We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - ADDICTION: How do we love an addict and how does an addict love herself?
Episode Date: June 8, 2021TW // abortion, bulimia, addiction In this episode discover:   1. How Amanda protected their sisterhood from Glennon’s addiction. 2. Which of the 12 steps Glennon refused to take. 3. What it ...took for Amanda to finally quit the wine.  4. The answer to the Pod Squad’s question about quarantine drinking and how much is too much.  To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi everybody! It's Glenin! I cannot believe that you came back to we can do hard
things every single week. It just blows my mind. Thank you for spending this hour
with us. I am feeling sappy this morning, half sad, half happy, and happy because
this week my sister and her babies and her husband came to Naples to see us. I haven't seen them for a year.
And I got to squeeze all of them. We missed Christmas together as so many did because of COVID. And so I decided we were going to do Christmas dammit.
So much to Abby's chagrin.
We put up the tree. We decorated the whole house.
Yes, we did.
We decorated cookies.
We sang Christmas carols.
We had Christmas morning.
We had Christmas.
And it was wonderful and beautiful
and they left last night.
So I miss my sister already,
but I'm very excited that she will be joining us
in a minute to discuss something
that so many people have asked minute to discuss something that so many
people have asked us to discuss and we can do hard things and that is addiction
and sobriety. How do we decide? How do we figure out if alcohol is a problem for
us? How do we love addicts in our lives? How do we protect ourselves? How do we love addicts in our lives? How do we protect ourselves?
How do we show up for them?
How do we talk about sobriety and addiction and what are all the different ways that alcohol
can give us or keep us from a beautiful life?
Let's get started.
Today, what we are going to talk about is sobriety and addiction.
And I think this will just be the first of many conversations we have about this topic because this has been, addiction and
sobriety have been the hard thing of my life and because it's been the hard
thing of my life, it's also been the hard thing of your life, one of the hard
things of your life because you are my person and you have been through all of
it with me. And I have told my story, my addiction story,
my alcoholism story, my food addiction story,
and my recovery story so many times.
And I think what has been missing
from all of that is your perspective.
So many people say to me, I'm not you, I'm not the addict,
I'm the one that loved the addict,
the one that loves the addict now. And that is a perspective that we don't hear enough.
So the hard thing we're discussing today is sobriety, but it's also being
and it's also being someone who loves an addict. Right?
Yep.
So the story I've told so many times, but some people don't know is that I became a food
addict when I was 10, I believe it.
And then that morphed into many other addictions and I became an alcoholic in my late teens and
didn't get sober until I was 25. And the day I got sober,
I had found out that I was pregnant. And so I just found myself one morning just sitting
on a bathroom floor holding a positive pregnancy test and just shaking from terror, but also from withdrawal and hangover.
And something about that day, I think I was so sick and so broken and I had burned every
bridge in my life and I just think I really understood that moment as maybe a last chance
kind of to come back to life. And so I actually called you from the bathroom floor. And
my memory is that pretty soon after that you came to me and picked me up and took me to my first
recovery meeting. So that would have been the rock bottom in the beginning, but let's go backwards
a little bit. I just want to hear from you. I mean, it's
wild because of all of the conversations we have, we really haven't even in private.
Now we've never talked about this. I know. I'm kind of actually scared. I really am. I was thinking
about it this morning, like I'm scared to know. But what was it like? My addictions affected your life from a very, very early age because I think mom and dad
found out about my bulimia when I was around 12, which means that you were only 9.
No, it was earlier than that.
Was it?
Yeah, didn't they?
It was what, the first time that they saw
The first time we were at grandma's when they discovered that you were throwing up and that night they talked to me about it so
Because they were like deep what do you know? Is this been happening?
Was that even that even that that's so interesting right?
So the first experience from the person who, the sister is,
what did you know?
What do you know?
What, what was it like?
And I'm sure that's a really loaded question
you could answer a million different ways.
But what do you remember about being raised in our family
where one sister was sick and you were living with that?
I mean, I don't't really I obviously remember that night and and I
didn't know that it was happening before they knew it was happening. I think that I'm obviously
was worried, confused, you know, I would have been seven or eight or nine. I can't remember which, what the date they found out.
And then I lose track until the next kind of pivotal moment when you were a senior in
high school and you went to the mental hospital, that I remember being a real moment of fear and worry and just kind of
odmyna freshman high school and just was very, very worried and scared for you but was proud of you
for going there. Do you remember dropping me off? Because I only have flashes, but I do remember very well. You guys dropping me off.
What do you remember from that day? I
remember we all we got in
Dad's pickup truck. We drove to I remember the name of the hospital. We drove there. It's surreal when you think about it. We just
Deposited you at this hospital. I remember that
got you to your little room, set up your stuff. Do you remember what you gave me?
The letter and the Mariah Carey song. Yeah, you gave me a letter. I tried a bunch of beautiful
things about how I was strong and that you loved me so much.
And then inside was the letter was this little smaller note.
And I unfolded it and it was the lyrics to the hero song by Mariah Carey.
And by the way, it is really moving those lyrics.
Where did that?
Oh my gosh.
It's the heroes inside of you. Like you have everything you need. It's all inside of you.
Yeah, it's the message I've needed my whole life and I still do as a 45 year old. So you nailed it. Well Mariah Carey nailed it.
I mean, yeah, that's really she's really the hero we all need if we're being honest. Right, right, right.
Yeah, so I that was a moment. And then it kind of, several months later, you went to college and that's when I feel
like I understood things as I began to understand you as two people instead of one.
So all they're going to, I mean, we were completely,
we were so tight.
I don't, I don't remember playing a lot.
I don't remember having really doing much with anybody
who wasn't you throughout going to us.
Yeah, it was just the two of us for all the things.
And then we even had one blankie.
