We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - ANXIETY: Is it just love holding its breath?
Episode Date: May 11, 2021In this episode discover: 1. Glennon’s description of an anxiety attack. 2. The 3 strategies that help her find calm. 3. The original We Can Do Hard Things anthem, written and performed by Glennon's... daughter Tish Melton and produced by Brandi Carlile. 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! I'm Glen and Doyle. I'm so grateful to be here and so very grateful that you've come to join me.
This is the first episode of We Can Do Hard Things, which means this is the first time I've
ever done this.
So let me set the scene for you.
I'm sitting here at home in Naples, Florida, in my office in front of this fancy microphone
that I really hope is working.
It's early in the morning and my wife, Abby, and the three kids are still asleep.
I'm in my PJs and I've got a huge mug of steaming hot coffee, which is my favorite thing.
My second favorite thing, my bulldog, honey, is sleeping at my feet.
You know, since I got sober 19 years ago,
these early mornings have become my very favorite time of day.
Because soon the world will wake up
and I'll slip right into all of my roles
and I'll forget my soul completely,
like I do every day.
But I'm mornings like this, just for a bit,
it's quiet enough to remember.
I think my hope, my great hope for this podcast is that no matter when, during the day or week
you listen, that we can do hard things will become a time each week where you will remember
the you beneath all your roles.
So my kids and I have a word for how I feel right now, which is skydid.
Skydid is how I feel when I'm making myself vulnerable and I'm trying something new for
the first time.
It's half scared, half excited, you know that butterfly feeling.
That's how I feel this morning talking to you for the first time, scared, but also excited
because this feels like a returning, this talking directly to you in this way.
It feels like a homecoming for me.
Because 19 years ago, after more than a decade of addiction, I found myself freshly sober,
newly married, and dripping with children.
I couldn't find time in the day to shower,
much less to get to the recovery meetings that had saved my life. And I started to seriously
panic because I knew I needed those meetings. Those rooms were the first places I ever felt
like I could stop acting and just breathe. I needed to hear and speak the truth
like I needed to inhale and exhale.
So one day, the doorbell rang and I answered it
with a baby on my hip, of course,
and I'm sure another one at my feet.
And my sister Amanda was there holding a computer.
And she handed it to me and she said,
sister, start writing.
And when you write, use the voice you use in your meetings.
While you're here, stuck at home with the babies,
just go ahead and turn the whole world into a meeting.
So since my sister is the boss of me,
that's what I did.
I started waking up at five every morning
while it was still dark and silent and the kids were asleep and I'd shut myself into the closet
in my bedroom and I'd start typing. And I'd use the voice that I used in those recovery meetings.
I'd tell my shiny happy representative self to be quiet. I just allowed my wild original honest
truth self forward. I started a blog and it turned out lots of people needed to
hear the truth like they needed air. Over time as I wrote to you each morning you
became my meeting, my friends, the community I'd end up doing life with.
Since those early days, a whole lot has changed for me.
First of all, I've come out of the closet. Ha!
I got divorced from Craig and married my wife Abby,
and we three are raising our babies together.
Those babies are now 18, 15, and 13.
The oldest one chase is off to college this fall.
I'm handling that swimmingly, as you might imagine.
And those early writings have turned into three books,
the last of which was untamed.
Whew, I watched from my home this past year in awe,
as untamed became one of the biggest books of 2020 and 21.
And because of that, things have gotten bigger and wider
and fancier and the bigger and the wider
and the fancier it all gets.
The more I miss those early days.
So here we are, back to the beginning,
just you and me in the early morning
and our coffee and the truth, full circle,
makes me very happy.
So we're gonna get into it now, but before we do,
I have to tell you my big surprise. My big surprise for you
is this. You know that sister I told you about who got me started writing? Well she and I
have been doing life together since she was born three years after me. And I have finally
convinced her to come out from behind the scenes to join us here on the podcast.
My sister is the best thing I have to offer, so I am so excited to give you the gift of her.
You will find her to be brilliant and hilarious and honest,
but I am telling you you should also watch out, because to this day she keeps a revenge
list on her computer made up of all the people who have ever done me wrong.
Amanda thinks in spreadsheets and I think in colors.
So together we have always made one pretty cool human.
So each week I'll speak to you directly, just like this.
And then Sister and I will talk about one hard thing we are navigating through, with
special guests joining us occasionally.
Then we'll have a Q&A where we get to talk to you, and then we'll wrap up each week
with a challenge for all of us before we sign off, called the next straight thing.
