We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - 86. Jen Hatmaker: What We Win When We Lose It All
Episode Date: April 12, 20221. Jen describes the shock of losing her 26-year marriage overnight. 2. How, looking back, Jen sees that she knew something was wrong in her relationship well before she “knew” something was wro...ng–and the moment she reached out to Glennon to share it for the first time. 3. Why Jen’s friends told her she was a “human spotlight” and “cleanup crew” in her marriage–and the pain of realizing she was powerful in every role other than wife. 4. How Jen convinced herself that her marriage was enough when in reality she felt like a pot of water slowly building to a boil. 5. The common hell of being lonely inside of marriage–and why we won’t be fully honest with ourselves, our partners, or our friends about what we are most afraid of. About Jen: Jen Hatmaker is the New York Times bestselling author of For the Love and Fierce, Free, and Full of Fire, along with twelve other books. She hosts the award-winning For the Love podcast, is the delighted curator of the Jen Hatmaker Book Club, and leader of a tightly knit online community where she reaches millions of people each week. Jen is a co-founder of Legacy Collective, a giving organization that grants millions of dollars toward sustainable projects around the world. She is a mom to five kids and lives happily just outside Austin, Texas. To learn more about Jen, visit www.jenhatmaker.com. TW: @JenHatmaker IG: @jenhatmaker
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I came out the other side.
Okay, we're going to jump right into We Can Do Hard Things today,
because we today have one of my favorite hard things doers in all the land.
Her name is Jen Hatmaker, and I'll just tell you that right off the bat
because I know everyone's going to get really excited about that.
The crowd goes wild.
And I have known Jen for a long, long time.
Yeah.
And I've always loved Jen, but I was thinking about this quote from both of our friends, Elizabeth Gilbert.
I just asked Abby to grab it for me like five minutes ago.
And it says, the women I love and admire for their strength and grace did not get that way because shit worked out.
They got that way because shit went wrong and they handled it.
They handled it a thousand different ways on a thousand different days, but they handled it.
those women are my superheroes.
And that is Liz Gilbert.
She's the best.
She's the best.
We have Jen Hatmaker,
who is the New York Times bestselling author of For the Love
and Fierce Free and Full of Fire,
along with 12 other books.
I don't know what to say.
12.
It's ridiculous.
The whole book shop, just of her own books.
Okay.
She hosts the award-winning for the love podcast,
which is so freaking good,
is the delighted curator of the Jen Hatmaker Book Club, and only Jen would write the delighted
curator.
You know that's my price.
Yes.
Even her bio is so Jen.
And she is the leader of a tightly knit online community where she reaches millions of people
each week.
Jen is a co-founder of Legacy Collective, a giving organization that grants millions of dollars
towards sustainable projects around the world.
She is a mom to five kids, only seven less books.
that she's written five, that's 12 books.
Math.
Thanks.
And just, and lives just outside Austin, Texas, Jen Hatmaker.
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
Hello, my darlings.
I'm so happy to see you both.
And Abby, just off camera.
Yeah, she's right here.
Hi, Jen, I miss you.
I miss you too.
Do you want to just come in here?
But she just is so jealous that she's going to stay in the frame.
Yes, Abby.
Abby won't luck.
loves herself, some Jen Hatmaker, which I just want to say that I think the first time Jen and Abby met was backstage at a women of faith conference.
So what I need the world to know is that I brought my lesbian soccer player, girlfriend.
That's right.
To the most conservative evangelical Christian arena event.
arena.
Yes.
Full of evangelical Christians.
And then I stood in the front row and we held hands and kissed and waved our arms to Jesus songs.
Jen, do you remember that?
That's right.
That's exactly.
Oh, do I remember?
Do I remember?
I remember.
What were you thinking at that point?
I didn't know what was.
I don't think I really understood what I was proposing to that crowd of 40,000 people.
Well, I was thinking how much.
I loved you.
And I knew about Abby.
So, and then, you know, it only takes like about three and a half seconds of meeting Abby.
And it doesn't, I don't care who you are.
You fall hard.
You fall hard.
You fall immediately.
It's irreversible.
It's irrevocable.
I got it immediately.
I got you.
I got y'all.
Because, of course, as you mentioned, our history deeply preceded.
that. We met when we were both married to men, other men. And so I immediately loved Abby and I was
proud of you and I was proud of both of you. And I was, I felt like in real time, I was watching you
like walk into yourself. And it was like an honor to witness it. And then a couple years later,
yeah, I got to watch you walk into yourself. We have talked previously on this pod in the
context of my sister and I's divorces about how the most obnoxious question a person can ask about
that horrific sacred time is what happened? Yeah. Because it's just like, I don't know,
simplification, bypassing that like kind of icky curiosity. So without asking what happened,
can you tell us what happened? Oh, I love it.
Yeah, definitely.
Also, thank you for your compassion and even just discretion around what it means to tell a hard story like this.
Literally, all four of us understand this.
All four of us, unfortunately, understand exactly this.
Yes.
Because there's us in the story, but there's a person that we were married to in the story.
There's a bunch of spawn that we created in the story.
There's in-laws and parents.
