We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - 70. My Hardest Thing
Episode Date: February 15, 2022Today, Glennon shares about her recent eating disorder relapse. If talk about eating disorders and mental illness helps: Listen today. If it triggers: Skip today. CW // eating disorders...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
do our...
Hi, sister.
So if that
welcome sounded a little bit
dramatic and
dreddy, it's because
we are going to
talk about something pretty serious today.
And
that topic,
I actually
haven't even spoken directly
to sister about any of this.
Abby and I, we have been in
light conversation about this
for the last couple weeks at least. But what we're going to talk about today is something
serious and kind of sad, but really important and hard. And that's what we do here,
is we talk about things that are important, even when they're hard or especially when they're
hard. So what we're going to do is talk about the fact that over the holidays, I had a eating disorder
relapse.
And that sounds way too simple for what happened and has been happening, but I only have
words to describe things, so I can only use words.
So that is what happened over the holidays.
And so today I'm going to talk about it here with all of you.
And I'm going to just try to use words, which is all I have to describe.
describe what I've been going through for the last bit of time.
Well, before you get into it, tell us how you're feeling right now.
I feel a little bit, I feel nervous to represent things accurately.
I feel a big responsibility to speak about something that so many people suffer from.
I feel scared because whenever anyone, anyone, I don't think it's just in the public, anyone speaks about what the world would consider a failure.
It feels like you're making yourself vulnerable to people discounting you.
So I feel that that's a risk.
But I also feel like a little bit grounded in a way I never feel as grounded.
on this podcast because I know how to do this.
I know how to like tell the real truth of things.
Even in scary ways, that's how I've survived.
I feel like I know what I'm doing, but I also know that it's risky.
Yeah.
Well, it feels like you're just opening yourself up, which I just find so freaking beautiful.
And it's just, I can't.
How do you feel?
You're nervous.
You've asked me a million times.
Are you sure you want to do this?
You're twiddling your thumbs in a way you never do.
And I also, I think you're perfect.
And I know that we are all imperfect.
I truly do.
And yet I still want to make sure that you understand that like, no matter what, like, we
are right or die.
and this is why.
Like this is a reason why I love you, not something to not love about you.
And I think that I just, I find you to be, this isn't courage or bravery.
Like, this is just like, this is exactly what I feel like I was made for.
Such a time as this.
And you are doing great.
And it's, you know, what you said this morning when we were just leaving the bathroom to come down here to do this.
And you asked me one more time, are you sure that you want to do this?
And I said, well, one of the reasons is because of my unshakable belief, whether this is true or not, that I'm not about to explain to everybody why I'm fucked up.
Like, I really truly believe that we all have these weird, swirly,
dark maybe spark whatever this weird wild self inside and that um and that one of my
jobs gifts whatever is to just really talk about that but i feel like there's part of what i'm
revealing that is true about all of us regardless of how it manifests in my life and this part
feels dramatic like it feels dramatic to say because it
you know, the whole word relapse is dramatic. But if something is true, it's true all the way through.
And if we say we want to show up with our mess and that we're still worthy of love, it's true whether
we're talking about our house is a mess or we're talking about our insides are a mess or we're talking about,
you know, it's got to be true all the way through.
It doesn't make anything about who you've become less valid.
It actually proves that you truly believe in what you say that you're willing to show up like this.
I do.
I had this feeling this morning of, this is going to sound so weird.
This isn't the right word, but pride or I feel like I have been hiding again, this, like,
part of myself.
And I don't feel ashamed of this.
I don't feel ashamed of this weird side of myself.
But I've been, because of the hiding, I have been acting like I do.
So in talking about it, I feel like this part of myself is like a friend and I'm like
standing up for her right now.
As weird as that sounds.
I'm like, no, no, no, you can speak.
Yeah, you're allowed to show up at the table.
Like we're not hiding you when the people come visit.
That's right.
That's right.
Because this part of you that makes your life so hard sometimes is also the part that in a swirly different way that people celebrate this weirdness that shows up in different ways.
So we don't get to just love her when she's shiny and whatever.
like we love ourselves even when we're hurting.
Maybe, maybe more importantly then, right?
So that's what we're doing today.
