimilation. It was still trauma, and it left me with all the residual trauma and disembodiment that I now have to heal and work to heal. And that's the story of so many of us who have been through this in various degrees and
I'm trying to find our way home.
How did specifically purity culture?
Because when we talk about disembodiment,
and then we talk about evangelical way of life,
purity culture seems to be a factor.
What is purity culture?
Yeah, everyone reign blessings upon yourself
if you don't know what purity culture is.
Yes.
Memorial Hall in our town was the big,
big-ish building where our true love weights rallies were held.
And it was always like the event.
But the purity movement, as I experienced it, was this,
well, it's connected also to the whole abstinence until marriage, even in my public school, we learned very Christian things.
There's so many resources we could have had that we just didn't get. So the purity movement,
there was a popular book called, I Kiss Dating Goodbye. I'm Josh Harris.
I remember laying in my living and reading this book
and saying to myself, I will not kiss anyone
until I am ready to marry them.
You know, my first kiss will be on the altar,
at my marriage, and I will not have sex.
All of the things, so you stay pure, right?
You stay pure.
If you're a girl, that means you dress appropriately
and you don't show your shoulders and because it's always stay pure. If you're a girl, that means you dress appropriately and you don't show your shoulders
and because it's always on you.
If you're impure.
Anyone less after you, yeah.
And ironically, my name means pure.
Caitlin, me and you are screwed from the start.
I'm sorry.
I was like, yes, I am pure.
Purity culture reminds me of the credit card machines.
You know how you look at the card and it's like,
do not remove, do not remove, do not remove.
Do not remove and you're watching it and you're like,
so you like I shouldn't remove.
And then remove now, remove now, remove now, right?
It's like, Purity culture is like,
don't have sex, don't have sex, don't have sex.
And then the minute you get married, have sex, have sex, have sex.
But you're still traumatized from trying not to have sex
because you thought it was so bad.
It's horrible. It's a horrible thing and your body is bad.
Yes. Your body parts. You don't know how they work. No. It is so traumatizing. Not just for
women either, for young boys, what they're taught about their bodies. It's so insidious, but
add on top of that being an indigenous young woman, but I wasn't connecting any of that until adulthood.
Now connecting that indigenous women's bodies,
how they have been treated by America, by the government,
the things that our bodies have been through.
So to put that layer of colonization on top of it
and woven throughout it is it just such a,
I don't know, it just violins the grief and the violence. Yeah. I still have my ring. You still have your ring? Yes. I just can't
get rid of it, you know. Okay, tell everybody about the ring. Tell everybody about the ring.
So the purity ring, you would buy it at a conference or in some cases a father would give
it to the daughter as it's not creepy at all.
It's not, no, no, it's not.
And you would wear it in front of the church even sometimes.
Yes.
Yes, you'd wear it on your wedding finger.
So mine said, I am my beloved, it's my beloved as mine.
Of course, I love this.
I love this so much.
And I still have it.
There are times where I'm like burning it would be fun.
But I also just think I need to keep it for a little bit. I just need to remember. There's a lot about our child selves that we blame. There's a lot in them. We blame them for these things that they went through and I don't know. There's just a softness. I want to hold for her because she didn't know. She didn't know a lot. She didn't know that she had grief and
trauma. She didn't know how to communicate the things she needed. Sometimes I just want those
reminders to be softer toward her and toward myself now. Katelyn, to me, the perversion,
no pun intended, in the purity conversation, but like the perversion of such a beautiful connection
in the purity conversation, but like the perversion of such a beautiful connection with God, with spirit, and so many of us can relate to the fact of, you know, being taught to be ashamed
of our bodies, be ashamed of what our bodies want. Well, of course, inevitably, distance ourselves
from our bodies. We have to, if we think our bodies and our desires are evil, we have to distance ourselves from
ourselves. And then that becomes disembodiment. But for you as a native woman, the whole additional
giant layer of God being used as a basis for the theft of your ancestors, land, and bodies, and that is actually God's will.
Talk to us about the doctrine of discovery.
Yeah, it's so painful.
And I always point to Sarah Augustine and Mark Charles have both written on this extensively.
Sarah Augustine, her book is called The Land Is Not Empty, and she writes specifically about this through a Christian lens as well.