Do you remember we had a one blankie,
as one security blanket,
and we would share it,
I slept in the bottom bunk
and you slept in the top bunk.
So we would share the blankie,
like across the bunks,
and then one day we were in a hotel room.
I don't know why, maybe in Ohio.
And we were fighting, we were in two different beds,
and we were fighting over the blanket.
So mom walked in and cut were fighting over the blanket.
So mom walked in and cut the blanket down the middle and gave you half and me half.
And I remember you being fine with that and me being like, you thinking like, yes, awesome.
Why don't we think of this earlier?
And I remember feeling devastated by it.
And I don't remember the thoughts, I just remember the feeling and it makes me think like that
was a connection to you that I needed.
It wasn't the security of the blanket, it was the security of being connected to my sister
by the blanket.
Yeah, a shared security blanket, it's maybe textbook codependence.
So codependency.
A shared security blanket.
I mean, and also goes back to our core issues of like scarcity and money.
Like, why the hell didn't we have two security blankets to be in bed?
You get a blankie, kids.
Enjoy your blankies.
And by the way, I took that blankie with me to college.
Yeah, to college.
I had it to college and my dad, when I graduated, cut a teeny piece of the blanky off and put it
in a frame and it says, in case of emergency break glass. I know that was so sweet, right?
It was so sweet. So two people, I was two people in college. I think I just kind of intuitively understood
that there was this one sister that I've always had.
That was still there.
And this kind of wisdom and love, and I could always do anything for me.
And then I just understood there was this different version.
And there was, oh, I could always tell.
It's funny.
Within like 20 seconds of a conversation or a phone call or whatever,
I could tell if you'd been drinking.
It was just, it's just like when you know someone that well and it's just like a tiny, it's like a click.
You just know that person differently. And as college moved on for you, I see, it was just clear that you were not in possession of yourself.
Like there were some moments where you were in possession of yourself and there were,
and then those were wonderful.
But I just understood that you couldn't, you could not not lie.
You were, I, you couldn't tell the truth.
You couldn't, and I didn't expect otherwise.
I don't remember being super upset about it.
I remember kind of just understanding it as fact.
Like I think, I think I realized it was at one point
in college where I'd called wherever you were supposed
to be living at the time where you had told
mom and dad and me that you were living. And it was just this familiar one of the girls answered.
I was like it's good in there. It was before cell phones or anything so you couldn't get in touch. And
I was like oh there was kind of yeah let me see. And they kind of of all restaurant. I was like, Oh, Glenin doesn't live there. No, like she definitely doesn't live there
And I think that was the that was the the moment for me where I realized okay, she
She can't she's just living a whole another
Life and she is
She's not in possession of herself for the remainder.
Did mom and dad used to talk to you about, you know, they, they're kept being like
little mini interventions, like I have flashes of those flashes of, you know,
sitting on the couch across from mom and dad and then something awful had just
happened that every, my whole life and then something awful had just happened that every
my whole life was just something awful happening after another awful thing
happening after another awful thing happening all tied to drinking and I you
know I remember mom and dad looking at me and saying do you even love us? I'll
never forget that and just feeling like oh oh my God, I have no answer for you because
every single one of my actions proves that I don't, except that I do.
I'm swallowed up.
I remember feeling like I've been swallowed.
I'm swallowed by this whale that is addiction and no one can hear me and no one can see me, but I'm in here.
But it was like one of those movies where the person's alive and they're in a hospital bed and they can understand everything.
But they can't speak or communicate, you know, did you know that those little interventions were going on or did they did the mom and dad shield you from that stuff or how did you all communicate with each other
about my situation?
I mean, I definitely knew that they knew that you were struggling,
that there was,
that we all viewed you as having a major drinking problem, but
they didn't tell, they never asked me, thank God, to be a part of one of those interventions.
But I never understood the situation that way.
I think in part, you never, I just, I always viewed it as two people. Like I never, I never
viewed it as my sister is lying to me or my sister is asking me for money. It was
always like this. It was a, it was like an alter ego of you. And so I didn't, I
never, I never thought those things that they thought. I never, I don't remember
experiencing like, well, my sister doesn't love me or my that they thought. I don't remember experiencing like,
well, my sister doesn't love me or my sister can't.
I knew that you in that state could not protect me
and couldn't be trusted, but I didn't experience that as you.
Interesting. 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. desperately want and are so wishing that there was some advice or formula or reason that some people
end up getting the miracle of sobriety and some people don't. And so I know that people often say to you,
how did you do it? How do I help my sister as an addict? My person is an addict. You know, you got your miracle.
What did you do?
Like how do I help my person?
How do you answer that?
Yeah, I'm so glad you asked that because I see that a lot when people are responding to
you and they feel like they're doing something wrong.
And I just want to say very clearly, if you are listening to this right now,
and you want to know what I did to help Glennon into recovery, I just want to make very,
very clear that I did nothing.
And that no one has ever loved or prayed or suffered or strategized anyone into recovery, not in all the history
of the world.
And I think what I did with you, Glennon, as I just loved you, and I lived my life with
some really healthy boundaries, so that when you were ready for recovery, our relationship
wasn't irretrievably scarred. We had I not had those boundaries, the
pain from the drinking days might have made it so that it was too scarred to recover, but
all I did was just have those boundaries and love you and then answer the phone when you
when you
Decided that you were gonna get sober and I do
You your sobriety as a miracle like I don't think that there I cannot see any ascertainable answer as to why some people recover and some stay drunk
And why I get to do life with you my best friend and why other people lost theirs like I just there's no there's no reason. And so I just feel like, I feel like people are in this awful place where they feel like
they can work harder to get their person into recovery, but no one has ever earned or
deserved a recovering loved one.
And by trying harder.
No.
It's just, or loving more.
No, that's just a miracle.
So, and smarter or any of those things, it's just...
And you might never get the miracle.