And the why is the why we're doing it is for all of the reasons we just talked about.
It's not, it's interesting because my friend Nadia Bolesweber says we don't write from our wounds, our open wounds.
We write from our scars.
meaning we wait, right, until pain has turned into wisdom because otherwise things just seem like a
cry for help instead of an active service or a piece of art. And I think that all rules,
you have to learn them and know them and get them in your bones so that you know when to break them.
And you also have to have enough, I guess, success at recovery and huge.
humaning behind you so that when you're in the middle of the opened wound, you still have a grounding
beneath you. Like, I know how to do this. I'm someone who's been to rock bottom a few times
in terms of alcoholism, in terms of mental illness, in terms of all of it, eating disorder stuff.
And I kind of, although I feel very scared because when you're in the middle of it, you kind of forget
that you're going to get out,
I can look back on my life and know that I will
because I have, because I trust myself.
So I am speaking from an opened wound,
but also one that I've seen scar over so many times
that I trust the process enough to speak right now.
I'm also with my wife and my sister,
I'm with my two people that I trust most in the world.
And I'm speaking to this pod squad
that I really do trust.
I feel safe here in a way I don't feel on social media or whatever.
Also, I have been thinking for the last few days about how mental illness is discussed
in the world and it just always feels like it's being discussed by someone who has it all figured
out or who is talking about it but not from it.
Wow.
which I don't know.
There's something weird about it.
And I get it because when someone is in the middle of a low or when someone who struggles with mental illness, you know, I used to use the metaphor of being swallowed by the whale.
Like when you're in the whale, you can't really speak clearly.
So how are people going to speak from it?
but it still makes you feel all the time like
like people are talking at you that don't even understand it.
Like it's always like here's your 10 steps on mental.
But it's not, you're not hearing from somebody in it,
which is how you feel less alone.
And it's like before or after but not the middle.
You never hear from the middle.
So I think there's something important to speaking
in the middle if it's possible.
And then how I'm going to do it is I am going to say whatever I want to say for the next hour.
So I'm just going to tell the story of the last month or so with words that are
match as closely as possible the experience.
I'm not going to worry about sounding crazy or triggering people.
What I need you to do loves is if eating disorder talk, mental illness talk, all of this sort of traumatic talk is triggering to you.
Please skip this.
Okay.
Because I'm not going to worry about it starting in a minute.
Okay.
So I need you to take care of yourself so that I don't have to take care of you for the next hour.
Okay.
So does that sound okay?
Sounds wonderful.
I mean.
How are you doing, Sissy?
Do you feel nervy?
I mean, I feel so many things.
I feel curious.
I feel sad.
I feel proud of you.
I feel like unhelpful.
I feel that, you know, it's wild because I first learned about
this when right after we left from the holiday break and we had just been together for two weeks
and I felt a little like, oh man, she was going through all of this and I was right there
with her, but I was not right there with her at all. And so, and I'm, I'm proud of you for doing
this and I want to support you for the next hour and then all the hours after that.
It's a new year, and instead of trying to reinvent myself, I've been asking a simpler question.
What would actually support me right now?
And honestly, a big part of that answer is my home.
I want my space to feel calmer, more functional, and a little more like a place that can reflect my goals and energy for this year, which is why I've been turning to Wayfair.
It's truly a one-stop shop for everything your home needs this season.
What surprised me most was how easy it was to find exactly what I wanted in my style and within my budget.
Whether you're organizing kids' rooms, upgrading your work from home setup, tackling clutter,
or just trying to make weeknight dinners easy.
Wayfair really does have everything.
Your home doesn't have to be perfect.
It just has to support the life you're living right now.