Men are given in the name of God, the command to enter any lands that are deemed un-Christian,
are deemed not worthy of God, and they can take what they want. And so it came from a,
it's called a papal bowl. It was a document given by kings
and queens or by royalty to allow these men, these conquerors to come and take the land. And so
to have that as a basis of we will literally remove these bodies from this land. And if you already have a basis of not honoring land as a being,
we don't honor Earth as Mother Earth as a being.
Sigamakue is what we call her in Potawatomi.
Having a relationship with her, which I think is so much
of the trauma, the collective trauma we carry
in our bodies today, all of us is that we don't have
a reciprocal relationship
of care with the land anywhere, anywhere we step, anywhere we exist, a relationship with the earth.
And so that Dr. No Discovery gave permission in the name of God to do this, to cut up the land,
to separate the people from the land. And it just has continued an ongoing colonization to this day.
We know that and whether we recognize that or not,
we do carry it in our bodies.
All of us, we all do, naming that is really important.
And it shows us the connection between colonization
and disembodiment.
Because even when you hear that language,
the way you're using it, Caitlin,
it sounds like sexual assault to me. It sounds like you, powerful men, have the right to enter
and conquer any unholy, that is so directly connected to purity culture. In American, in Christian,
in patriarchy, what is an unholy body? An unpear body is a woman's body. It's so directly
related to why women need to be disembodied because in a world like ours, our bodies are not safe
to live in because they can be taken over at any point without justice. Yeah, and we have things like
missing, murdered, indigenous women and relatives. We have
our relatives that go missing all the time and it's not going to make the news. It's not, and a lot
of times those cases are not going to be solved. And it's so painful to constantly be reminded of our
invisibility, but also the ways we're sexualized in society as well. When I lead workshops, sometimes I have people write letters to mother earth.
And I tell them it's a define the relationship letter.
And it makes people so uncomfortable because because, well,
one, it can bring up our childhood trauma.
It really can.
But also what is it like to actually acknowledge this as a relationship?
And what if you filled up a whole journal of letters to Mother Earth?
And you said, I don't know where things went wrong.
I don't know what happened, but I miss you or I never knew you.
Who are you?
You know, like, what, how would that change even our climate conversations?
If we acknowledge this as a caring, reciprocal, beautiful relationship, a kinship.
That would, it would change a lot.
I think it would change a lot if we were able to reframe that.
But America and the Christianity that many of us have grown up with was one of dominion
and assault and violence.
And so there's so much to undo.
And I don't know somehow I chose to be part of the class.
It's a tiny job you got.
It's a tiny job, Caitlin.
I'm Jonathan M. Hevar.
I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I want to talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
I was like, Girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing, and strangely intimate things about
what class means to them. She said, you know, for the house cleaner, I hide the tag on the
$6 bread. And I just thought, don't you think she knows that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself. Classy. A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now. Wherever you get your podcasts.
I agree completely with just the massive paradigm shift that that creates. When you even say Mother Earth, when you even say her, because it reminds me of the podcast
we did with Jen Hatmaker when she was talking about how she learned from Hillary McBride
to instead of say it about her body, she started referring to her body as she. And just that
shift, she talks about how that the empathy and the gentleness that she thought about her body with,
even just personalizing as she as opposed to it. And the way that you talk about the earth and personify her.
That gentleness and empathy is there. It's not a commodity. It is living and
it's wild that it's a leap to think of the earth as a living breathing thing when it literally is, but that's
a side the point.
Another part of your work when you talk about
I was side the point. Another part of your work when you talk about the earth in terms of the climate emergency, you say you think of the earth as a mother screaming that she's done. We are
telling her again and again that she is beautiful and resilient while we pillage and take from her
while we push her back down and tell her to keep getting up. And it reminds me so much of how mothers across this nation and the world are overwhelmed,
an overburdened, an overtaxed. And as a culture, we give this them this kind of empty praise,
you're a superhero. Here's your greeting card. You're not even a human instead of doing the thing that will actually reduce their
overwhelm and reduce their burden by treating them better. We just call them a hero. And
it just makes me think of that connection between the earth and mothers. And what is the
lesson that we need to learn about kinship with mothers and with mother earth
to start to have that respect, to treat them better?
Well, the line that you quoted from my new book,
this is my problem with the term resilience,
is that resilience should be us choosing
our resilience, not an oppressor saying,
you're resilient and then shoving you back down
and then you get up and they say,
look, you're resilient and then they do it again,
over and over again.