Like, you can't just wear yourself endlessly down just trying to earn it because you might not.
And if you do, then there might be something left of you
to be able to love that person when they come back.
If you don't want to wear yourself down.
I think so many people think I can't make boundaries
because I love this person so much.
And another way to look at it is I have to make boundaries
because I love this person so much.
And I have to make boundaries because I love this person so much. And I have to make sure that there's
something left if there is a miracle of that love because addiction has a way of just
ravaging love without boundaries. So we did have that day. We did have that day where I called you
from the bathroom. And he asked like, we'd had a few of those days, I think.
So, we weren't sure that this was going to stick, right?
Like, nobody knew if this was going to be the actual time.
Do you remember?
I remember two things.
I have flashes of that day.
I have a quick flash of getting into your car.
I have, I remember walking into the meeting. I remember they're being brochures
on the table. I remember taking the brochures to the little circle, right? And everybody
sitting there reading the brochures. So this is probably why they give the brochures.
So you have someone to look awkward. So yeah, awkward AF. Yes. So I remember the brochures so you have somewhere to look awkward. So yeah, awkward AF. Yes.
So I remembered the brochures saying things like you might
be an alcoholic if I know it was like a magazine quiz.
It was like, yes, we can just do that.
This is a love of quiz.
I love a quiz.
So it was like, you know, you drink more than three drinks
in one setting or you ever black out
or you have shame where you're blah blah blah.
You drink in the morning.
And first of all, I remember other people watching other people take the quiz
and being like, this is so wild.
Like, isn't the fact that we're all sitting
in a frickin' church basement in the middle of the day
in this gross room, like enough of an indicator
that we have a drinking problem?
Like, did we really need this quiz?
The jig is up.
I don't think anyone is here who is not now, Collock.
Like, is anyone in the store gonna be like,
actually, I just had some extra time to kill
and came in here, I'm fine.
Okay.
I just took the quiz and I'm totally great.
I'm gonna go back to work.
Right.
So I remember that and then I remember checking
yes to every single one of them.
And I remember you putting your hand on my leg
and saying, actually, I don't know if AA is gonna be enough
for you, we might need AAA. Oh my God, anything to try to make. Of course, because that's how our family, like,
any humor we can bring in. But I do remember that was the first laugh.
And that's when I felt like, oh, okay, like, maybe we're going to be okay. Like, the laughter
has always been kind of a proof of hope for us. It's also just a coping
mechanism. But what do you remember anything from that day or do you ever anything different than I
remember? I just, that's, I remember those things too. I remember, I remember sitting there and thinking
like trying to figure out if I, how I could just do it for you.
I was like, can I just say that I'm, I just, they're thinking there's no way to
walk her all the way through this and that being awful. And then I remember
just going home and I do remember like for six hours we just cleaned your room. Do you remember that? Oh my god
I forgot that. That was to me, such because as we all know, my love language is just any
ability to help and it had been like 10 years at that point of not being able to help in any way, and it just felt like this,
we took every single disgusting thing out of that room
and we cleaned and we organized and we threw everything away,
and it was just this kind of hope
that you didn't have to live in a place
that wasn't worthy of you anymore.
I remember feeling like I remember you leaving that day and sitting in my room
and feeling like I deserve this place.
I deserve to live in a nice place.
I remember picking up just like all those old gross bottles and ash trays and just like the layers of shame and crap and disorder
and just one at a time you just loving we didn't even talk I don't think I don't think we talked we just like minute by minute put stuff away washed it clean surfaces. But that was the only meeting. After that, you went to the meetings by yourself,
and I just wonder, what was that whole process like for you? Recovery meetings and that whole
all the steps and all of it? Yeah, I mean, I feel nervous talking about this because I've never really talked openly
about my whole experience with recovery and specifically
AA.
It was very unbelievably life saving for me
in the beginning.
I'm an old school in my belief that I actually am an addict.
That an addict is a thing that people can be.
I know there's a lot of thought and talk now, which I respect, that is not real.
But I feel it in me.
I don't know how else to describe it other than there is a part of me that switches on and off when it comes to certain things that I cannot control.
So I believe in that. I believe that I actually am an addict and there are things that I need
to do to keep that at bay. I loved the truthfulness, you know, you know that the first time I
sat and listened to somebody in a name meeting, I thought, oh my God, like know, you know that the first time I sat and listened to somebody
in a name meeting, I thought, oh my God, like these are the people I've been waiting for my entire
life. These are the honest people. Everyone else is always acting and pretending and lying. And
this is where people come to be honest. That part of it was life saving to me. The accountability,
just replace them, some replacement thing.
When you're an addict, you just all you can think about is drinking.
So just to have something else to think about and to plan to do.
And people who will notice if you don't show up and who, you know, just the showing up
part, super, super important to me, I will tell you that I have never spoken to
what was publicly, but before, but I didn't do all the steps. So I was working the steps,
and then I got to the amends, the making amends step. And had a really interesting to me,
if it'll be interesting to anyone else, an interesting experience
with that step where I was unable to do it and I will try to explain why. I think the
best way, so we're just going to have to put 7 million trigger warnings on this episode,
but I don't know if you remember before I got sober, I had an experience where I had an abortion, I told mom and dad about it,
and this was in the depths of just the addiction, and all they just didn't know what to do with me,
and one night out of desperation. After I told them about the abortion, they actually sent me to this
priest. Do you remember this experience?
So there was some little church,
and I think some priest that dad had been going to
for some spiritual guidance about my addiction
and just being my dad,
and how to handle being my dad on this earth.
And so in a moment of,
we don't know what to do with this girl anymore, they said, just go
meet with this priest.
I was like, oh my god, I should do it.
And I'll never forget, I was actually hung over from the night before.
I was wearing a freaking black leather pants, stilettos.
This like my mascara down to my cheeks, just like just whoa.