Get organized, refreshed, and back.
on track this new year for way less. Head to wayfair.com right now to shop all things home. That's
W-A-Y-F-A-I-R dot com. Wayfair. Every style, every home. Well, what? Okay, so
looking back, I feel like, and you please tell me, because I'm not always good at when I'm in
something, I can't always remember what I was like before in any way, but I do.
know that I remember at the beginning of COVID, which was a strange time for everybody. And for us,
it was strange in the way that Untamed was like blowing up. And I had 70,000 interviews a day and all
of that. I do remember spending a lot of time talking about having untamed myself in many,
many ways in terms of sexuality and our family and marriage and gender stuff even and talking a lot
about how frustrated I was that I still have not broken free from compulsive thinking about
body and food. Right. So the reason I say that is because when I try to trace back this
relapse and I say, oh, it was two weeks ago.
or a month ago. I'm like, well, okay, we can trace the like getting weird, as we call it,
like the slow fade into this. I remember feeling compulsive thoughts come back right around
a couple years ago. Because we would talk about it too, right? Yeah. I mean, I think that if you
want to know the logistics of it, it's like you were preparing. So like less we forget,
You were about to go on a nationwide book tour.
Okay.
So it was before then.
And so it was before COVID hit.
And oftentimes before you go on the book tour, there's a huge to do.
You know, like your whole team has planned an entire for a whole year, this book tour.
You have a whole situation of clothes.
And so you're going to be on stage.
And you're going to be on stage.
And you are about to go talk about this, this art that you've just created.
It's now going to go out into the world.
So when we talk about getting weird or getting weird again, I just want to talk about all of the context that was and is a part of those times when you start getting, like we talk weird, but like you start to obsess, I think, a little bit about your body.
Yeah, there's an element of, okay, things are about to be so out of control and I'm going to be so vulnerable because people are going to be staring at me and I'm going to be staring at me and I'm going to be.
stages and I'm going to be talking about the pouring my heart out. There's a feeling of how can I,
what can I do to make myself invulnerable? And I think that comes with a lot of like in my
compulsive twisted thinking while I can make myself a like robot in terms of body,
face all of that. Like I can make myself completely unjuicy, unhuman, inhuman, because the way that a woman
looks in the world is a vulnerability all the time because anybody can say shit about whatever. And so when
you're about to go out into the world and say things that are controversial in themselves,
and you know people are going to have a whole shit ton to say about what you're saying and who you are,
if you can control one part of it.
Yeah.
They can't say this.
They can't say I'm whatever.
So controlling your physicality, that's interesting.
Yeah, that's true.
And you were also about to deliver this love story.
So everything that was in the book, I don't know.
I just think it's really important in terms of the context of it all.
Like you are literally turning your insides out and letting people read your insides.
Yeah.
And when I look back on pictures of then, I was really fucking skinny.
Like, it was something when I look back on those pictures.
So interesting.
Okay.
So then that happens.
And then the tour gets canceled.
And then we're home.
And then the pandemic happens, right?
Yep.
So you are right.
I was probably already in those that way of thinking.
For a few months before the pandemic.
Yeah.
And also I would say for anybody, you know, there's an anxiety controlling.
Like if you're, if you have some anxiety going in.
to a big thing,
working out, sweating,
working out,
like all of those things
are anxiety.
You feel like it's going to take the edge off.
You just exhaust yourself.
You exhaust the anxiety out.
So I was probably working out too much.
Yeah.
So what I know is that at some point,
the thinking,
the overthinking about food and body
just felt like it was getting more and more intense.
The next marker I remember is the scale came back.
I must have found a scale somewhere in our garage.
Yeah, I don't know why I was even still in house.
But that's just like a marker for, you know, the scale came into our bathroom.
Over months and months, I just, you know, it was like I was, I'll just wait myself
once a month.
Then it was once a week.
Then it was once a day.
Then it was, you know, most recently it was like eight times a day.
like every time I went into the bathroom.
Just like,
to give you context,
at the one point I remember being like,
I'll just do this without my headband on.
Like,
I'll just weigh myself without my headband.
Like that kind of level of obsessant.
I just want to remind you that at the time, too,
we were trying to do things to keep ourselves busy during the pandemic.
Yeah.
So I hired a trainer to come and train us on the driveway.
Yeah.
And so this is what I thought,
Because at the time, we were having kind of open conversations about like, you know, I'm starting to obsess, you know, and I'm like, okay, I think that what we should do then is we should work out so that you, your body is strong so that you know that your body is strong. But I think that that was like gas on the fire.
Yeah. And I knew that. I mean, I looked at that lady one day and was like, I'm never coming back to this driveway. Like, I don't like this. This isn't the right vibe for me and didn't come back. So.