It's complex.
Yes, it is.
And to some degree, our connective tendrils go forever.
And so it is complicated to give an accurate retelling, to say nothing of the fact that I have a certain version in its mine.
Yeah.
Which means it's not entirely right.
But it's the one I know, even the one I've crafted a little.
Yes, ma'am.
I've polished her up.
Yep.
But in short, I was married for 26 years.
and I got married.
Every time I say this, I just have like a stab of like horror.
But I got married when I was 19.
And Brandon, my ex-husband was 21.
We were in college.
And we were in a kind of a conservative Christian college environment,
which is just to say it's a very strange place.
It's a very strange ecosystem in and of itself.
And I just a bunch of little babies get married there.
And that seems normal.
And we have real weddings.
Our parents give us away.
Like, that's a normal thing.
Like, she's 19.
She makes $4.25 at the YMCA.
Go be a wife.
You know what I'm saying?
What, what hell are we doing?
So I started really young.
I was never really an adult a single day in my life without a man.
I went straight from my dad to a boy.
So we built a whole life, you know, a whole life.
We grew up together, essentially.
And we had three kids.
And then we adopted two more.
Ben and Rumi are youngest.
They're Ethiopian.
And we adopted them when they were five and eight.
And built kind of this entire hat maker ethos.
And then in 2020, just after the pandemic started, so that was already, we were just
already all flailing around. And we started the divorce process. And for us, it wasn't like a slow burn.
It wasn't like a mutual, like we are devolving or disconnecting or we've been working and working
and we can't get these things resolved. It wasn't like that. It was overnight. It was shock and off.
It was one day you know something and the next day you know something different.
And there isn't recovery from it.
A lot of people wanted to know, you know, because marriage and family has been the center spoke of my wheel for a very long time.
And so I know people were like, I don't understand why this, we're not now watching a fight for this recovery or we're not now seeing Jen and Brandon, you know, just go to the mat.
to resolve this or to repair it.
And the truth is sometimes that's not an option.
And that was not an option for us.
And so just like that, just like that, it was over.
And then there's some shit that goes on, but it was over.
That was the day it was over.
When I put the marker in the ground, it's July 11th, 2020.
A bunch of stuff.
And then we actually filed and then we actually got divorced, but that was the day.
That was the day that I was on my own in the world.
Wow.
I didn't know how to be a grown-up.
I certainly didn't know how to single parent.
I didn't know anything.
I had never had a single moment to myself as an adult woman.
And so it was scary.
It was shocking.
It was humiliating.
And there was just a minute there.
I can't honestly hardly remember it.
I was just in such a fog of trauma and grief and fear.
Yeah.
Jen, as you know, Glennon likes to celebrate your transformation in the world as the genusance.
That's right. She's branded it and it's really lovely.
You don't know my excitement.
Glennon, I don't know if you've ever watched in my social feeds every time you say that word.
Everybody piles on underneath it and they're like, I'm going to borrow that and I am now in the lenisance.
And now I'm in the Janet Assents.
And I'm like, listen, borrow it from her.
She's offered it to our community.
Take it, everyone.
I wish you could see every time, which may be like 20 times, I've written genocence under your things.
I have to Google how do you spell Renaissance every time.
And then I have to write it out.
And then I have to write it every time.
It's one of those times.
I don't know how to spell it right now.
I feel like if you paid me a million dollars to spell Renaissance, I would get it wrong.
It's possibly, even if you've done it many times, even if you've added the gen, it's, yeah.
Oh, God.
Anyway, I'm sorry, Amanda.
No.
No, there is not an apology for the genocence ever.
And so she's describing this first, the pain, then the waiting, then the rising.
And I think when I went through my divorce, when you say a stake in the ground and you kind of say, okay, that was July 11th.
And at first, I always thought the pain was right when I knew I was getting divorced.
And like that started the floodgate of pain.
But after I realized, no, the pain actually started well before then.
I just couldn't either see it or recognize it in myself.
But there was like a part of me that was grieving things in my marriage before I even knew I was grieving the loss of my marriage.
So do you, like looking back, are you able to see kind of,
where the pain was there for you before the implosion of your marriage?
Like what were you grieving before you knew you were grieving?
It's such a good question.
By the way, please enjoy the train.
I like it.
I feel like it might be an analogy.
Numerous.
It can't be helped or stopped.
Choo-choo, Jets come through!
I mean, okay.
Okay.
Happy.
I love this question, and I think that's an important one.
Because in my now experience and then what has opened up the floodgates inside my community that I lead,
I think this is ubiquitous.
I think women who are losing their marriages can get just a little ways out from it.
And when they're finally able or willing to be honest, they can go backward and say,
I knew.
Or I thought I knew or I knew something.
I don't know if you remember this Glennon.
So July 11th, 2020,
but I had your book in hand before it came out.
I had the advanced copy.
This was like January of that year.
So six months before,
anything before I knew,
anything that was important for me to know.
I read a very specific sentence in Untamed.