And I had to walk into this small church and meet with this
priest that I had never met before.
And I remember sitting down on the other side of the table and I guess dad had talked to
him and this priest just like kind of launched into the speech to me about abortion and about
what a sin it was and that perhaps I could be forgiven, but I needed to, a tone,
and I needed to, the first thing I needed to do was start apologizing.
I needed to apologize, like right then and there.
And there was a part of me that just right now, you know, all these years later, I would
have had a much more
formed argument to make to this race. I would have had a lot of things to say in that moment.
Some of them would have revolved around like hypocrisy and patriarchy and whatever, but
at the moment all I could think was F you, just F you. And and that encompassed a lot of things. The idea of all of the, you know,
sexual hypocrisy that the church represented to me at the time. All of the fact that, you know,
nobody had even mentioned where was the the the man in this situation. like nobody was just so, so much of what I understood about shame and sex
and birth control and all of these things had come directly from me, from the church.
And I just kept like thinking, I know that I'm aft up, but like you too.
Yeah. Yeah. Like you too, you know, so like I'm sorry, but also F you
Right, I'll start apologizing if you start apologizing exactly like if we're gonna apologize. Let's both do it
Uh-huh. Okay, so but I didn't say any of that. You know what I said?
Hmm. I'm sorry
I'm sorry, and then I left and then whatever
when I I'm sorry. And then I left and then whatever. When I try to think about apologizing for my addictions,
okay, which is what making amends is, right? For all the people you're learning during the,
right? You go back from where your addiction started and then you think of every single person
or institution or whatever that you hurt
Throughout your addiction. Okay. All I could I wanted to do it
I wanted to do all the things they told me do I wanted to get healthy. I wanted to surrender. I wanted to whatever but I
kept thinking about so to whom do I apologize? Where do I start when I was 10? Right
To whom does my 10 year old self freaking apologize?
Or who owes my 10 year old self an apology for the fact that
it's really easy.
That's what I feel like, the metaphor that I would use to try to
describe how I feel about this is I feel like I was raised,
okay, in a country in which on every single corner there's a factory that gives off toxic
smoke, okay? Some people are okay with this okay-ish with the smoke, but there are certain,
you know, group in the population that has a gene that reacts negatively to this toxic, toxic smoke
that's in the air.
And those people get sick, okay?
And over time, this smoke makes them so sick that they start showing symptoms.
They start having symptoms.
And because of those symptoms, they become a huge pain in the ass to their family, to
their friends, to the community.
They become a burden because of these symptoms.
So eventually the symptoms get bad enough
that the people go to the hospital
and they're like, oh, I'm so sick
and I'm a burden to my thing.
And the doctors are like, well,
you better start freaking apologizing.
You better start freaking apologizing because that-hmm. You better start freaking apologizing
because that's the only way you're gonna get healthy.
Get on your knees
and ask for forgiveness
for getting sick.
Right?
I have a humility in my recovery
that understands that I am an addict
and I am powerless against alcohol.
Like I believe that. But it also has an FU, my recovery, that's like hold on a second.
Like I was born in a culture where every single message I heard from the time I was a baby
was that a girl's worth is in her beauty and the girl
the girl's beauty is in her smallness.
That girls aren't allowed to have big appetites, desire, that a girl's job is to stay small,
right?
And that was plastered on every billboard and every TV and in my home.
And by the way, alcohol culture was pumped into my
into my into our family. Eating stuff was pumped into our family. The messages
that I got were everywhere. Right? The smoke was everywhere. I was just freaking
breathing. So perhaps if there had been before the I'm sorry phase if there had been, before the I'm sorry phase, if there was an FU step, right,
where I got to actually line up, because I think that it's two parts, right?
Like there is the responsibility I have as an addict to do things differently and to create
a different life and to stop hurting people. But there's also the toxins, the smoke
that was pumped into the air all the time, right?
So my my surrender, my sobriety path is like,
it's not just on my knees.
It's like fist in the air a lot of time.
Like there is an FU to my recovery that is healthier for me
than just being that girl who sat and looked at the priest and was like, I'm sorry.
Right. And it's also another reason why people who love addicts need, need boundaries because a lot of addicts got to addiction quite honestly and and
our justice miserable as they can possibly be and they will hurt you.
And your job is not to save them. Your job is to protect yourself from their inevitable
hurt that has nothing to do with their love for you.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. All right. So, you know,
people will have a lot of feelings also about that AA stuff. And I will say that I found and find
so much help and beauty there. And also for me, whenever anything gets too rigid or dogmatic or fundamentalist
or tribalist, I can't do it. And so I have a major love and respect and no allegiance or the rigidity of that path.
Right?
So I think what we should do,
is we should take a break and get back to some Q&A.
And I think we're just going to have to do a lot more on
sobriety because I love talking with you about this. And love you so much and you know thanks for making the boundaries that
you needed so we had something beautiful to come back to. I love you sister thanks for
being the miracle of recovery so I had someone to come back to.
God I'm so glad I finally got to talk about that priest!
Fuck you! God, I'm so glad I finally got to talk about that priest! K.F.U.F.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U.U you so much for all of your questions and the topic ideas that you're leaving.
Here's the place to call if you have a question for Sister and I to respond to or if you have
a topic idea for We Can Do Hard Things.
The number is 747205307. So check in with us. We love to hear from you. We listen to every single voice now.
Okay, here's our first question. This question is from Laura.
Hi, Gladden. My name is Laura. I'm just listening to your first podcast and journaling this morning and just thinking about hard
things in my life right now.
And one thing is alcohol and how much I've been using it the past year during the pandemic.
And I'm confused on my relationship with it if I want to keep drinking, if I want to just stop all together.
I go on like these different ways,
like all in or all out, you know.
And I just, I'm confused on my relationship with alcohol
and how to move forward with it.