So for now, let's roll.
Okay, here come the sponsors who support allow us all to listen here for free.
I was so careful choosing these companies. I only chose companies whose products,
someone in my family or on my team uses.
If you can, try these products because the more we support them, the more they'll support us.
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, why 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.
All right, so let's get started.
Sister, are you there?
How are you feeling?
Eh! I'd say since I'm very used to being at the back of the house, I'd say I'm not so much
skated as just scared.
Okay. So I think that you should bring the hard thing today because I feel like I'm
already doing mine just by showing them.
There you go. Okay, I've got you, sister. Okay. So my hard thing that I'm
bringing today is the hard thing I bring to every day, my anxiety. So you know about my
complicated relationship with anxiety, which I guess has been lifelong. So I became a food addict when I was 10 and then alcoholic later in life.
And I got sober when I was 25.
And the interesting thing about getting sober is that I thought that booze in food were
my problems.
I thought addiction was my problem.
But through early recovery, I learned that booze in food were kind of my ineffective and dangerous solutions to my problem, which
was anxiety and depression.
So being anxious and depressed at the same time is a little Right? Like I'm kind of sad always and very intense about it.
And you know, I have times in my life when anxiety comes in big time or depression comes in big time.
But I don't relate so much to people who feel it intensely at some points and then it goes away completely. I feel like it's kind of a
part of me all the time, right? That I'm kind of always at the foundation of me, I'm always kind
of afraid and sad. And I can have all the other emotions and as you know, I do all day, but sad and
you know, I do all day, but sad and scared are kind of where I live. So scared is the anxiety and sad is depressed?
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
Like at least once a day, I think I am sad about everything.
That's just a sentence that makes it, I don't know.
So in the beginning of COVID, as you know, it was so interesting because Abby turned to me,
I don't know, three or four weeks in,
and she said, you are the calmest one in this house.
She was freaking out a lot.
I've never heard that in my life, right?
And I was, I was feeling so steady suddenly.
And she was freaking out about the world, about the family, about work, about everything.
And I was very steady and it was so interesting.
And so then I started talking to some of my other friends who deal with anxiety and depression.
And they too felt very calm.
And what we decided was that we had always been
living on a level 10, right?
And everybody else in the world was on a level 5.
And finally, the rest of the world was joining us in our panic, right?
So we were kind of like, it's like we were chicken littles, you know, running around our whole lives.
Like this guy's going to call, the sky's going to fall and then it fell.
And we were all like, well, how you like us now?
We told you this guy was going to fall.
It's like when it's sunny outside, and it makes me so sad because I feel this guilt of not being out there.
But when it's raining, I'm like, thank you outsides for matching my insides. Now I don't have to
excuse myself for not going outside.
This sun is so judgy and bossy. It shines out there, telling
you you should, if you were healthy or you'd be out
enjoying me, it's shaving short. Yes, it's shaming. Yeah.
And I really did feel like always that,
there was a level of, okay, I've learned how to live
with this fear and stress.
And so I can help now.
I've been preparing for this moment my whole life.
I was made for this moment.
I know how to be scared all the time
and still kind of show up.
You know, so there was a while where the anxiety got better.
And then it didn't. So I don't lately the anxiety has just been through the roof for me and I don't know if it's related to
this is really embarrassing, but I think it might be slightly related to going back to normal.
Right. I was out.
I've been state.
I've been really taking COVID very seriously in terms of staying home one because of I believe
in science, but also because I it was just a great excuse to stay home because you've always
been serious about staying home.
Yeah, yeah, that's right.
That's right. But Abby and I had to go out and do something recently.
And it was just like, I forgot how to be out in the world.
And I've always had a little bit of social anxiety,
but I really felt so exposed.
I was like, why, look, we're walking around now.
People can just look at you.
It just feels so ridiculously vulnerable
to be out in the world
and I have always felt that a little bit.
But as you know, my hard thing
is that I had an actual anxiety attack last week.
And I haven't had one of those real intense ones
for a very long time.
But I got home.
And so I think like what I want to describe to everyone is there's different levels of
anxiety, right?
There are different ways that anxiety manifests.
So how would you say?
I mean, you are in general a little bit more mentally typical, would you say, than I
have always been?
How would you describe yourself compared to me in terms of?
Well, relative to you, probably.
Relative to your average bear. I'm not sure. I mean, I would describe, I don't know if I would have like a diagnosis, but I am whatever is the exact opposite of easy breezy.
Right.