And it was a,
Essentially, I can't remember it exactly, but it was something like you gave a litany of things that might
possibly be going on in our lives that were really hard to say. They were embarrassing or they were
hard or they were sad or they were shocking and they were carrying these things around but we were
not saying them out loud. And one of my things was embedded right in the middle of the list.
And I had your book open and I just kind of like very. Very.
quietly, I closed it and I set it down and I sat there quietly for about one minute and I picked
up my phone and I texted you. And I said, something's wrong in my marriage. I didn't understand
it at the time because I was only feeling the symptoms. I bet I felt him. I felt him. Sure shit.
I felt them. I was feeling the symptoms and so I was trying to diagnose the problem and I was
partially right. Yeah. I was half right. And I said,
said something's wrong. Nobody knows. I don't know how to talk about this. I don't know what to do.
I'm trying so hard to fix it and I can't fix it. I can't get it all back in. I'm, um,
and I just need somebody to know it. And you immediately texted back because when I'll never get a text
back from you if I text you something silly. Never. It's like I never sent you a message. It's like,
it's like you don't have a phone. But if I send you something important,
If I send you something serious, you're Johnny on the spot.
And you know what?
I received this, okay?
And I actually respect it.
And you texted me back right away because I had given you what I think the problem was,
which you have some history with.
And you sort of began workshopping it with me and what it looks like in a marriage and how
I'm not alone in this.
And a lot of women are like biting their fingernails off in their marriages, but they don't
know what to do.
And so to your question, Amanda, I did know.
and I wish I would have been more courageous.
And honestly, I wish I just could have been more honest, even inside my own marriage.
I cannot imagine some of the suffering and sorrow that I maybe could have avoided if I would have just told the truth.
Number one, to myself.
That was the first person I lied to.
Because I just didn't want to believe any of it.
No.
26 years, my parents been married for 50 years.
My in-laws have been married for 50 years.
I'm like, we're going the distance, man.
We have five kids.
Damn.
Like, this, just no, not us.
Right?
And so I just kept thinking, I can fix this.
Like, I can, we're going to write the ship somehow.
And, but if I'd have been more honest,
and I think if I would have been more honest with him and said,
we both see this thing that's happening.
Like, what can and should we do?
I don't know what would have happened.
At this point, it's speculation.
But I did, I want you to know that I told him way after the fact, after I'd hit the bottom of the ocean and just drugged myself back up to the surface and we were able to speak and talk and be a little bit more honest and tender with each other than just like radical disintegration.
I'm like, I wasn't telling the truth to us.
And I wish I would have.
And this was broken.
And I just wouldn't admit it.
So if I wouldn't admit it, I couldn't address it.
And I wouldn't let you address it because that made it true.
And so we've kind of had that good healing conversation since.
But it's true.
It's hard to admit.
it's lonely.
Like, no one's in your marriage except you.
You know?
Like something about parenting.
Yeah.
For example, you get to reach sideways for that, you know?
We have each other in that.
And for some reason, that feels more, that feels easier to bring our community.
But in marriage, it is you and it's that person.
And so when things are so, so broken, it's scary and it's isolating.
And that's the easiest place, at least for me,
it'll lie to myself about what's real.
Yeah.
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Jen, you are so beautiful.
I mean, just the way you tell your story and the way you honor the other people in the story,
but also tell the truth.
I think that was just a service to so many people.
That's what I was thinking.
That we don't tell.
Like, we are in our marriages, but we are often just us in our marriages.
You know?
And so it isn't even...
You're not even with the partner.
A lot of people are not even with our partner.
We're just all.
And we don't know where our partner is.
Because if you don't say the thing because what happens after you say the thing?
That's why we don't say the thing.
Because what are you going to find out your right?
Who the hell wants to find out they're right about that thing?
And like it's not working, but it's working, right?
You are still married until you say the thing.
That's it.
And if you're like me, this like glass half full hope springs eternal type,
I'm like, we're just about to fix this.
You know, like it's just out of reach.
There's some sort of trickery or like formula.
We just haven't quite discovered.
And then we're just going to be like,
back. Like he'll be back in his own body and mind. We'll be back in this sort of relational space.
And we'll look back on this and be like, ooh, that little bit was rough. And so I think there's
also this like just this hope maybe that we hang on to because the truth is even when divorce
is literally the best thing, when it gives you back to yourself, when it returns you to your like
highest space and it delivers you to the second half of your life whole and healthy and good and your partner
for that matter even then divorce is traumatizing yes it is it just tears some things apart that we've
spent our adult life building and putting together and so and it affects so many people the rollout
of the centrifugal rings of affectation are still going on frankly a year and a half
later. And so I think we know that and just wanting to avoid that level of just
disconnection in all of our family structures makes us just kind of go, well, you know what?
I don't know. We're still paying our bills. That's right. Like our kids are in school.
Nobody's dropped out yet. You know, like, I don't know. I created a version of our marriage in my
own mind and convinced myself it was enough.
Yeah. Same.
And that wasn't fair to either one of us.
It really wasn't. And so,
I don't know. Not many people
were saying this out loud, which is why
Glennon, when I was kind of reading this and untamed,
I'm like,
do I have permission
for this? Like,
do we get to say
out loud that even
this long time heralded
marriage, much admired,
much written about?