And any advice I would appreciate. Thank you.
I would love to take this one because I do. Yes. I understand this confusion very deeply
because I feel like the world has kind of presented to us two options of the type of drinker there is. So either there's like this fall down drunk
who loses their job and alienates their family
and has this quite conspicuous rock bottom at some point.
It's me, it's me.
Does that sound familiar?
And kind of is forced to stop drinking or should.
You know, everyone agrees they should.
And then there's everybody else.
And it's just kind of assumed that that
if you're not in the former category
that you're in the drinker category.
And the fault is you should keep drinking.
Right, exactly.
And I feel like our cultural culture does not make room
for people who are not in that super seriously
dramatically problematic drinking space
to even question in any way
whether they're drinking is working for them.
And I feel like it's kind of this very countercultural concept.
If your life is quote unquote working,
to even look at it,
and it makes everyone uncomfortable when you do.
So my path is very much like this.
So I got drunk for the first time when I was in seventh grade.
And I've always been on that tightrope of very high achiever
and also drinker.
Like that was kind of a badge of honor. Like a big part of my
identity was that work hard play hard thing. And then and that always appeared to
be working for me. And then a couple of a few years ago now my it started to
work less well for me. And I feel like from the outside,
things appeared to be still working correctly,
but my anxiety was through the roof.
I was more depressed than I had been before.
And there wasn't a night that went by that I didn't drink wine.
And there would always be a glass.
When I was making dinner, a glass during dinner, a glass after dinner, and you know
the glasses I'm talking about.
That's not the case.
Yes, I know your glasses.
I sure do.
And that was just my routine.
And I told myself it was perfectly normal for a couple to finish a bottle of wine every
night.
And I also very scoffally avoided the fact that my husband was drinking a glass of bottle of wine.
A couple, a couple to finish.
Everybody, we're just finishing,
and if everybody does that, we're so European.
And I was working really hard during that time,
and my life was crazy and two little kids,
and I just needed that click of relief.
It's like the only exhale, the only unwind that I could find in my life to
take me out of the constant mental ticker that is going through my head
constantly. And I just didn't have any other way that I knew up to do that.
And then I gradually started to realize that this thing that I was up to do that. And then I gradually started to realize that
this thing that I was using to make my life work
wasn't working for me.
And it was, it had been my door
into some kind of freedom from the rest of my life,
but it was actually the thing making me most unfree.
And the way I realized that, and I was very, I did not want to realize it,
but I just started thinking about it a lot. I was, I was, instead of worrying about all my problems,
I was starting to worry of whether I had a drinking problem. Yes.
And I also, but then, but I didn't want to ever say it out loud because I seriously was
wondering, how can I keep up my life without this?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, when you rely on drinking, it seems utterly impossible to consider.
Because you're in the spiral of anxiety and depression and you think that if you take away this one
thing that is that in a doubt to that, that your life is going to be all those things except
worse, except for no relief. It's like that Homer Simpson quote. It's like alcohol, the cause of and solution to all
of life's problems.
Well, it's, by the way, that is factually true.
I mean, not to go down a tangent, but it is,
science is clear that sustained alcohol consumption.
I believe this scientific term is totally jacks up,
but there's something like that. Totally jacks up. But something like that.
Totally jacks up your dopamine signaling in your brain and the GABA receptors in your
brain.
So it literally puts you on the spiral of anxiety and depression and dependence on that
to get out of it, but then leads you further down the cycle. So you need it more and you
think you can lose it less because of that vicious cycle. And I think for me, it just,
I was scared to say it out loud, very scared to say it out loud because it's kind of like
that meme that you, I've seen it a few times
that says, I would be friends with you again,
but I already told my mom what you did.
Exactly.
For me, it's sister.
I can't be friends with you
because I told my sister what you did.
Yeah, yeah.
It's just, there's no, it's done.
You can't undo that.
You know, it's out there.
And so I was afraid to say it
because I thought for sure that a couple of weeks
after I got the bravery to say it,
I would very much want to say psych.
I take all of that back.
But I think that I think it just,
it got, I forgot to feel trapped.
And I felt like I really truly knew it when you said about, I remember thinking in the
car driving one day and that part of my team where you say, you know, what is your
dragon?
What is your one thing that you know at the center of you?
And I knew it was that.
I knew it was that I was saying that I had all of these issues
so that I needed to drink when, in fact, my anxiety
and worry about whether I would ever be able to stop drinking was in fact my biggest
issue.
And a reason that you could never handle your or fix your issues because you're constantly
tapping out before you get to that discomfort that forces you to actually deal with the
issue.
So not only does alcohol become an issue, but all your other issues get bigger because all you're doing is avoiding them with the alcohol.
Right. And by the way, the other part of that, that's exactly right. But the other part
of that is what ever your thing is, I mean, whether it was my bulimia, when it was my
bulimia, whether it was my drinking, when I was my drinking, it is this decoy issue.
So you're both not dealing with your real problems,
but you're also telling yourself
that these other problems aren't problems
because your main problem is your drinking.
Your main problem is your bulimia.
And so your, it displaces all of the work
you should be doing because you're telling yourself, if I didn't have this one problem, all these other problems will go away,
which is also unfortunately not true.
Right. It's not true tragically.
And another thing that you keep bringing up is that you just kept thinking about it.
So whenever someone asks me, how do I know if I have a drinking
problem? My first thought is always, people who don't have drinking problems do
not sit around all day and wonder if they have drinking problems. Right? If you
are wondering, if you have a drinking problem, that might be enough evidence for you. Right, and I think, but I think it's fair to understand why people are confused about what drinking problem means.
Because we, I mean, every movie, every book, there is a caricature of a person with a drinking problem.
And they are arrested, and their parents don't speak to them.
And they lose custody of their kids.
And they, I mean, all of, so it's kind of the,
you don't know if you have a right to say it.