Everything is intense and I'm never settled or calm,
but I don't know that I would qualify.
You know, every single thing is like,
emergency high stress,
this is the most important thing that happened.
Yeah, and it feels like yours is related, the way that I see it, the way I see your anxiety.
And for people who are a little bit more neuro-typical, is that your anxiety seems to be
appropriately matched to the life situation you're in. You have a very, very high stress,
You have a very, very high stress life schedule day.
You're in it with two young kids. You run our business.
You have a very, very intense life.
And so when your anxiety gets high,
I can see, oh, that's matched to her circumstances
to what's being required of her.
Right.
Great.
Would you say that?
I would say that, but I would also say that some of it, I feel like, is just the way we
were made.
I think I'm always going to find a way to make something to project manage my life into
a whirlwind.
I mean, like, if some people are like, why didn't I become a gardener?
I would be the most miserable, overachieving, stressed out gardener in the history of gardeners.
So I just think some of it is just like personality type
too, but I don't think I don't have these,
it's of my own doing to myself is what I'm saying.
I don't feel like there's this external force on me
that is shifting me outside of my actual ambitions
and goals and projects that are self-imposed.
Okay, okay. Got it. So you think yours is personality driven. I get that. I feel like what I'm
trying to explain about the anxiety that I feel like is tied to mental health with people
or mental illness is that it feels very existential. My anxiety has nothing to do with what's being required of me.
I know stress.
I know stress.
I mean, I have to do a lot of things.
I have to like, you know, have a big job.
I know stress.
Anxiety is completely different.
Anxiety.
So I will sometimes be sitting at a restaurant.
OK, and looking at all of the people,
just eating their dinner and using their forks
and talking to their people and looking so calm.
And everyone's well, I just wanna stand up and be like,
are you all aware that one day, perhaps not too soon,
we are all going to die.
And so is everyone that we love, all of them.
For sure, 100%.
And you are ordering onion soup.
Like what?
It blows my mind.
That's why you're so fun at parties.
I know, I know, I know, okay.
Yes.
But what I'm saying is,
I remember being little and being in therapy
and being diagnosed with anxiety and thinking,
okay, maybe I am anxious.
Or maybe you just aren't paying attention to what's happening in the human experience,
right?
What's not to be anxious about?
Everything.
Point to it.
Point to something that's not to be anxious about, right?
It just feels as if non-anxiety is the suppression or the compartmentalization
of the actual human experience to me, right? Isn't it? That's correct. I mean, think about
all the things throughout the day. Yes, everyone you love is going to die. Yes, you're getting
in a little like tin vehicle that's like a 300 pound tank
that anchor reeling down the road.
Just really hoping that any of these other people
don't smash into you.
Like, it does require the suspension of logic
to get through all of that.
It's true.
Yes, yes, it does.
Yes, it does.
And every once in a while, I am unable to compartmentalize. I am unable to pretend that what's happening
in my life and in everyone's lives and in the world is not happening or is not inevitable
and those are the moments where I freak out. Okay, so to me, it feels like, okay, it's
mental illness, it's anxiety, but I have this part of me that is a little bit
belligerent and wants to insist, I don't know, I just feel like it's moments where I'm actually seeing
the matrix, you know, like we all have to walk around and pretend that the matrix is not real and
everyone's well, it just pops up. So I'll briefly tell you what happened. It came home from something.
Well, we must have been the bus stop because we all know that's the two places you go.
That's where I go. Trying to think if there's anywhere else I go, there is not.
Cregs, yeah. So I got home and I saw a note on the counter and it said it was from Chase, my 18-year-old
son, and it said went for a bike ride, be home soon.
This is a normal occurrence, okay?
But something about that note, the moment, the world, I don't know my mental state, I just knew, sister, I had an actual
knowing, I saw it on the counter, and I had an actual knowing that something horrible
had happened, that he accarded him, that just the visions that I have are so horrible.
They're like embarrassingly horrible. And every part of me just
wanted to jump in the car and go driving all around and find him. But Titian
Amma, my 15-year-old and oh my god, 13. Okay. Whatever.
Their ages change every freaking year and it's impossible.
They were sitting at the kitchen table, right, and Abby sitting on the couch and I'm at
the counter.
And so my anxiety just completely took over my body.
I could barely breathe.
I just went cold. I explain it. It's just
like it feels like a paralysis, like a mental emotional physical paralysis. And then this war starts.
When I have an anxiety, I attack this war starts. It's this internal war of my anxious voice,
of my anxious voice, which is saying, this is it.