Like much respected, do I get to say this is fragmenting and I am lost and he is lost and we are lost and we can't find our way back to each other.
And that was, I think, for me, the beginning of the end probably in a good way.
Really, I can say that now.
I can't believe I could ever say that, but I mean it now.
I'm thinking about hope when you're saying this and it's interesting, this idea of hope.
It's like sometimes I think our Christian,
version of hope fucks us up because, you know, the Buddhist version of hope is like,
don't have it, basically. Like, hope will, like, abandon all ye hope who enter here. But it is,
it's like hope can distract you from the truth. It, like, keeps you from accepting what is.
And hope is a beautiful thing when it carries you through the truth. Yeah. And, and, and, and, and you
match the truth with hope. But when you lose, when you use hope as a spiritual bypass to what is actually
happening in front of you. That's when it screws us over. That is the truest thing because you're
hoping in an invention. It's not true. It's made up. I made up a story about what was actually
happening and I made up a story about what could happen. And neither one of them were ever going to be
true. Ever. Ever. I just wrote myself a little script and went, well, that is sweet. That is lovely.
I like that story.
It's super hard when you're also a writer.
Yes.
When you also create narratives, you're like, I can do this.
I can make this a love story.
I mean, I think about that all the time.
Yes.
Did I live Love Warrior and then write it?
Because I don't think so.
I think I wrote Love Warrior and then hoped that I would live into that version of the redemption story.
It's so real.
Like, I think I am my own self-help author.
Dangerous freaking territory.
Totally.
Oh my gosh, me too.
By the time we got to July 2020,
I had told so many lovely stories
about my own marriage,
which were partially true.
Right, absolutely.
And partially was enough for me.
I was okay with partial.
I'm like, I will fit.
in the gaps on partial with my best friends, with my parents, with my siblings, with my kids,
with my work, with the women in my community, with my friends that we work alongside of each other,
that will be enough for me. And so my marriage can be partial and I can still be a happy human
lady. The shitty thing about that is it's a little true. Like it's not really true. I'm not
really happy, but I could run those traps. Yes. Yes. And nobody could really prove.
It's nobody can prove that it's not true. Like it's, you can, if I were under a lie detector test,
I could still pass. Like, there's part of this that feels true enough to be true. That's the problem.
But what I'm learning, like what I'm discovering right now is, at least for me, having been married
my entire adult life, I just didn't know what I didn't know. And so what I'm discovering is that
Oh, that was really partial.
Yes.
Now, I had, you know, I was in a slow pot of boiling water.
So that partial space just, it just crept up on me, you know?
Where all of a sudden, like if you'd have dropped me into that scenario from 10 years previous, I'd been like, oh, shit.
What has happened here?
Like, something has derailed.
But because it kind of was a slow coming, I talked myself into that being a fulfilling,
life day by day, right? Month by month by month, year by year. And as things continue to fall off,
I would backfill them with other healthy relationships or spaces. And just, I just kind of kept
the balance like this, just enough. Just enough. I had the capacity to do that forever. But what I'm
experiencing right now in genuine wholeness and completeness, just in and of myself, like in my own
soul in my own life, I'm stunned that I would have chosen to live that way for the rest of my life.
And I am now like grateful. I'm really grateful to be here. Did I want to get here the way I got here?
God, no. And I don't wish that on anybody. And I, my heart for women who have been in a super similar
path is just endless now. But am I sorry that I'm here? I'm not. I'm really not. I feel like,
I am, this is me.
I feel me.
I feel me living.
I feel me alive.
I feel me leading.
Without editing and without constantly having to shape shift around somebody else
and without having to keep the thing afloat.
And I wouldn't trade it.
There she is.
You said shape shift.
And that's, what do you mean by shape shift?
because I also heard another conversation with you and Jamie Wright and Kristen Howerton.
Yeah.
They're your dear friends and they know you and then they as you and then they know they knew you as wife.
And you just said shape shift and they said you were a human spotlight and a cleanup crew.
As a wife.
What can you talk about those things that you can look back and see yourself as different?
in that role than as you were as you.
And what does it mean to be a human spotlight and a cleanup crew?
And just so you know, sister and I talked about this for an hour in terms of our own previous
and like it just made so much sense to me.
And I feel like people are going to get it in their own.
I'd like to hear both of your thoughts on that too.
That was really hard to hear from my friends.
And I heard it earlier.
I heard it before we were divorced.
And I was shocked.
I was shocked because I didn't know that there were two versions of me.
I didn't realize it.
And I certainly didn't know it was observable.
You know?
I felt like I was running a pretty clean operation.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Because it was my job to keep our best foot forward as a couple.
And I did it.
I thought I was doing it.
I thought I was doing it.
You did do it.
And I thought that when things were like dipping and wobbling and going off the rails that I was course correcting quickly enough, outward facing so that that was either like, oh, well, that was silly.
Or we could shrug that off.
Like, that's a weird day.
That was a strange conversation.
Those girls were with me in January, right before I texted you, Glellan, January of 2020.
And that's when they told me that.
We were all together with all couples for four days.