And so I share about that through this,
also this lens of how we treat the earth.
Look how resilient you are.
You've lasted all these years as we continue to take from you,
as we continue to hurt you,
as we continue to harm ourselves and harm we continue to hurt you, as we continue to harm
ourselves and harm you. But look how strong you are. You just keep taking it and you keep getting back
up again. And so you must be resilient because we say you are. And at a conference a few years ago,
I was on Pueblo land in New Mexico. And I was the only indigenous person at this entire conference. And I took some time outside and the land just called to me.
Now, I had grown up in New Mexico.
And so that place is really special to me for many reasons.
But it was this moment where Mother Earth was like,
I need you to feel something.
I need you to stop for a second.
And so I sat on the ground and I put my hand on the ground
and I just started weeping and I couldn't control it.
And it was, as if for just a second,
she was like, this is how much it hurts.
So feel it for a second
because that's all you can handle as a human.
Like feel this pain for a minute
and then go on and do what you need to do.
But if we stopped to actually feel that,
to feel the pain that mothers feel,
to feel some of the things that they have been put through,
if we stopped to acknowledge the relationship between our bodies
and government and land and colonization,
there's so much there, there's so much there to unpack.
And I don't fully know always
How to change it this whole conversation between the micro and the macro
So in social work you study
Macro which is the big systems and the micro which is the one on one or the every day
And what I learn about humans is that we need both we need the small moments to change the way we think and
humans is that we need both. We need the small moments to change the way we think,
and the way we process our world, and then we need the macro. We need change on a larger level, but both of them have to happen. And I think about that a lot with the way that women are treated,
and the way the earth is treated. There has to be the microchanges, the relationship change,
and then we have to move to the systems
and how they affect the Earth and affect women
all over the world.
And they are connected, even if we don't realize it,
they are connected.
I'm actually struck in this moment right now
at the connection, because I'm sitting here thinking,
why are we so flippantly horrific to Mother Earth?
And even us women, maybe we're just trying to get some sort of power anywhere we can.
And how we can reunite and connect again with mother earth. What are ways that we can actually reconnect? Yeah, I love the brought that up because throughout history you see
people or persons with power
Show the people below then they have power and then those groups fight with each other to gain scraps of power
That is what humans have done throughout history is
To survive we fight with each other to try to gain any ounce of power to be close to the people at the top Because we would like to survive and in doing so we brutal with each other to try to gain any ounce of power to be close to the people at the top
because we would like to survive and in doing so we brutalize each other. We hurt each other
for centuries and centuries and that is like such a painful reality of the human experience.
But you're right and that we're also doing that to the earth because we can. And if we grew up in
you know in my back to Southern Baptist tradition, the
language is always dominion, dominate dominion. That was the language. I'd never heard the term
kinship growing up or reciprocity or mother earth, any of it, you know. And I see specifically
within different faith traditions, some of that changing. And I see part of decolonization
as some of that work of having those really hard conversations. I spoke at a women's conference
recently and I gave them like five ways to connect with the earth. One was researching the history
of colonization because we have done these things to the land, to a being, to who she is, and that has affected our bodies
that has affected society. And so researching colonization, researching things like the doctrine of
discovery, one of the other things I said to go on walks or to look out a window or to birdwatch.
Like some, any way of connection is connection and it is a point of healing.
Any way of connection is connection and it is a point of healing.
My family, we're a family of rock climbers.
So we climb in a gym and outside
and it has been one of the most healing things
I've ever experienced is to be by rocks
and to be on land that we acknowledge
and we ask permission and we spend time in these places
and we're honoring the rock beings.
We're honoring these beings that, you know,
when you go to a river and you recognize like that water and that river has seen more life
than any of us can even imagine it has carried history on its skin, you know, like it has carried us.
And these trees that we're staring at literally helps us breathe, but also they have carried stories. They've sheltered all these people
Like isn't that so beautiful and we are terrified as humans
Of a lot of things. I think we're really scared of our humility. I think we're scared of that and
The power and the ego that doesn't allow us to sit under a tree and say
You're really old and really wise. I bet you could teach me a few
things. That scares a lot of people to imagine doing that because what would it start to pull on?