But that's what happens. You try all these things, you know. So I think that I did actually throw up a couple of times or maybe two or three times over those months. And then the two weeks.
Did Abby know about that? No. Okay. No. You did tell me. I did.
Yeah. You told me that you were getting weird and like there was just a couple of ice cream incidents.
I did. Wow, good for me. Well, okay. So that and then right at Christmas.
This Christmas. This Christmas, yeah. The whole family was here. And I think that, you know, we have had some family stuff come up over the last year.
Um, that has been mostly good in terms of like talking about things that our family hasn't talked about.
Um, bringing up some old stuff dynamics in our family that probably, for sure, originally contributed to an environment that would have been allowed this to, to flourish.
Right.
Right.
So that stuff has been brought up, but I don't know, you know, people who are listening when you're dealing with stuff with your family of origin, it's like brought up and that's an amazing ridiculously brave step that most people don't do it all is bring up dynamics that may have been harmful in one way or another, especially in a family so full of love and so full of goodness.
it's hard to bring up the stuff that wasn't good enough.
But then there's this period where it's not, nothing's taken care of really.
It's just like this weird time, this weird in between where the thing, the elephant in the room has been pointed out.
But like, it's still there.
No resolution.
No one ever talks about that part of the elephant in the room.
You're like, but now we just got a fucking elephant in the room.
That's how it feels.
Not that helpful.
It's not like, well, it should be, it should be like excusing the elephant from the room, but it's not.
It's just calling out the elephant in the room, but it's still trampling over all your shit.
I mean, you know, shout out to all the family therapists.
Is there, because I feel like that's a part you've missed.
Yeah.
How do you resolve the problem you've just pointed out?
There's no elephant removal crew.
So then there's the like, you know, the canaries in the coal mine or the whatever, the families who have the elephant pointer outer.
But then when you point it out, then you just feel like a jackass because then everybody's like, well, thanks a lot.
Yeah.
You pointed out the elephant, but now we're all staring at an elephant.
So way to go.
You know?
So anyway, the context is that the Christmas happens.
And all of this is to lead up to the last week of Christmas, the last week of 2021.
Is that what it just was?
I was throwing up every night.
Right.
So New Year's Day, you guys leave, sister, you and John leave on New Year's Day.
So you and the kids and John left New Year's Day.
our friends, our dear friends, Katie and Cam, texted us like a few hours after you left and we're like, we're in your town. Can we come say hi? And like literally if there was anyone else, we would have pretended that we couldn't find our phones because we were like de-stressing and getting the quiet house back. But it was Katie and Cam. So we were like, get over here. And so I had this moment because at this point, I'm still just keeping this.
all to myself. And that's a tricky place for me because I think I kind of know I'm keeping a
secret from myself. And that's how, that's my definition of my own sobriety. It's when I'm,
a break in sobriety is when I'm keeping a secret even from myself. That's, that's it. But that's
even tricky for me because so much of my life, you know, since I was 10 years old, was kind of, was this life of like eating and throwing up and whatever. And so it kind of just feels like life to me. I can very much switch back into like, oh, this is just what life is. This is how I can, some people go for walks. Some people go to a therapist. It's a well trod. A well trod path for you. Yes. It's familiar. Yeah. It's familiar. Yeah. It's familiar.
Yeah. But so Katie and Cam sat down and everybody, I think somebody said, well, what are your intentions for 2021? You know, they're lesbians. We're lesbians. This is, you don't, there's no small talk. We get right into like our deepest, right. And it's 2022. Incidentally. There's no demarcation, but intentions for 2022 is what you intended. Is that what I said. You said 2021. But it's the groundhog year. So it's fine. Exactly. And so Abby said something.
and awesome and Cam said something and they all looked at me.
And I had no, I had nothingness.
I had nothing to say.
I could not think of one true thing to come out of my mouth.
And so I kind of panicked and just said something about work,
which is I never, ever.
If anybody asked me about like what is my work,
is not what I go to.
But I had, and so I don't know how to explain why that was such a red flag to me other
than, oh, I'm lying to myself.
I have nowhere true to start.