And they very bravely, and I commend all friends who love us enough to come to us and say hard things.
Yes.
I commend them.
I can't imagine how hard that was for them to say to me because I didn't ask for their opinion.
It's not like I said, did you guys see me absolutely shrink or no? Like, did I just go real small?
Did my light snuff out or was side normal? You know, I didn't give them any rope.
They just came to me and said, we just need to tell you something that we're seeing.
And I was defensive because I was embarrassed.
Yeah.
Because I'm so strong everywhere in my life. I'm powerful.
Everywhere in my life in every role, except that.
and I just didn't know that anybody saw it.
Yeah.
You know, I thought it was internal.
I thought I was just going to carry that inside me and partially make it work forever.
And so this is what I've learned, what Brunet taught me.
So Brunet called me like in maybe week two, week one or two after DefCon, you know, one.
And she's, she told me something.
things to do. And when Brunay tells you what to do, you do it. Right. You don't get to disobey.
And, you know, she doesn't come in real gentle either. She kind of comes in like a wrecking ball.
Like, there's no hair petting. It's not like, this is a real hard time. She's like, I've got one
hour. I'd like you to sit down and grab a pin. I'm like, you will be crying. You will be
rising strong in 15 minutes. But one of the things she's,
told me, she gave me a list of things that I was going to do and ways that I was going to survive.
Some of it had to do with my body.
And just, she's like, it's radical self-care time.
And this is no joke.
She's like, don't take this lightly.
But one of the things she told me back to our point here is to get the book codependent no
more.
Yes.
Melody.
Yeah.
We have several copies.
There are like six of them here.
Y'all.
Y'all.
I'm still furious.
When you come out as a lesbian, they make you read that book.
It's just like part of the care package you get sent.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's the rules of admission to the lesbian club.
This is the book on how to lesbian.
Yes, but it's codependent forevermore is what we call it.
Wasn't that book like just a kick in the teeth?
I didn't understand codependency.
I don't know if you guys did.
When I hear that word, I thought that word meant you are a needy person.
Like you're fragile and you don't have the muscle memory to be independent anywhere in your life.
And that's what I thought that meant.
And I'm like, well, that's not me.
No, because you, what the listeners need to know if you haven't picked it up for the last 30 minutes,
Jen does not, those are words she would not have related to.
fragile.
Jen,
Gen handle it
hat maker.
Yes.
Right.
I'm like,
I'm not fragile?
Like that needy?
Just so you know,
when you describe Bernay,
that is certainly how I feel about you.
You too.
It's Texas or something.
Maybe.
Maybe it is.
You know,
maybe it is.
And we're sorry.
The state makes us this way.
You see that we're,
it's a race to the bottom.
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As a recovering person, I know a lot about codependency because of recovery.
We learn a lot about it in that.
Yep.
Yeah.
Yep, totally.
And that would be the backdrop to what it means to be a human spotlight
and what it means to be the cleanup crew,
because essentially the central definition of codependency
is that you just do not allow another person
to sit in the consequences of his or her choices.
You just won't allow it.
You don't either.
You don't want them to feel the discomfort of it.
You don't want other people to observe what's true.
That would have been closer to me.
You don't want to live with a ticking time bomb.
So you shape shift around somebody's like volatile personality just to steady the waters, right?
So that you're just not constantly having explosions all around you.
you're basically taking on the effects of somebody else's choices and you are crafting an environment around someone else
so they don't have to feel their own pain, their own discomfort, their own trauma, their own consequences,
or even their own responsibilities. And then I was like, well, shit. I took that book and I give it a little toss,
right across my living room, just a little toss. I was like, you don't know me.
You don't know my life.
I did not know I was codependent.
I thought I was just being a good person.
Right?
I thought I was just being helpful.
I thought I was just being in service to another person.
Or I did not realize how much I stunted our own growth.
Not just mine, but his and ours.
and had I let the chips fall where they were supposed to fall all along,
who knows what we could have solved, right?
Like, had consequences worked their magical effect,
because they do, one way or another,
who knows how we could have grown,
or what would have been possible for him inside his own, like, soul and his own trauma?
Or how we could have learned to relate to one another in healthy, mature adult ways
as two whole people, not two half people trying to make one whole, right? And so that was really
hard to learn. And I took that to my counselor and she was like, this is your work. She's like,
I promise you, this is not Brandon's fault. It's not. She's like, these are your choices. You made
these choices one by one because you preferred a steady, stable environment over whatever was true.
and if you don't deal with these behaviors and responses,
you will 100% walk them into your next relationship.
Wow.
And she's like, you're probably already behaving this way with your kids.
I'm like, you're mean.
Like, I'm paying you $150 an hour to not talk to me like that.
What have you been trained by Brunay Brown or something?
No, seriously.
I'm like, I'm hurting.
Sure enough, when I decided to tell,
like put that overlay over parenting. I was like, oh no. Yes. Oh, nuts. And so that's been a lot of
my personal work for the last year and a half is figuring out how to let other human people just be
human people all the way. Good, bad, hard, making good choices, making terrible choices, because they're a
person and that's their life. And it's not my life. And so I am only, I'm in about the 54,
percent mark on this, you guys, if you want a grade. I would still give it a kind of an F-minus.