What would start to unravel? And I told these women at this conference to talk to their house plants
and they all get gold. I'm like, no, I love it. You talk to your houseplants because these are
beings that take care of us every day.
They're sitting in our homes, they're bringing us joy,
they're cleaning our air.
What if we thanked them and watered them and said,
oh, you're beautiful.
Thank you.
And it's so funny and silly,
but it would change something in us
if we actively began to shift the way we think
and examine our relationship to other beings.
They really would. That small thing that you're talking about is
monumental of just seeing your plants, seeing the earth, seeing the water,
seeing the trees as a she or a them. Just that simple shift in your brain
changes the way you experience everything. And I would love to talk to you or them, just that simple shift in your brain changes
the way you experience everything.
And I would love to talk to you about
when you're talking about this connection
to the land opening up connections in yourself.
You have this revolution while you are walking
in a hike with your family
and your one and a half year old son in Georgia.
Can you please tell us that story?
Yeah, we were out on a hike on Muscokey and Cherokee land.
And you know how sometimes the sacred or God
or Sigmacoi mother earth or your ancestors
just kind of stop you in your tracks
and they're kind of like, hey, let's notice something about your life on a
grander scale than than what you've been noticing.
And I'd already been asking some questions.
I'd already been deconstructing some things and leaning deeper into aspects of
my identity that I couldn't even fully name, but again, grasping for embodiment, trying to understand.
And you know, I will also say,
a part of my own trauma and journey was
in being disconnected from the land
and finding safety and things like television characters
and some of these things, I didn't do a lot outside.
Like I would have rather watched a movie.
A lot of people picture indigenous people
and they're like, oh, you love to camp.
And you love TPs and you wear a fringe and you burn.
Sage by your TPs.
Let's not make assumptions.
Some indigenous people don't like to camp.
And so there was a lot that I have not experienced.
And my partner, Travis has always been someone
who has loved being outside.
He's always been adventurous in that way.
And it taught me a lot.
And coming home to myself, I did it alongside him.
And so we went to the spot that he had found to go hiking
and my youngest, I was still breastfeeding.
And so there was this moment where I had to stop and feed him.
There's nowhere to sit down. And so I turn him sideways and I'm just still walking and I just feed him while we're walking.
And in that moment, the lens of my life sort of zoomed out. You know, you just zoomed out to see
the whole thing. And in our tribe and the Potatomi tribe, we had a group of people in Indiana who had a forced
removal.
I'm sure many, many people listening have heard of the Trail of Tears.
We had something called the Trail of Death.
It was in 1838 and it was a forced removal at gunpoint of a group of Potatami people
who were forced to walk from Indiana to Kansas.
So walking to Kansas to a land they had never been to
or known anything about it.
It was just in that moment that I could feel the mothers
and the women and the grandmas who were walking
with their babies, I could feel them in my own feet.
I could feel their steps in mine.
And the trauma and the beauty and the glory of it
and the pain just completely, like, just fell onto me.
And it was also this moment of asking,
who are you and what are you gonna do about it?
And it was like this flip just switched on for me.
And after that, it was a series of months
of painful, exhausting realizations
of coming to terms with my identity,
of all of who I am, of coming to terms with all aspects of what I was processing and who I am as a mother.
If I don't know what it means to be part of me, then how are my kids going to know?
And I don't want them to go through that like I did. And so I want, I want to continue to break through the trauma and the colonization that has been put on us. And I want them to know more than I knew.
And so it just flipped a switch that day.
And I got into our car and I just started journaling and writing.
You know, just trying to remember and hold on to that moment.
And it was really pivotal for me. We're all deconstructing.
Every single person who has even made it close to this far on this podcast is deconstructing
something, right?
Was taught a way of life that at some point for UKTL and it was in college where you
took a literature class and was like, wait a minute. I mean, do you think the instruction comes fast for
evangelicals? People are like, wait, there's dinosaurs? It's something that's like very
literal, right? Any there comes fast or not or not at all because you protect your
genitalia, right? You don't let one block come out because you don't want the whole thing to.
Yes, it's true.
But what is so fascinating to me,
Caitlin, and something I go through over and over again,
is that with deconstruction of anything,
whether it's a family code or religion or whiteness
or patriarchy, it starts to deconstruct.
And then we want to replace it with something else.
So for you, you lost your connection
to the indigenous community, evangelicalism.