And you also feel, yes.
Right? And there's no place for people like that.
And it's double worse because the same media and culture
that holds up, oh, it's just this fall down drunk
that has the problem.
Also, continuously holds up drinking as the best life,
every celebration, every social gathering
that is meaningful, everything that is celebratory when what we see in the media involves alcohol.
Your best life will involve alcohol when actually alcohol often keeps people from their best life.
I mean, I think that's one of the ways you just know. Like, is this thing that I think is going to give me this best life?
Is it keeping me from whatever I believe
that my best life is?
Right, that's right.
And that is how I started to feel.
The thing that I was relying on to untrap me
from the frenetic pace of my life and my head
began to feel like my trap.
And so, I mean, my gosh, people do it, people do elimination diets with gluten or dairy
or whatever the hell else that is giving them hives.
But the idea of experimenting with whether, if you eliminated that from your life, if your life would be better,
is this kind of revolutionary thought that, and the reason it is, by the way, is because it shakes
up the whole ecosystem around you, because every time you stop drinking, people view that as a
judgment of theirs, and as long as that's right. That's right.'s drinking, then we all agree that it's totally normal
all day long. So anyway, for me, I think to the person who's asking this question, it just
feels like if you are thinking about it, you know, And your first steps can be, I mean, for me, my first step was I started one day, kind
of reached this crescendo in my head where I was like, I have to clear this mental space
of my head.
It's taking up too much real estate in my brain.
And I called my doctor's office to ask for an appointment.
And they, she didn't have one for like months.
And I realized that then like that moment, you know, you get all your, you're all psyched
up.
Yes.
I'm thinking I'm like that moment has passed.
I probably, I'll probably revisit this in three years.
So but the very, that's the universe, that's the universe saying I should probably just
keep drinking exactly order another case of wine. So I
The very next day I got a call from the same
doctor's office reminding of me of my annual physical that was the following day. Oh shit. That was the universe again
saying that you should stop drinking. So I thought you know like the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and over
and expecting different results.
I was like, what the hell?
What if I just go in there and just tell her
that God's on his truth for the first time in my life?
Oh my God, that is a revolution in itself.
It is.
It is.
So I just went in there and I told I was so scared I was shaking.
I when she asked all the questions that she asked every year prior to that,
where you have a lot of consumption. I'm like, um, eh, just about right-ish. Um, I, I told her
exactly what I was drinking. And I told her that I was anxious and depressed,
and I told her I was worried about it.
And she was great, and she looked at me and said,
okay, here's what we need to do.
Yes, that is, she was definitively.
I was expecting her to be like,
well, you know, but she was like,
aha, that's too much.
And she said, here's what we need to do.
You need to not drink for two weeks and then come back
and we'll make another appointment and talk about how it's going.
And I just burst out crying because the way she said
you just need to not drink for two weeks, like it was easy.
Like I could just, oh, that hadn't occurred to me before. So what I need to do is not drink.
So I wasn't expecting that crap.
So I came in here to say I needed to quit drinking
and you're telling me that the only way I can quit drinking
is to quit drinking, that's unacceptable.
But it's just, yes, it was too much.
It was too much.
And so I said, I knew if I left with nothing,
even if it was like a placebo effect,
something, something to make me feel like this was possible.
And the PM.
Yes.
Exactly.
I just said that to her, which was brave of me because I was usually in like, got it, got it.
And I was like, definitely don't got it. And she said, so she gave me this prescription for
something that was, didn't do anything for the cravings, but it was supposed to help with withdrawal.
So if you go from four glasses of wine every night for three years to zero, your body has a reaction
to that. So yes, I do remember.
And so she gave it to me to take for two weeks and then come back.
And it was, I remember, I was very, it was an emotional day,
but I remember picking up that prescription from the pharmacy.
And I just burst out laughing as soon as I looked at it
because on the outside of the bottle, it said,
call the doctor if you experience mood changes.
And I was like, try to do that now.
Yes, I'm pretty much already having them.
So, but that was 17 months ago, but that all happened.
months ago, but that all happened. And all of my problems are still my problems, but now I know what my problems are. And before I didn't, and eliminating the drinking has not fixed my problems, but it also is not part of the source of my problems.
And it's also not tricking me into believing that the drinking is my problem.
Like I can actually see, kind of clears the runway to actually look at what is.
And I do still feel shitty a lot of the time, but I definitely feel free.
And that's what I want.
And so I think that just I think it would do each person a great service.
And whether it's in whether it's about drinking or whether it's about relationships or whether it's about your partnership or something with your kid.
If we were just brave and bold enough to not need this kind of permission slip of a dramatic
rock bottom to look at things.
Yes.
To look at things.
I think that would really be a blessing for all of us
because it's like we need to wait until we're no longer having sex for six months to be like,
well, it's officially a problem. Or we need to wait until our kids are, you know,
until the teachers telling us that something's very wrong or we need
to end same with drinking.
We feel like we need an excuse to open that conversation because it disturbs some kind
of part of the ecosystem.
Yeah, I mean, it challenges a cultural mandate we have that alcohol is a part of a good
life.
Right.
I mean, it challenges an idea that alcohol has.
And that's all stuff that's pumped in the air purposefully by the alcohol industry.
It's not a mystery why we all think this. And the funny thing is, if you're wondering if you have
a drinking problem and the idea of even experimenting with removing it for a small bit of time,
The idea of even experimenting with removing it for a small bit of time, it makes you feel terrified and like you cannot do that, that's more information for you.
Right?
If the idea of even removing it, if you can't do it, that might be your evidence that you
must do it.
Tragically, I've learned many times in my life.
So what does living sober mean to you?
I think it's funny because I feel like
people think of sobriety as living your entire life
in deprivation.
It's like we have defined sober as not drinking.