That blankness, that nothingness, that looking at three people on my couch who I trust,
you know, top 10 people in my life, the three of them were on that couch.
And I had nothing, I had no they're there anymore.
Like it was it's the opposite of the there she is moment.
It was like, where'd she go?
Like where am I?
I have no.
I have a, I have lies blocking any truth.
Anything that I could say is bullshit because the truest thing I know is I'm fucked again.
And I'm not saying that.
Why am I not saying that?
Mm-hmm.
So since the truest thing I know is that I'm scared because I'm like back in this
scary place, then why am I not saying that? I'm not saying that because I am deliberately
hiding and that means I'm fucked. Not the fact that I'm throwing up again or whatever.
It's the fact that I'm sitting here with these three people that I love and know and trust.
And I'm not saying to them what my thing is. I get that completely because it's the verification.
It's like we live so much in this conflict with inner selves.
of like what is true, what is not true, what is the inside of me, what is the outside of me.
There's never any black and white in like what I'm, what is a lie between what I'm presenting
to the world and what is my internal reality. It's such a gray swamp of what is real and what
isn't. But then when you know what is in those rare, rare moments like that where you know what
is true and you know what's most important and you know what is clear, but you're not saying it,
that is the explosion where you're like, oh, we're in the deep now.
Yes.
This is.
Yes.
I remember being on the couch looking at you like, wow.
Really?
She couldn't come up with a thing.
I don't even know if you said, you were like, I don't know.
I don't.
You just.
I couldn't do it.
I could not conjure up anything.
Yeah, that has never happened before.
You know, we're, we talk.
We talk a lot when you.
Gone.
It's gone.
Yeah.
You're gone because you weren't bringing you.
That's why you were gone.
Yes.
It's not that you couldn't access it.
It's because you, you weren't ready to bring it forward.
Yes, that is why at the beginning of this when I was saying there was a level of like,
Pride isn't the right word, but maybe it's relief that I'm talking today is like,
it's the opposite of that moment on the couch. Like, I don't care. Fine. Say I'm crazy. Say I failed.
Say I'm relapsed. But don't, but I'm still here. Whoever that I is is still here and is going to speak.
This time of year, I am always looking for my.
sweaters. Luckily, Quince has all of the staple sweaters covered from soft Mongolian cashmere
sweaters that feel like designer pieces without the markup to 100% silk tops and skirts for easy
dressing up to perfectly cut denim for everyday wear. I can't tell you how much I'm loving my
quince cashmere sweater in this gorgeous oatmeal color. It's become the thing I grab almost every day.
It's held up beautifully. It still feels soft and it honestly looks way more expensive than it is.
You know how frugal I am. And I've started picking up.
a few quince pieces for home too. They have travel bags and sheets. Their sheets are awesome.
10 out of 10. Refresh your wardrobe with quince. Don't wait. Go to quince.com slash hard things for
free shipping on your order and 365 day returns. Now available in Canada too. That's Q-U-I-N-C-E.com
slash hard things to get free shipping and 365 day returns. Quince.com slash hard things.
So Katie and Cam left.
I didn't say anything for the rest of the day.
And then, I don't know if you remember this, and I'm not going to use any names,
but the next morning you had a friend call you who was in their second day of sobriety.
And the truth is that I sat there, you were on like speakerphone or something, and I
I sat there listening to a very early and sobriety person,
say all the very early and sobriety stuff with all the hubris of early sobriety
and all the like beauty and like things you can hear them say that they're going to crash and
burn about.
And like the, I don't know.
I actually found myself feeling a little bit judgy and annoyed by myself doing the dishes
listening.
Like, listening to this beautiful human who has just reached out to Abby, who is in their second day of sobriety and feeling judgy and, ugh.
Like jaded?
Jaded.
Mm-hmm.
And they hung up and I put one more glass in the dishwasher and was like, I'm fucked.
I think I said, I think those are my words.
babe, I'm fucked.
You actually said, I was going to wait until, because the kids were still with us,
they were going back to Craig's house that afternoon.
You said, I was going to wait until the kids went to Craig's, but I'm fucked.
I was like, okay, okay.
And then you just told me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then I told you, and then you were completely amazing.
I was.
Yes.
Because you were undramatic.