It's like, replace it with something else. And what I'm finding over and over again from
a million different wise women and for myself is that the only thing that can replace
an structure of thinking that's off is not another one, but it's embodiment. It's embodiment.
In your work, you offer us real things that we can do when you said,
that the way you pray, listen to this. You said that sometimes the first thing you say when you
pray is, God, how are you doing with all of this? Wow. How does it feel to have to be
aware of so many things? I mean, Caitlin, I don't think of it.
In the whole book, I sensed my whiteness as much as I did when you said that.
I was like, I'm in fucking checked in with God ever.
The only time I checked in is like, you must be real busy because I haven't gotten all the
things I've asked for.
Circling back, circling back, God, circling back with this.
Did you receive my email?
Just checking.
It's so beautiful.
So talk to us about embodiment
and maybe can you start with how you talk about checking
and with your little girl self?
I will say that a few years ago,
right after I first started therapy,
and it's so funny even in therapy,
I'm like, my parents were worse than I was nine
and my dad left, but it's okay. It's fine. I've forgiven him, I love him, like I'm like, my parents were so I was nine and my dad left, but it's okay.
It's fine. I've forgiven him. I love him. Like, I'm good. And my therapist was like,
that's trauma. I was like, no, it's fine. It's just a thing. It happened. And it was hard.
But, you know, it's okay. Minimizing our trauma means we're minimizing the strength of our inner children as well.
We're minimizing because they were, you know, and so we're not trusting that they did the best they could
to take care of us in those times. Like little Caitlin held me as best she could. And even though,
you know, in young adulthood, I was so disembodied.
I was so lacking in how to communicate well and how to love others and myself.
There are so many walls.
But when I just started therapy, I started noticing the pain that my body would tell me
about, like, oh, man, my lower stomach really hurts.
I just went to the most like, oh, my God, this is bad, you man, my lower stomach really hurts. I just like went to the most like, oh my God, this is bad.
You know, or I have abdominal pain.
Oh, this is probably cancer.
I went to the worst extreme.
My lower back is hurting.
I get these headaches.
I, you know, I just was noticing my body was like telling me things and I went to the worst
extreme, looking everything up.
And then I had to stop and realize,
maybe my body's just saying, like, oh, this thing is really painful
and you've been thinking about it a lot.
So this is a trauma response.
This is a stress response.
It took me so long to realize that the trauma
I've carried in my body since I was little
still manifests in my adult body.
And my adult body is still trying to tell me things,
just like my child body was trying to tell me things.
And so stopping and recognizing that,
what if I went slower,
and what if I stopped and learned a breeze,
and learned to listen to what they were telling me?
That's really actually very helpful.
And I've gone through cycles of this,
I'm still going through cycles of this,
I'm still going through cycles of this.
I'm still not very good at embodiment
in the way that I think I should be good at it.
Which tells me a lot.
Yeah.
That's exactly what I do.
Exce...
Oh, there's that.
That's good on it.
I didn't know this was gonna be therapy.
Yeah.
It always is.
I've never really understood what embodiment is.
But when you say embodiment is regaining what was lost so we can learn to be present again,
I can understand that. What does that mean to you, Sissy? The way
it feels to me is we are not present now because, like Caitlin just said, the trauma of growing
up, we had to take care of ourselves. It was not the how small the trauma was. It was how big we were in showing up to take care of ourselves.
And we had to lose some of ourselves, to survive in families, in institutions, in societies
lying to us about our power and our history.
And so you're losing and losing and losing that part of yourself.
So of course, you are not able to ever be present in an authentic whole way
because it's the very path that you've taken to survive that leaves you here fractured.
And so it seems to me that embodiment is going back and remembering.
And I think why indigenous culture, as you describe it,
Caitlin is so powerful because it's all about remembering.
Nothing is just this point in time.
Nothing is like a point on a timeline.
It's this cyclical time.
It's when you are healing now, you're healing seven generations past.
When you were healing now, you're healing seven generations past when you were healing now
You're healing seven generations forward. Do you keep a picture of yourself when you're a little close, right?
Yeah, I have it on my laptop. I do that too. Why do you do that?
I actually learn this from my friend Ruthie Lindsey. She's just a beautiful
author and speaker and she has so much love for her child self.
And so she writes about it in her book about this journey of learning to love her child self.