This is your intuition, go. He's in trouble, go.
And then there's this other voice
that is saying don't let the anxiety win, right?
Don't show your girls, and that you're supposed
to freak out constantly, that you're supposed
to live in fear by going and getting in that car.
But that's what love looks like.
It's running out and doing that every time.
Right.
Right.
Okay.
I can't believe you said that's what love looks like because the next thing that happens,
while I'm sitting there holding on, like holding on to the counter, trying to like figure
out which of these voices to listen to.
Right?
Abby walks over, bless her, she knows me so well, she walks over, she knows exactly what's
happening.
She holds my arms and says, he is fine.
My first thought to stir is, first of all, you are reckless. You are reckless and irresponsible.
And second of all, you just don't love him as much as I do.
Okay, now, none of those things are true.
I'm just telling you what my inner anxious voice said to me.
Okay?
So, I just think that's fascinating because basically what I must believe at a real level is that anxiety is love
Because her not being anxious makes me think you don't love him as much as I do
If you love to miss much as I do you would be losing your shit right now
Because he's because our 18 year old is on a bike ride right because didn't you read that note? It's obvious
Yeah, so anyway because our 18 year old is on a bike ride. Right, because didn't you read that note? It's obvious.
Yeah, so anyway, I sat there, I just smiled at her and let her walk away.
And I just held onto the counter
and just breathed deeply.
I just couldn't make a decision either way.
And I just breathed as deeply as I possibly could. And thank God, like one minute later, two minutes later,
Chase walks through, oh, and by the way, I have no idea how long this was.
It could have been two minutes, it could have been 30 minutes.
Okay.
Okay.
Chase walks through the door.
And I just hug him as if he's returned from war.
Right, okay.
Lazarus.
Yeah, yeah.
And then it's over.
It's over.
Absolutely back to normal.
Your whole body returns.
The like, ice paralysis is gone.
Okay. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then back to normal. Your whole body returns the like ace paralysis is gone. Okay. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then
back to normal. So, you know, I, and then, and then the three days afterwards, usually when I,
when I go into a real anxiety attack like that, not just my normal level of tiger hypervigilance
conseneral concern about life, but like that kind of thing, then I spend the next few days
just spinning about it because it scares me so much that I feel like I have to figure
out why it happened and fix it. And then I just remembered, actually, I don't have to
fix anything. Like, I just, I, what I'm choosing to understand about those moments are that those moments,
they do have to do with clinical anxiety. I am doing the things I'm supposed to do. I'm on my medicine.
I do all of my things. And yet, there will be times when the matrix becomes visible to me,
right?
When I look at a note from one of my children, or when I have a moment where I remember
that, oh my God, the truth is that I love this person as much as I love this person,
that life is as fragile and precarious as we think it is.
That we actually could lose each other and will eventually,
that every time we take any sort of risk, show our heart,
leave the house, love someone, try something new we could fail,
and we could lose.
And that we do it any way we still let our children go for bike rides.
Right, we still allow life to happen, even though it's terrifying and scary and things could go wrong.
Right, right?
Like that, that, that it's not a anxiety in those moments,
it's not a problem that I need to fix. It's, and it's sometimes just an acknowledgement
of what love and life and risk are. And that sometimes that is so breathtakingly
beautiful, as we would say, beautiful and brutal, that you just have to hold on to the freaking counter and breathe.
And so it isn't necessarily a conflict between your intuition and your knowing
that guides you in all these other beautiful ways.
It's just a deeper, kind of more core life, truth knowing that shows up in these moments where you're like,
I really do love him as much as I'm terrified that I do.
And I really will lose him, eventually they're me or him.
And so this is precious and scary.
Yes, this fear is the price of love sometimes, right? And so this is precious and scary.
Yes, this fear is the price of love sometimes, right? And it makes me think of when I was younger
and I thought that that ache, that anxiety,
that I, that fear, that awareness
that I felt was so painful that I had to get out of it.
That's what addiction was.
It was every time I felt so afraid or I felt deeply,
I just felt like I got to get out of here.
I got to get out of this pain, I got to get out of this fear
and I would do it with booze or food
or a million different things.
And it just reminds me of that thing we said
and untamed so much that was like,
this is so painful, this is so deep,
this is so beautiful, This is so beautiful.
This is so real.
So stay.
Right?
It's too that kind of love while it's so terrifying
when you're paying attention is the whole point.
When I look at it a certain way, that moment in the kitchen was everything beautiful about
my life.