You were unshooked.
You were soft and loving and huggy.
And there was no flick of terror.
There was no, you're not who you said you were in your face.
It was just like, of course.
And now we will get through this.
So you were amazing.
And then we had told the kids we were going to go for a hike that day.
Yeah.
So here is where I tried to explain.
this thing about food and body and eating disorders and mental health and mental illness.
So I have always felt like, you know, there's all these science words and there's depression
and there's anxiety and there's eating disorders and there's mental illness and all this thing.
But like the way it manifests inside of me at times is like there is this black hole or like a
canyon of murkiness that is, it.
exists inside of me, and I could jump in. Okay. But like my job is to stay on the land side of this
manhole or canyon of swirly dark energy. But there is something seductive about the canyon. It's not all
terror and, you know, weeping and gnashing of teeth. It's like a little bit purple and
swirly and sparkly too. So it's like... It's like Vegas. It's not like Vegas at all.
But Vegas may well be Abby's Canyon. So let's just... Let's just table that for a second. That's
another episode, Abby. That's right. It's like the opposite because Vegas is all like lights and
manmade and bullshit.
This is like spiritual in a weird way.
Okay?
I don't know.
It's not, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it might be the
internal, um, tendency to glorify this thing.
Yeah.
I was going to say your story about it is that it is spiritual.
Right.
Whether, that may be true.
It may not be true, but in your story when you look at the canyon, it is seductive because it is a,
maybe a higher or deeper reality than the actual tangible reality of the shore?
It could be, yes, that, but also it's because it is so hard to, and it requires so much work
to stay on the land.
Yes.
It's not being the land is part of its seduction.
Exactly.
It represents not having to work so damn hard, like a succumbing.
So what I'm trying to say is that when eating food, body stuff, is my way of getting closer to the canyon, it has nothing fucking to do with eating and food.
Okay?
It's like my friends who are cutters or my friends, all of the different things, those are their ways.
Those are their ways of inching closer to the canyon.
It has nothing fucking to do with the eating.
So when I get weird about eating in food and it's like, oh, we'll get a personal trainer.
Or it's like, well, let's talk about nutrition.
It's like the equivalent of saying, okay, I have once again set myself on fire and someone saying, well, what we can do to explore that is let's just sit down and talk about pyrotechnics.
Yeah.
Do you, have you taken a fire prevention course?
Yeah.
Like, it's like not, no.
That's elementary, baby.
No, no.
Like, we're to, we want to know like why cosmically am I an arsonist?
It's not like how fire works.
Right.
Okay.
I'm talking about the canyon of, of sorely dark.
I'm not talking about freaking nutrition.
Okay.
So we have to go hiking and I actually decide we're going to do that.
Like we are, there's no point and we're going to continue what could be better than going on an easy hike with the family and staying in the light and being outside and all the things.
I wasn't so sure.
I think that you had to convince me that that was going to be okay.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So we go.
And we're just going to this like place that's.
25 minutes away, whatever.
And on the car ride there, it was just so interesting because, first of all, I was in a bit of
trauma because I had just told you, I had just, it's like to take yourself out of the secret
place to where someone can see it in the light, it's like there's no turning back.
Now it's real.
It doesn't always feel like it's real when it's inside of you, even though it's happening
and you can see yourself throwing up.
It's like it could still be not real.
So in a bit of trauma, I think the best way that I can describe this part is that this is
when I really feel crazy.
Whatever that means.
So we're driving there.
I notice that my breathing is so shallow.
I can't take a deep breath.
I'm sitting there in the passenger seat.
Abby's driving.
The kids are in the back.
I think we had the dogs with us.
It was just like utter chaos.
Like everybody.
happy chaos
and I can't catch a breath
and I realize
it's like
I'm being as still as humanly possible
and not breathing deeply
and it's so interesting
because it is the same
way of being that you would be
if you were hiding
because there was like a killer in the room
okay
so you're like trying not to be found
it's like
being paralyzed
being, not being able to breathe because there's a stalker and then you're thinking hard about
why you're behaving that way and then you realize, oh, no, no, the stalker for you, honey,
has always been inside of you. Like the call is coming from inside the house.