And keeping pictures like frame, she has framed photos of her child self around her home.
And I don't know what happens when you just stare at your, stare at that picture you're seeing,
we lived it, but we may not remember where at that picture, you're seeing we lived it,
but we may not remember where how that picture was taken.
I actually just yesterday on Instagram shared a photo
of myself when I was seven or eight
and just thinking about what she wanted
and the angst that she carried in her little body
and all the joy and all of the things.
It's so full and it's so deep.
And and I will say about embodiment and our child selves.
I've always been someone who lives in my head.
And so the danger with any information we get that has to do with embodiment
or health or care or self love, I love to read about these things.
And then I love keeping it in my head.
And it never goes like below here.
So not even my heart, just doesn't even enter.
It's like not, but my head feels so good.
Yeah, it's so great.
So I have all this in for me.
Stop stepping that.
And I categorize it and I could write about it.
But to actually let it seep into my body, it's so hard. It's so uncomfortable,
it's so painful for me, even now. Maybe especially now, because I know what I'm doing, and it's
so much harder. So dealing with anxiety, struggling with that, struggling with all of these things,
loving my child's self, those realities have to seep into our body and not to
live in our heads.
So if you are someone like that, read all the books, but like you have to let it also seep
into your body, which can be really scary, because sometimes embodiment feels like a giant
void, because it's painful.
Sometimes it is painful, but it is bringing us back home to ourselves.
It is bringing us back home to God and to the sacred and all these things, even in the painful
parts of it.
I'm in this embodiment journey because of my therapy and I just was talking to Liz about
my 20 books about embodiment.
And she was like, that should do it, Jay.
Just go ahead and just keep reading about embodiment.
Okay. And she was like, that should do it, Jay. Just go ahead and just keep reading about embodiment. Yeah.
You can read 20 books about embodiment.
But when you look at a picture of your little self,
you realize that you are nothing but a nesting doll
of every age that you have ever been inside your body.
Our daughter just had her 17th birthday yesterday
and she had an existential crisis.
That's what she does. That's who she is. She's my kid. She said, I cannot believe I'm never going
to be 16 again. And I said, honey, you're going to be 16 for the rest of your life. You don't just
become 17 and let go of all the others. Now you get to be 17 and 16 and 15 and 14 and 13 because
trust me. You know, can't we don we ever think about like when people are in dementia
and they go back to their childhood selves and that's what they remember. It makes me think that
that is who we are. We are at our core self. We are our child self. Yep. Yeah, I think that's why
some like personality tests and I even think the anyogram is it is asking you to examine like your child trauma or your shadow,
the things that happen in childhood,
even at the height of my like,
I wanna live this very evangelical Christian life,
even at the height of that when I was like in my teens,
I'm still me.
Like at the core of who I am,
I was a teenager who wanted to love people in the world better.
I wanted to do kind things. Like that was still the core of who I was a teenager who wanted to love people in the world better. I wanted to do kind things.
Like that was still the core of who I was then, who I am now.
It's still there, but it got muddied.
And I was told who I was supposed to be instead of trusting who I am.
And so we still are those things, even as adults.
So to have care for who we were, it's still painful.
And we still make mistakes
and there's still so much grief.
But to know like inside at the core, at the root,
we're still who we've always been
and coming home to ourselves that phrase
that a lot of writers have written about,
that just resonates so much with me, that coming home
because if we can't be safe with ourselves,
then what, you know, then what?
It's, it makes the world a much scarier place
if we can at least love ourselves well.
If you wanna know what embodiment is, you ask yourself
what does 10-year-old Caitlin need?
Because 10-year-old Caitlin is not. Because 10-year-old Kaitlyn is not going to say that she needs a new, you know, business strategy.
10-year-old Kaitlyn is going to say, I need rest. I need to walk outside, I need fresh air, I need to scream, talk to us about screaming.
Okay, this is funny because I'm not very good at screaming. It kind of scares me.
Yes.
But there are times when I know I need it.
So sometimes I do.
What I have found is that when I'm rock climbing,
I have permission to be loud.
And so when I'm climbing on this wall, because rock climbing,
even in a gym outside, like rock climbing brings out the most like raw,
like you're on the wall thinking
you're probably gonna die even though you're not,
because you're attached to ropes,
but you're like instincts kick in of like,
I will survive this,
but what it does for me is it drops me into my body.