I think the decision to not run and get into the car with Chase to find him, I think
that that is the progress of being a 45 year old woman. I think it's
that a few years ago I would have gotten in the car anyway, but it's finally knowing I can't
control shit. And what I want my girls to see is a woman who loves so deeply and still
knows that she can't control anything. And so she's just going to stay and breathe in these
moments.
That's fascinating because as as you're talking, I mean, I know you've had so much anxiety recently around chase around this this time period.
And it's just reminding me of when you're in the mental hospital in high school and you are getting ready to leave and you're so scared to leave.
And then as you're talking,
it's occurring to me that Chase is getting ready
to leave for college,
that we're getting ready to transition out of COVID.
Is it like you're creating?
In the mental hospital, there were clear rules.
This is how you talk to each other.
Here is how, here's the words you use.
Here's your schedule, all of those things,
and then you're going back to high school,
which was this, had a whole other set of rules
that you never really made sense to you.
No, Lord of the Flies.
And then COVID's the same way.
It's simple, right?
It's terrible, but it's simple.
Stay in your house, wear your mask.
It's very clear what should happen
Chase you know the rules of like how to parent him you don't know the wild rules about parenting when he's off at college
And how you're gonna love him through that?
it's
freaking so true. I
Okay, this is this is wild. I can't say crazy because I'm talking about
mental illness, tighten up, Glennon. Okay. When I'm telling you that yesterday, I was thinking about how
maybe once a week I think about, I fantasize, it's just like a slice. Okay, it's not like for real. It's just like a little bit about being in it like
mental hospital again, like about just tapping the F out
of everything that's hard about trying to adult
and trying to be human and trying to mother and parent
and sister and work and like go into this place
where there's this structure and all the freedom
that is so terrifying is taken away and it's just a simplifying of everything. I think
that you're exactly right and I think that's why when anxiety comes in, there's a million
things that I do to control again. Structure, like lists and food and bringing back like, yes, it's the anxiety of walking
out the door of the mental hospital when I was a senior in high school and being like,
but what now?
But in there, you told me what to do, what now?
And really at the bottom of it, when you're describing this knowing, this hitting the kind of bottom of looking at
Chase and seeing that and realizing that you love him so much and life is so precarious,
at the end of the day that really is a rule of life.
Like that is a rule of life that you find utterly intolerable to abide by.
That's how you do it. We love these people people this much and it's so precarious that somebody could leave, that somebody
could, that any number of totally intolerable things could happen.
But at the end of the day, that's the, that's a game.
That's what's happening. That is the core of my sobriety, I think.
Is this commitment to accept surrender to show up for life on life's intolerable terms?
That's it. That I'm like, okay, I'll just stay, keep showing up under these ridiculous circumstances where
we are loving and risking and will lose.
Okay, well, on that note, we're going to take a break and then we're going to come back
and answer some hard questions.
Okay, everybody, welcome to the part of the show I'm most excited about because this
is when we get to hear from you.
This segment is called Hard Questions.
We will be taking all of your questions, sister, what's the phone number?
It is 747-005307.
Bring all of your questions.
I will not have answers, but I will have things that I say in response.
I cannot wait to hear from you.
Let's hear these questions.
7 4 7 2 100 5 3 0 7.
Today we are taking questions about anxiety.
Our first question, Glenin, is from Kirsten.
Hi, Glenin. My name is Kirsten.
My boyfriend has anxiety, and I don't understand it,
and I don't understand how to help him.
How do I support him through this and these episodes or challenges that he is facing?
Thanks so much.
Mmm, that's hard.
Sweet, Kirsten. I often think that the only thing harder than living with
mental illness is loving someone who's living with mental illness. I really do over the
years of listening to people who try to make sense of things in the
people they love's lives that can't be made sense of and that can't be fixed.
I do think that Kirsten
is a bit of a warrior there.
I mean, I can just tell you,
this one wild time I'm thinking about,
and Abby's just like sitting here in the room with me,
so this is gonna be funny, but I actually had a bit of
an anxiety attack a few years ago,
and I was laying in bed, and I just started breathing and hard, and it was so embarrassing
for me because it was the first time that Abby had witnessed the weirdness of that.
It wasn't just me talking through it. It was like an actual bottle. Physical, right.
Yeah.
And this is as total aside, but I was having visions
of being back in the mental hospital
and this worst case scenario that I go to every once in a while
where I'm just left somewhere
because everyone's just decided that I'm too much to deal with. I don't know how to, it's just too exhausting, that it's just too much, that is ultimately
what will happen.