So it's necessarily this idea of you are withholding
something from yourself that everyone else gets
to enjoy, but I think it's the opposite actually.
I think to me, sobriety is a commitment
to stop living out of a place of deprivation
and to start living in the opposite place, which is possession. Like possession of yourself and your needs and accountability to the life you're making,
because this is what I mean by that. I think that when whether you're using drugs or alcohol or
food or sex or whatever it is, it's the thing we need or want the most. We think that's the
thing. And that to withhold that from ourselves is deprivation. So if I'm not allowing myself
to have the thing I want the most, it is a deprivation. But with the thing we're abusing is always just a shitty consolation prize to a higher need.
And by give me an example.
Okay, so, you know, like you, I was believe it for a lot of years.
And when I go back and look at the time periods where that raged the most,
it was always during a time that was not safe or sensical around me, where it was, whether
it was law school and my utter overwhelm with that and my relationship at the time that none of it, it was all overwhelming,
none of it made sense. I created this secret, terrible life of binging and purging all the time.
And it was torturous, but it was a drama entirely of my own making.
Yes, I understood.
You were in control.
Yes, you were in control of your own drama,
your own pain, your own misery.
So I was concurrently utterly out of control
and a hundred percent in control.
And being in control in, like through the reward
of compulsive blemia was a very, very shitty
consolation prize to a higher need. That was setting the boundaries that I needed
in the real world. Telling people what I needed from them, saying no to things, and
making my actual life manageable.
Yeah. Well, I mean, this reminds me of, you know, in untamed. It's like the idea of to things and making my actual life manageable?
Yeah, well, I mean, this reminds me of, in untamed.
It's like the idea of when you ask a woman,
why do you need that bottle of wine a night?
Like, what do you need from this?
And they will tell you, I just need a break.
I just need a moment of peace.
I just need, and in big alcohol
and in the capitalist society in any way, their job
is to take a real human need. That's real and true and good and slap a product on it.
And that is what they've done with wine and booze and all the things. They've slapped the human
need of celebration joy rest on bottles. And so if we can't get it the real way, we just grab a
bottle because we think that that's what we're gonna get
And so it's like this surface desire of
the bottle of wine
It can't really be trusted but the but the but the desire below it for me
I'm say below you say hi. That's interesting
But like you go high I go low regularly in our life, but
the the the deeper desire beneath that surface for a bottle of wine is good and can
be trusted.
It's just the freaking human desire for a woman has for just some rest, some peace, the
ability to check out of her mind for a minute.
But you only know that because you went through that.
Because here's the most insidious part of this whole thing, which is it becomes this vicious cycle
that you never actually identify your higher need or what you call your deepest. Deeper need.
Because you become so convinced by your shame that your life only sucks because of your addiction and not because
of some met higher need.
That is not being met.
So you never get to the part where you can say what I really want, what I really need
and want is X because you are 100% convinced that it is your fault,
if I didn't drink and make my life miserable,
if I didn't spend three hours a day
bingeing and purging, if I didn't,
that is the source of my problems.
But I need this thing in order to manage my life.
So you can't even see the upside,
you can only see the deprivation of the immediate need.
Yeah.
And you're considering it a reward.
I think you're telling yourself that's a reward I'm keeping myself from.
Instead of understanding that it's often just a punishment, it's a self punishment.
It is, and for me, it's the shitty consolation prize.
It's like, here's this little, you know, it's the store-bought steak of the cheetah instead
of the, you know, it's the store-bought steak of the cheetah, instead of the wild hunt.
And I think that, I just think it's super counter-cultural
and audacious and brave to say,
this isn't working for me,
and I require something else,
whether it's in any context,
and for me, sobriety is saying,
you can keep your shitty consolation prize.
I'm going to demand the real thing.
And that's just what at the end of the day, what I want.
I want the real thing.
I want to know what the real thing is.
And if I keep accepting this consolation prize, like my treat and reward in life, I'm
never going to know what the real thing is.
Yes, and by the way, that is what I believe,
one of the reasons why our culture continues to present
wine as the opiate of women masses, right?
Like, you stay, you don't need to get the real thing.
You don't need freedom. you don't need peace,
you don't need equality, you don't need justice.
Just keep drinking.
Oh, I gotta, I gotta like package in the mail the other day
that was a set of wine glasses that said self-care on them.
Yeah, like that's, I mean, if friends with you
are glass of wine, if you don't have
a problem, if you're not keeping yourself from your higher, great, but that isn't self-care,
even in those situations. That's fun. That's enjoyment. That's time with your friends. That's positive.
Like the actual wine. It's not self-care. And if that is the only self-care you're giving yourself,
you are accepting a shitty consolation prize
to what actually is self-care.
Yeah.
We have a question here from Ashley.
Ashley says to us, I think I would like to reduce my drinking
or stop drinking, but my husband drinks just as much as I do
and doesn't want to stop.
And he doesn't think I have a problem.
I can tell he wouldn't really support me if I tried to stop.
And it would already be hard enough with his support.
So what do you do if you want to get sober but you feel like your spouse doesn't really
want you to?
I mean, yeah, this is just, I think, the most predictable and probably common fear that people have.
You know, despite the fact, I'm sorry, besides the first one, which is I can't live without
booze, the second one is always like, but all of my relationships will change, right?
Or the people around me won't understand and the people around me won't understand. And the people around me won't want me to get sober.
And the truth is that often the people around you will not want you to get sober.
Yes.
When you live in a culture that says drinking is the thing.
And so everyone becomes dependent on it in one way or another.
And you start to say, what if it's not?
And then you stop drinking, everyone around you considers your stopping drinking
as a condemnation of their drinking, right?