I actually have to shut my mind off completely
if I want to climb well.
And it's so fascinating for me,
as someone who does struggle with anxiety,
as someone who over thinks everything,
climbing has helped me so much
and being able to kind of yell on the wall
and get those things out of my body
has been so healing for me.
On stressful days, my body craves getting it out. It's like, um,
there's just energy ping-ponging around inside of me, mostly all in my head again. So this is like
not very much room for a whole lot to ping-pong around. And so then this area is just like what is
happening and then I need to get it out or it's bad. And so that's what it is done for me.
Being on the wall or playing piano or writing,
there are different things that get the energy out
and get me out of my head.
So I would like to learn to scream better one day.
But for now, I'm allowed at our climbing gym.
I have a question.
I think that for a lot of our listeners, I am more embodied.
I do physical things that purposefully turn off my brain. Yes.
That is what I am geared towards.
How do you become embodied?
Let's just hypothetically say you two are people who live in your mind.
Hypothetically, can you?
Okay.
Because that was a safety mechanism.
You both used because you felt like the outer world wasn't safe. This was the
place that you could say safe. What has what do you have to change about your mindset or maybe the
world to feel safe enough to get embodied? That's a great question. Well one thing I noticed about
myself that that was painful to realize but helped me was that I realized a few years ago I was telling myself that I am safest in my own head.
So because it's mine and I know what's going on.
And coming to the realization that actually, even though I love my mind and my thought, it probably isn't the safest place for me to be.
And so because...
Danger, fire!
Yeah, yeah. Because, fire, danger. Yeah, because it's the best safe.
It'll land us in the hospital because we are so stressed
and we are so scared and we're,
we are living these realities that aren't healing us
because we're not dropping in.
So, I think for me to recognize actually,
this is not the safest place.
My safe places are being with people who love me and see me
and my safe places are being with people who love me and see me and my safe places are
Doing the things in my body that will get out some of this stress and and the grief and the
anxiety whatever it is so I have a peloton and I write about in the book. Okay. Yes, I do have a peloton
10 minutes, right? It helps me a lot and
Robin is one of the women that I peloton with. Robin was saying recently that she was journaling about when do I feel most myself?
Like where do I feel that?
And I was thinking about that.
Like what clothes do we wear to feel most ourselves?
What are we doing?
Who are we with?
What are those things that actually drop us into our body? And so I know, I can think of those places now. I know the places that
are not. And ironically, there are places that used to be safe for me that are not anymore,
you know, churches. There are places that used to be my safe place no longer are. So coming to
terms with the honesty of that, that maybe this area is not our safe place,
but there is safety in recognizing that and then leaning into the places that get us out.
Does that make sense? Yes. Yes. One of the practical tools that I pulled from your work was,
tools that I pulled from your work was, again, this idea of being in the presence and recognizing living things, because they remind us that we are living things.
So in a world that wants us to be machines, it is easy to think of ourselves as machines,
but when you talk about your bologna's,
it made me cry because you were talking about the tenderness
that you give them water and then you say,
oh, you are so thirsty.
And then you watch them soak it up and then you say,
I wonder if we let others know when
we need a drink or a break from the heat.
And when we get closer to the water, we drink it up within seconds, begging for more.
While nearby someone says, Oh, love, you are so thirsty.
I wonder if we even know we're thirsty.
We don't even know we're thirsty because we think we're machines,
but we are so thirsty.
Yesterday we were at dinner with,
well, at our table,
and to the teenagers at our table,
we're talking about how they actually have to set alarms
every hour to wake
themselves up all night to keep studying.
Because they have so much work, they sleep for 15 minutes, wake themselves up.
We are doing this to them.
And it's not a mistake.
We're training them to be good machines in a capitalist culture, right?
So that's why this work is everything. It's about
coming home, what you're saying, Caitlin, it's about adamantly, relentlessly remembering and holding
on to being human. Yeah. And if we pass anything down to the next generation, what's so hard though, it's like
Trisha Hersey's new book of the Nat Ministry, Restless Resistance.
I bought that book for every woman in my family because we have all become a part of the
cogs in the machine, you know.
And so that is the scary question is if the systems are like this and we have been taught
to be like this and
the systems probably aren't changing anytime soon, then how are we supposed to resist that
status quo? How do we do that? And what I have come to is that we keep having conversations
with our kids and we keep giving them the tools they need and we let them have the day off
when they need it and we tell them that it's going to be okay.