Yes. Yes. So this is what I'm thinking about. And then I realize, I look around and I think
everyone's listening to like Taylor Swift or something. Like the cognitive dissonance between what's
going on inside of me and what's going on outside of me is so it's like all.
light and happiness on the outside on the inside is like this swirly thing. And I realize that I am
holding so tightly to my arm that like, I mean, for sure I'm bruising myself. I'm holding so tightly.
You do have a grip. Like that's just like a general state. Coala bear grip. Like sometimes we'll
just be holding hands watching TV. And I have to actually like move my hand like because she's,
She's now completed and gotten the grip into a vice grip and my circulation is being cut off.
Like you have a tendency to just do it.
Would you say that not sometimes, but every time?
Every time.
Every time we're holding hands.
You have to.
I have to like kind of wiggle and you have to say sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Yeah.
You don't have to.
I have a question about that cognitive dissidents.
So you for the week prior when you were actively purging.
you did not feel that cognitive dissonance because and only after you had told Abby you had
that cognitive dissonance because theoretically you could have had that the whole time that you
knew this was happening and the world was just unfolding around you obliviously but it's only
after you told Abby that you had that um I just I think it's phases. I think it's like it's real now
it's real now yeah yeah no
turning back, no turning back. No takebacks. No takebacks. No take backs. We're here. Exactly.
So I've realized that I'm holding myself so tight. And I remember looking around and they were all
dancing. They were like dancing and singing. And I'm looking at their hands and their hands are all
flailing around. And my thought was, it is so beautiful how much they trust gravity.
And then I was like, what the fuck does that mean? Like what? Why don't you trust? Like,
I'm holding on in the car.
Like, I am holding so tightly so that I do not fly away.
And these fools are just, it is as if gravity is real to them.
They do not even have to hold themselves down or in or together.
Yeah.
I'm just telling you what my thoughts were at that time.
Right now, sitting here on this couch, I understand how bad shit crazy that sounds.
But in the moment, I was like, wow.
Look at this magic trick they're all doing. They're all just so loose. So we get to this hike. We're walking. It's really, really beautiful. And we're in Palis Verdes. Okay. And we're going around this cliff. And we come across this staircase. Okay. Do you remember? I now understand what you're doing. Do you understand now what was happening to me during that time?
Do you remember how I stopped at that staircase and stared for so long and then walked down it, which I never do. I'm like the least adventurous person in the world.
No, I was so, I was like, is she nervous? Because Chase had walked down there. I was like, is she nervous that Chase is going down there? That's so weird.
No, the second I get out of the car to go to a hike, all I'm thinking is like how long will it be until we get back in this car? Like, if I don't trust gravity in the car, I'm sure as hell not going to trust it on a cliff. It's all very precarious.
So we're on this cliff overlooking the ocean and there's this staircase and it's wild.
It's the longest staircase in the world.
It goes from the top of this cliff and it's cut in.
Not really, but it looks like it.
Right.
It looks like it.
And it like somehow goes all the way down to the water, but you can only see the top half of it.
You can't see the bottom half of it.
So, and then halfway down, the whole top of the staircase is in the light.
You can see it.
And then there's this platform, this like bigger part of the staircase.
And then that's all you can see.
So I was like, okay, I have to, first, I have to walk down and get down to that platform.
So I walk down the staircase and there's that platform.
and then the staircase turns and then the rest is just all down to the ocean and it's all dark.
It's out of the sun.
So that's when I walk back up to the top so I can see the whole thing, right?
And I realize that platform, which I had to Google because I could not freaking think of what that was actually called in a staircase.
It's called the landing.
I was going to say a landing.
The landing is where I was that day.
Yes.
I feel that. Yes, yes, yes. The landing is where I still am today. Yes. Weeks later. Okay. But here's what I'm saying. The landing is where you stand and you can go either way. You look down and the down is so seductive because it's easier and it looks like it'll take less effort and it's in the dark.
You can get lost in it. Nobody can see you. You can just keep descending one step at a time. Or
you turn and you look up at that motherfucking staircase again. Right? Just like one step at a time.
And you think about your freaking poor little legs who have done this so many times. And you think about like the sun that's so freaking freaking bright and like,
Everyone can see your struggle and it just looks so steep.