I've pulled up from zero. So we're going to call it progress. We'll take it.
What is your experience here with codependence inside these relationships, like specifically,
because they manifest their differently than I think they do with our work partners or with even our
kids or our parents. But inside like a marriage, oh, Lord, that can sink a ship. Yeah. I have a lens.
when I think about this, that it's just a question. I don't know if this is true or not, but I found
these journals, I can't believe I'm about to admit this out loud. Oh, my gosh. I know. I found these
journals from like 15 years ago or something. I don't know. And they were, I was writing to myself,
to God, I guess. But I was saying things like, dear God, please help me let Craig be the spiritual
leader of my family. Please help me be less loud. Please help me be less, less, less. Okay.
I'm sweating again every pocket. But like that is who I was trying to be less. And when I think about
the way the cleanup crew manifests in like a social thing to me is like the person says something
dumbass. And like you just don't let everybody experience and him experience the discomfort of having
said something dumbass. You jump in and go,
the dancing monkey. Like you try to
distract everyone from what just happened. You try to put it in context
real quick for everyone else. You just, you're like a
gazebo or what is that called? The, the, at a hockey
game in the middle. A zamboni. A zamboni.
Which is almost exactly like a gazette.
It's pretty close. I mean, I tracked, to be honest with you,
As soon as she said hockey, I'm like, I'm there.
Okay.
It's fine.
So you're a gazebo is what you want.
So the cleanup crew, I see it with like literally almost all of my friends and me.
It's like so the giggling, the making okay what you just said.
Yeah.
Is just, it's terrible actually.
It's so gross.
But that's the spotlight thing is what I'm really interested in, especially with you.
because and what I was just writing about my journal.
It feels to me like it's perhaps set up in patriarchal marriages, especially inside of Christian
marriages or any marriage where the man is supposed to be the thing.
Yeah.
The problem is that doesn't work because people are just people and there's going to be
somebody who's shinier.
Yeah.
who's bolder, who's probably a little bit wiser, who's the leader.
And it might be the man and it might not be the man.
It might be the woman.
But when the woman is as shiny and bold and wise as you are, in order to fulfill the deal
you made, which was to always allow him to be, you have to become a human spotlight.
You have to become dimmer and dimmer and dimmer and try to make him shine.
Because you've not only broken the rules by being as successful and effervescent and beloved and admired as you are.
You've already fucked up the whole deal you made, which was to allow him to constantly be better than you.
It sucks so bad because it's so true.
Like I have, I internalized that narrative so deeply and didn't really have another one until I was a
own person with critical thinking skills.
And by that point, I'd already screwed it up.
I'd already gone out on my own ledge.
I'd already created my own world and couldn't understand the tremors that that was creating.
And so I was trying, again, to fix it.
Like, I can be as powerful as I am in all these places.
But when I come back over here, I need to put a lid on that shit.
like because it's causing some problems and I don't get it.
And also what sucks about that about me just constantly kind of shrinking so that I didn't,
we didn't get too out of whack here, you know?
It can't be like this.
It can only be like this.
Is that that's like not even fair to him.
What a shitty arrangement.
Like, look, you're married to a small.
smart, wise, powerful person, literally, damn.
Like, let's fit into our spaces correctly.
We could flourish like that, like literally flourish.
And so even the effort to try to sort of pony up this ethos that you don't even have,
right, to be a thing to match or supersede this.
What, that's exhausting.
And shameful.
I'd be worn out.
It shames.
It shames the dude.
I can just imagine Craig in his little.
journal being like, dear God, help me be the leader.
Like, he didn't want to.
It shames the guy who maybe does it.
It does.
It also happens in lesbian marriages.
My marriage was, this is that too.
Yes, you made yourself small, small.
I had to make myself small to feel like that there was like some sort of balance.
It was a root belief like childhood thing too.
Youngest of seven, I think what I've learned is that it comes down to stepping into my
full humanity and loving myself fully enough because there was a part of me that felt like,
oh, yeah, I should dim my light for you. That's what a good partner does. And really,
it's just about self-love. Like, it was self-hate. I was hating myself in doing that.
It's so true. And then I think what happens when we like sign on to this agreement inside a
marriage or any kind of partnership where we sort of agree with one another, I'm going to shrink.
so you can expand.
I'll clean up,
I'll clean up and I'll shine the spotlight.
It does create a lot of shame in both partners.
It creates,
it does.
That's a shameful practice.
And so shame is when we make our worst choices.
When I am operating out of shame,
that's my grossest self.
That is when I say and I do things
that if I were looking in on that from the outside,
it'd be like, Jen.
behave. Like, no, we don't talk like that. Like, we don't say that. We don't posture ourselves like that.
Like, shame, that sort of shameful agreement made us mean and it made us punish each other.
And we did that in different ways. I think, I think he would say this.
Brandon punished me with aggression and dominance.
and anger, which has a catastrophic effect on me, just the way that I'm built. That is already, take out
the context. That's going to make me sort of freeze. I freeze like that. And then I punished him
with withdrawal and withholding. And so I will just go dormant. I won't respond to this. I won't
engage you. I won't even try to make this better. I'm just absent. I just, the gin has left the building.