It's like that crab analogy, the bucket of crabs
where there's a bucket full of crabs
and then one escapes and the rest of the trapped crabs,
natural inclination is to grab that crab and pull it back in the bucket. So I do not drinking in the beginning
changed my relationships dramatically because everybody who I was friends with
was big drinkers. There was no way for me to survive my life without being
surrounded by other people
who drinking was as problematic as mine. So I actually lost a lot of relationships.
But over time, I have learned and seen that it just affects things, right? You just have to be
ready for things to get weird all of the time. I mean, Abby and I don't get invited to a lot of
things. We talk about it a lot. And I think it's because people don't know what to do
with two sober people at an evening gathering
that is revolved around alcohol.
And we've just learned to accept it as a price of sobriety,
I guess.
It's okay with us because the other way is harder,
causing a little bit of awkwardness in relationships
is okay with us.
But what about you?
What would you say to sweet Ashley about her husband?
I would say to listen to the boundaries episode
that we did a couple weeks ago,
because it's exactly that.
I mean, it doesn't mean that you've done something wrong
or there's a problem.
If there is a shift in the ecosystem
around you or in your relationships or in your family unit, when you decide to stop drinking,
in fact, you should be prepared for it. Anyone who is, it will happen. It is a result
of setting a boundary for yourself that says, I want something different. And anytime in
your life, you say, I want something different, there are ripple effects
throughout it, because how audacious of you
to want something different that you think is better,
and why do you think that you are better than me?
You know, it is, it's inevitable.
I will say that you, I will say to your point,
sister about the parties and the fun, I was very worried about that. And also it doesn't matter.
I have more fun at places now because I'm not sick, because I'm not rethinking the 47
things I said, but it's liberating.
But I do want to say to Ashley, that is super hard.
And I had a very supportive husband, and I have my sister and all of that.
But my husband still drinks in our house.
It's just, you can't, I just want to say very clearly that just as it's true that you
can't stay so get or
stay sober because someone else wants you to, you also can't be prevented from getting
and staying sober because someone else doesn't want you to.
Yes.
Yes.
It is.
And you can't use someone else as an excuse not to.
Because by the way, there's a billion excuses not to.
If you're just like looking around your house
to find them, good luck.
Because there's gonna be a thousand.
So I feel like for the hardest thing to swallow
when it comes to your sobriety is that no one owes you
a goddamn thing.
That's right.
Not your partner.
Not you. There's no like like they failed to do X. So I can't get sober. No one owes you a goddamn thing. It is a hundred for me. That was it was very
liberating slash lonely, but at the end of the day empowering to know that it's a hundred percent.
Subride is a hundred percent about your relationship with an accountability to yourself.
That's it.
And that if you let anybody else into your sobriety relationship, that isn't you, that
you're sabotaging yourself.
That's right.
And I would also add to that.
So you don't actually use her husband
as an excuse to not get sober.
And then when she starts to get sober,
if she decides to, she does not verbally try
to convince her husband to get sober.
This is the curse of the freshly sober.
Like you can always, it's like,
who do you want to sit next to least?
Like a freshly sober person, someone who just started CrossFit, like all of them,
just are such evangelicals for their newfound.
And it's pyramid schemes, it's just a pyramid scheme.
So just all you can, well I learned this the hard way a million times, like you just, you go about
I learned this the hard way a million times like you just you go about doing the true thing for you and you just let everybody around you watch and you give the respect
of what you ask for yourself.
This it is a deeply personal
deeply specific question as I don't think no one should drink,
I think everyone should make that personal decision
for themselves and ask you to respect mine
and I respect the hell out of yours.
All right, we'll leave it at that.
What do you think these people's next right thing should be? What should the pod squad be talking about this week?
With sobriety addiction, all of it, what should the pod squad's conversations be about?
I think it would be super interesting for someone to think about what is the thing that you
need that you depend on, that's your reward, that's your treat, whatever it is,
that that's what you use to get through your life.
And then spend some time thinking
whether that thing is
the real deal for you
or whether that could possibly be a shitty consolation prize for
a higher need that is not being met somewhere.
And here are some examples.
The people who are overspending constantly and ruining their life with overspending because
what they really want is belonging and worthiness.
And they think if they throw these things around their body
that that will give them the worthiness
that they so deeply are craving.
Or, you know, the example I put in the untamed
of my friend, he was about to buy a beach house.
He was in no financial shape to buy a beach house.
And when we sat down and talked about what was this need,
she was just desperate to get some time
with her family back.
Everybody was in a, going in a million different directions.
And so the deeper desire beneath the beach house
was just some freaking time
with everybody where they were looking eye to eye and their phones were down and they were so you know
the beach house turned into an eight dollar basket on the table where everybody put their phones and they were able to sit and have
what family dinner each night
the the bottle of wine which the deeper desire beneath is for some rest, for some
peace, for some non-producing time.
So anyway, what sister calls a shitty consolation prize or what I call the surface desire, what
is one of those that you have in your life that is not the real deal.
What's beneath it? What's the good, true human desire beneath it?
That you might actually be able to gift yourself if you stop accepting the
shitty consolation prize. And this week when life gets very hard, instead of
grabbing the shitty consolation prize, just tell yourself that we could do hard things. We love you
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle
I walk through fire I came out the other side
I came out the other side
I chased desire, I made sure I got what's mine
And I continue to believe
That I'm the one for me And because I'm mine, I want the line
Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak
So man, A final destination
Glad they stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
Through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do a heartache I hit rock bottom it felt like a brand new star
I'm not the problem sometimes things fall apart
And I continue to believe
The best people are free
And it took some time
But I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers in heartbreak So man, a final destination
With that we stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
But finally find a way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heart
This perfect, fresh and hot, we might get lost, but we're only in that one stop, Some places they've never been And to be loved we need to be long
We'll finally find our way back home
Through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard things.
Yeah, we can do hard things.
Yeah, we can do hard things.
We can do hard things, is produced in partnership with Cadence 13 Studios.
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