And so for a minute, you just stay on the landing.
And so that's where I am right now.
I'm on the landing and I only know, which I'm really delighted about, that I'm not going down.
I'm not.
How do you know that?
Because I know myself and I know.
know what I know about myself is that once I get to the landing, I will not go further.
I trust myself completely to not descend further when I know where I am. I trust my weary little
legs. I trust the light. I trust the climb. When you were throwing up, were you below the
landing in the darkness or on the landing. I feel confused. Walking down, right? I don't know.
I mean, I think this is where metaphor kind of breaks down a bit, babe. I don't know exactly where I was
fucking on the staircase. No, listen, I just want to know because this is as a partner.
Yeah. This is important knowledge. I mean, the landing is day zero. Like, the landing is when you
look at yourself and there are no lies between.
you and you anymore. Got it. Right? It doesn't feel like a staircase until the landing. It feels like
a free fall of nothingness. It doesn't feel you're not deliberately stepping down and down and down. It only
feels like the staircase. That staircase wouldn't have made any sense to me the day before.
I see. You have to be on the landing to recognize the landing. It's like an acknowledgement of
acknowledging it actually forms this staircase. Yeah. It's like a forming of it. That's sort of
I mean, a landing is a platform that allows you to change directions or allows a climber to rest.
So there's a graciousness of the landing too. There's enough space to rest, right? To like gather your strength up for the climb again.
Wow.
Yeah.
So that's where I am now.
I'm on the landing.
And what that means to me in practical terms is that there will be a next.
There will be a climb.
There will be, it will probably include therapy and all kinds of different things.
but I will say that I have a confidence about me this time.
Like I really do.
I think the climb will be different.
It will feel different.
But I'm 45 years old and I know myself and I trust myself.
And I also have been through this enough times to have a level of curiosity.
because I think what was annoying me about that conversation you were having with that person in their second day of sobriety was that that person sounded the opposite of jaded.
There is an awe, a beginner's mind that returns to you when you realize that we're all on the fucking landing all the time.
there is a returning of awe when you start that first step that feels a little bit magical
that isn't as present when you're feeling really big and bad about yourself because you're on step 409,000.
So I have a positive anticipation about
the magic that will come as the climb begins again.
And I'm just being super tender and careful and gentle with myself as I wait on the landing.
And that is what I wanted to say today.
Have you ever hit a point at work where everything just feels heavy?
Not just a bad week, but the kind of burnout where you're staring at your laptop thinking,
I can't keep doing it like this.
You're not alone.
Strawberry.me is career coaching that helps you get to the real root of your burnout,
whether it's workload, boundaries, a tough manager,
or feeling disconnected from the work you used to love.
Our coaches help you untangle what's draining you,
build boundaries that actually stick,
redesign your day-to-day so it energizes you,
and create a plan so burnout doesn't sneak back.
And with a new year starting,
it's the perfect moment to rethink how you want to feel.
You can get matched with a coach in just a few minutes and sessions are flexible, private, and built around the reality of your life.
Go to strawberry.me slash we can do hard things and try a coaching session for 50% off.
Strawberry.combe because your career should feel good again.
And so, with that, I just want to say directly to you, sweet listener.
It is true that we can do hard things.
And we will keep doing them together.
See you back here in two days with more love notes from the landing.
Bye.
I give you Tishmilton and Brandy Carlisle.
I came out the other side.
I chase desire.
I made sure.
I got was mine
And I continued to believe that
And because I'm a
Because we're adventurers
And heartbreak
A final destination
They lack
They stopped asking directions
To places they've
To be
We'll finally find
Can do a heart
A brand new star
And sometimes things fall
I continue to
Law free
And it took some time
But I'm fine
Those were adventurers and heart breaks
On the destination
We lack
They stopped asking directions
So places they
And to venture
To play for bed
And too
We Can Do Hard Things
Is produced in partnership
with Cadence 13 Studios.
Be sure to rate,
review,
and follow the show
on Apple Podcasts,
Odyssey,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Especially be sure
to rate and review the podcast
if you really liked it.
If you didn't,
don't worry about it.
It's fine.