And so we just got in this circular pattern of like aggression and withdrawal.
And we just couldn't find each other anymore.
Like I've had so much resentment around this.
So much.
I was buried in resentment for ways that I was choosing to respond.
My choices.
Right?
At any point, I had the tools.
I had the resources.
I instructed other women how to do better in that scenario.
to do as I say, not as I do community.
And I just couldn't access it.
Now, like, my counselors help me identify shame when it's coming in.
It's not a life sentence responding out of shame.
We are not stuck in that.
That is not a prison that we have to stay in.
It is work to learn how to identify shame, how it feels in our bodies,
what it actually does to be physically,
where my thoughts start going when I'm in a shame spiral.
and I can grab that by the tail.
I'm learning to grab that by the tail
and say, oh, this is the instruction.
My body is instructing me right now
that I am getting pushed into a shame space.
And so let's take a minute.
Let's take a beat.
Let's get in front of this.
Let's talk about what's true here.
What's not true?
Because shame is always constructed on something
that's not true, some sort of lie.
Whether it's fear-based or reality-based or both.
Something in here is not true,
and it's not going to serve me.
So let me take a deep breath.
Let me go put my feet in the grass.
Let me drink some water.
And let me pause before I start to respond out of this space and regret it tomorrow morning.
And so that's hard work kind of.
I'm also medium at that.
But I think that's what happens in our marriages when we continue to shame each other by
either shrinking or expanding when that was really never how we were meant to fill a room.
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When I think about women who have good friends, I think that you to me are an example of one of the
people in my life who values, who puts the energy in, the depth and the realness and the family
of friendship that you have created in your life is freaking beautiful.
Here's my question.
why in the hell
don't why do we share everything with our friends
except for
the marriage shit because did you
like did you share your you didn't because they had to come to you
only half only half yeah okay I did half
so like what would you share and what and and then tell me
why do we do this why do we leave each other alone
why why do we why do we because we're so good
at getting down into the dark tunnels with each other.
We're so good at it.
Like, I know this experientially.
When I am like capsized by something in parenting or in work or in a relationship with my parents,
my friends are like excavators coming down to get me and like grabbing me by the, you know,
I know that this is our magic, that this is the power of women in relationship with each other.
The marriage piece,
It's so interesting for me to look back on the year prior and go, hmm, I did pull my friends in at about the 50% mark.
And the parts that I shared were the parts that were palatable.
The ones that felt like I could garner compassion for my friends, not just for myself, but for Brandon.
I didn't want him to be, I didn't want him to be non-redeemable in my friends.
friend's eyes, you know? And I needed, I needed to keep him above board enough so that we could
eventually hit that elusive recovery phase that I was waiting to happen and that everybody could
still love him and love us. And so I think had I been more honest, which I was after, oh, it was so
hard to say some things that had been real and true and just like, of course, how is it met with
nothing but open arms? Nothing. Nothing. It's not a disconnector. It's a connector. I've discovered
this in my own community of women online that I lead because I just, you guys are kind of like this too.
I don't know. There's not a second version of me. Do you know what I mean? I wish there was.
That would make things so much easier on everyone.
For real.
I just only know how to be mostly this one meet.
And so I didn't know how to suffer privately.
I didn't know what else to do except for just live my life, like the way it was really going,
kind of in the public eye.
And I was like, well, let's just see how this goes.
Like, I don't know what this is going to mean for me, having talked ad nauseum about marriage since Facebook existed.
Right. Shit. God. What could go wrong? What could go wrong? Everyone's going to love this. But what was interesting was to find out, as always, God, we know this. How many times we have to preach us before we believe it, which was what it actually became that level of vulnerability of like raw, unprotected, exposed pain that I just.
said out loud and put in front of my community, what it was was an invitation for connection.
And it's exactly what it became. And something happened in my community over the last year and a half.
I mean, it just experienced depth that we've really never had together because this is not rare.
It's not. People are hurting. And they're hurting specifically inside of their marriages.
And my story is not new. It is old and boring. I'm saying, please.
men, can we get a new story?
This one's so boring.
Make up a new one.
They all want to be so cliche.
Good.
What else could there have been?
You know what I mean?
Like, some sort of different shock and awe.
I don't know.
Be more creative.
I love that whole thing where we protect our people from the version of the truth because we
are afraid they won't be able to take our people back.
It's like that thing I say to my people, you know,
I would like to be friends with you, but I already told my sister what you did.
So I can't.
So we're done.
Sorry.
Forever.
Yeah.
But I think it's beyond that, though.
I think if we're being really honest, it is about our people and about how you're going
to look at them from now on.
And are we going to still be able to like go on that group vacation?
Because now you know who he is.
But actually, it's about your view of me.
Because as much as I can't handle you.
viewing him like that, I can't handle you viewing me as the kind of person that's going to stay with that.
Yeah, totally.