I was so much the people pleasing and wanting to just make sure everything stayed okay,
everywhere at school with my teachers at home, at church, everywhere I wanted to just keep things
very smooth no matter what my inner world was and it's not fair for our kids to have to carry that. And it wasn't fair
that we had to carry that. None of it is. And so trying to remind ourselves of that or finding
these like subversive ways to rest and to care for ourselves and each other, it's not easy. And
it can be exhausting, but we can't give up on these conversations.
and it can be exhausting, but we can't give up on these conversations. I have to ask one more question, and it is about the ancestral realm.
Oh, yes.
When you talk about trauma and coming home to ourselves and wholeness,
it strikes me that a lot in white culture,
we have this individualist myth really of,
okay, this is what's wrong in my life.
And it is because the generations before me.
And there is some truth in that.
But you see memes going around that are like,
I'm going to hand my parents the therapist bill
with a note that says, you broke it, you buy it.
This idea, it's kind of like a funny thing we're doing.
And you have such a different view of that that I think is so powerful.
You say that to practice decolonization, we name the ways in which our ancestors did what
they could, but didn't do enough in the ways that they still had so much to accomplish,
but didn't have the space or resources or time to do it all and the way that they rely on us to
change the things they couldn't or didn't change. Wow. And this view is so beautiful because it's not
beautiful because it's not you failed to do it. So I have to. It's you did what you could. And it is the honor to take where you left off and build. And in doing that, I'm healing you and I'm healing
my kids. I really want that to settle into my body as a way of being on this honored path of these
generations that are doing the best they can.
Can you say more about that?
Yeah, I love the idea of liminal space.
Yes, I use that word a lot.
Liminal liminality, liminal space, the gray areas, the spaces in between, which is often
the nuance spaces,
the spaces we don't wanna talk about,
because we'd rather be on one extreme or the other.
Can't put it on a meme, Caitlin.
Can't put the liminal spaces on a meme.
No, that would just confuse everyone, wouldn't it?
I think of my life, this living space I live in,
that I exist in between those who came before
and those who will come after.
We exist in that. We
can't escape it. It's who we are and not in just a linear way, but these cycles, the cycles of who
our ancestors were, the cycle of our life now, the cycle of seven generations after us, who will
exist and who will have to reckon with what we've done and left undone that whole idea. And you're right, it is a very this individualistic way
of understanding things that were not like,
my ancestors were awful, they did some awful things,
but like that's not my problem.
When instead, if we could actually say,
I wanna be a part of the healing,
I wanna be a part of healing, whoever my ancestors were,
and we don't always know that,
and that's okay, You don't have to know who your ancestors were and what happened. I
want us to hold the vision of that. Whoever our ancestors were, whatever they did or didn't
do, we don't know the ones that come after us. We don't know what they're going to look
like or who they're going to be in this world or what the state of the world will be.
But there's healing. Our healing is directly connected to those who came before and those who will come after.
And if we can experience it that way, doesn't it feel so much? Yes.
Fuller? Like, doesn't it give us? I don't know. It doesn't make it feel like it's all on
me, but that I get to be a part of this fluid moving space of resistance. Because the other
problem that I often find with, especially white people who want to fix things, like they
want to fix it, they want to put the bandaid on and call it good or read the book or do
do the thing is that I keep reminding people, this is lifelong work. You're not going to be healed
in a week. You're not going to be anti-racist in a week. You're not going to learn all of indigenous
history in the next two years. You need to keep reading and then keep reading more. Like keep
doing the things because the best thing we can give the generations after us is that we understood
that it doesn't end with us,
that we keep passing on that healing,
and that we pass on the healing to people who came before us.
In a way, we don't understand it.
So again, drop into your body and let it just be the truth
and live into it and don't think on it too hard
or you'll just burn out and explain.
Wow.
You can only know it in your body, Caitlin Curtis.
Y'all, just go get native, go get living resistance,
follow Caitlin on Instagram and begin the rewiring.
We adore you.
Thank you for this time, Caitlin.
Pod Squad, catch 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 each or all of 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 the front, we would be so grateful.
We appreciate you very much.
We can do hard things, is produced in partnership with Keynes 13 Studios.
you