Because the cardness in our culture is someone who settles, someone who's fine. So if you say,
this is the situation of my marriage, and also, I'm not leaving it, it's like your respect for yourself has gone down,
but also the respect that you perceive that they have for you feels like it goes down.
And at least for me, that is hard, you know?
It's so real.
And that's always mattered to me disproportionately.
What do people think of me?
This is one of my monsters to slay.
And it has an outsized effect on my choices, or has.
It has, for sure, which is.
something, a lovely little side gift that this kind of public divorce gives you. Guess what?
You get to fix that. That's dead. So I think you're right, Amanda. And what sucks about this whole
thing is that what's actually true is that when we are standing kind of naked in front of one
another. And we are just stripped bare of all of our pretences and all of our posturing and all the
ways we polish our gross stuff up and all this pretending. That is really where the magic is.
That is where real connection is. That is where real community is. Ironically, that's where real
hope comes from. The real kind that really has, it's based in reality. And I don't know why we
run away from this so much. I really don't. The self-preservation.
thing has a terrible ROI.
Just terrible.
It doesn't even work.
It doesn't even work.
I'd love to see us tear this down brick by brick.
And I think what happens when people like us who have a lot of eyes on us more than makes sense and more than I like, frankly.
I don't think we're necessarily built for this kind of attention.
And it kind of has a corrosive effect.
Anyway, whatever.
That's a different ball.
I think when we can dig deep enough to stand like that in front of our communities without
defending, without justifying, without making it a little better than it really is, without
anything, just being true, it has this contagious effect.
And I think it has a ripple effect through our communities that is so healthy and it's so
good and we start showing ourselves to one another. And because every single time, I mean, God,
how many times I have to say this? There's nothing new under the sun. Every single time, it's a me to,
me too, me too, me to, too, every time. I don't care what your thing is. I swear to God,
I don't care what it is. However weird outlier little situation you feel like you were in,
you are not, you are not, you are not. Like, you have a weird little club that you belong to.
Congratulations. You know, you don't want it. Me neither. But we have it. And,
So it's so good for us to do this. And so I know that we are all committed to continue to live
like that as often as we can. Because we're also just human little people and we'll go into our
little hidey holes and get weird. But as often as we can, I think leading with that sort of vulnerability
and truth telling is going to have far-reaching effects that we'll probably never even see.
It's the commitment to say, okay, I'm okay with you admiring.
a little bit less because I want you to love me.
So true.
And it's the only cure for loneliness, right?
I mean, it doesn't matter what your situation is in your marriage.
The universal experience when you're struggling in any way in your marriage, whether you're
admitting it or not, is a profound loneliness.
And then when you are able to hear the truth about other people's marriages,
guess what that does makes you feel less lonely yeah yeah it's so real yeah and it takes away the shame
of it too uh the deep shame that seeps into our bones it's it's a mean shame because it's not fair
and it's not warranted but that sort of connection inside shared pain it just seeps out that shame
bit by bit and it just loses its power over you i mean it really does shame is so powerful in the
dark so powerful i could just convince us of all sorts of things
And so to me, that is an incredible antidote.
It is literally a healing property to choose to not stay isolated in our own suffering,
but invite people into it.
Like, that alone is 80% of it.
I mean, I get 80% there, just simply not being alone in it anymore.
So I do believe in that.
And I love the community that you build and host, which literally almost enforces this.
You just, you know, we're not.
not setting tables where people have to just put on their prom dress in order to fit at it.
You know what I mean?
It's just a messy, sloppy mess.
Yes.
It is.
So here's what we're going to do.
I assumed that during this 50 minutes, we were going to get through the pain, the waiting,
and the rising, okay?
Of Jen's life.
Apparently, the pain, the waiting, and the rising takes longer than 50 minutes.
So today, I think we got to the pain.
So what we're going to do?
So we've never done this before in the history.
We can do our things.
But I'm going to beg Jen to come back.
And we're going to do a part two because I,
we must Jen Hatmaker talk about how you during the waiting and in the rising just got your shit together.
Like I have never seen just figured out how to do life as a whole person.
You had your there she is moment, but it was you.
It was there she is Jen Hatmaker.
Genisance.
The Genisance.
The damn American hero.
An American hero.
This is enough.
That's a lot.
This is a lot right now.
I don't think so.
Okay.
Jen, you do hard things and we love you.
Same.
And for the POT Squad, we will catch you back here for the next episode of We Can Do Hard
Things and you won't want to miss it because Happy and I will be having a double date.
With Miss Jen Hatmaker and her new boyfriend, Tyler Merritt.
Catch you then.
I give you Tish Milton and Brandy Carlisle.
I came out the other side.
I chase desire.
I made sure I got what's mine.
I continued to believe.
That was I'm a...
Because we're adventurers and heartbreaks on map.
A final destination we lack.
They stopped asking directions
to places they've never been.
And to be loved, we need to be known.
We'll find through...
It felt like a brand new star
And sometimes things fall hard
And I continue to believe
The best people are free
And it took some time
But I'm finally fine
Because we're adventurers and heart breaks
We've stopped asking
A final destination
We've stopped asking directions
To places
They've never been
And to be
Too hard
We Can Do Hard things
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