It's strange.
But anyway, I started breathing heavy and kind of rocking and Abby held on to me tight.
And afterwards, I talked to her about it and said, I was so embarrassed and she just said,
Oh, this is part of the beauty of you.
This is part of the magic.
I will take all of this with the rest of it.
And she said something about how the deep feeling of everything is not something that she
loves me in spite of, but she loves me because of.
So I don't know. I mean, that's a high level of love.
And, but I do know that there is so much beauty and there are so many gifts inside of people who have this fire inside of them.
And that there is part of it that, um,
and that there is part of it that brings something to the table. As opposed to like always being something that you have to deal with or figure out or
manage, that there are things that we bring to the table that are gifts in terms of the
way we see the world, in terms of the way we stop the world and say, no, no, look at that,
the way we feel things that other people are not willing to feel and see things that other
people are not willing to see and hear things that other people are not willing to hear.
And so there is a way of looking at it that I think Abby has that I love, which is not
just like how do I freaking deal with this, which I'm sure sometimes she feels.
But like what gifts does this bring to me and my life that I would not have if
it weren't for these mental differences that my wife has. I love it. Good luck
Kirsten and Abby. Yeah, and Abby forever and ever again. Okay, this second question
is from Samantha. Hi, Chi. This is Samantha.
I've not been clinically diagnosed for anxiety,
but I have many symptoms that suggest I could be.
I was diagnosed with OCD in my teens
and found that meds were helpful then.
But with pressure from my holistic mom,
I stopped seeing my therapist
and put my meds cold turkey,
and I've not sought professional help since.
Living with untreated OCD for 20 years
and experiencing symptoms of anxiety has been an uphill battle for me. I'm curious about
seeking treatment and using meds again, but it's hard because my family is always talking to me
about their concerns that the world is so over-medicated. What is your experience been like with meds
and how do you respond when folks shared their concerns about you being on them? Oh Samantha okay well
first my experience with meds I have been on meds for a very long time I love my
meds like I love my children okay when I walk into the grocery store and I see the pharmacy
sign, it feels like light from heaven to me. It's like the whole the music of my life begins.
My favorite song is Jesus loves me this I know for he gave me Lexa Pro. I feel strongly
me like a pro. I feel strongly Samantha how I feel strongly I feel that medicine for me like it does for many people who struggle with all different kinds of illness has balanced the chemicals in my
brain to get me to an even playing field with everybody else mentally. I feel that my medicine has not helped me escape the human experience.
It has allowed me to have the full human experience.
And I'm grateful for it every day, every single day.
I can imagine that it must be very hard to be someone who's trying to be brave enough
to get the help they need and to have this constant.
Well, it sounds to me like judgment.
I know it's being couch just concern.
For me, every time I hear of sweeping generalization, like the world is overmedicated, it doesn't
sound like concern. It sounds like judgment kind of feels to me like when a woman shows her body
Is is bold enough to just live in her body and her body doesn't match the cultural
Expectations of of what a body should look like and somebody expresses concern, right? They say something like oh, I'm just worried about her health
I'm just worried about her health. I'm just
concerned about the obesity epidemic. It doesn't really feel like concern. It feels like judgment.
We have a saying in our family that goes like, you know what? mind your own body. And so I think we could extend that to brains,
right? Mind your own mind. What I know is that what is helpful to me is when people speak
of their personal experience. So what I would, how that would sound Samantha is, I would
say medicine has helped me. I would never go as far as to extend that to, so the world must be completely undermedicated.
Do you hear that difference?
So I can hear someone who says to me, medicine did not help me.
I cannot hear someone that says to me, the world is overmedicated.
I think we have to be very careful to speak about our personal experiences
and not over-generalized because those over-generalizations lead, they release the stigma into the air
that keeps people maybe like you from getting the help they need and deserve. So my experience
in my own life and inside the mental health world is that I see a whole lot of people who need help who don't get it, right? Who do need medication, but don't get it. First of all, because of
the incredible privilege that's required to have the money and time to get medication,
but also because of the stigma, right? That's released inside of families and cultures often
couched in concern like but the world is so overmedicated
So Samantha what I would say to you is that none of these people who judge
Who we are or or what we need?
Can be with us in the dark right? I often think of these kinds of ideas and people as two
leg and men who are calling prostheses a crutch.
Just because they don't need it to have the full human experience does not mean that I don't.
I think the angst inside of you is you're knowing.
Maybe trying to get you to
understand that your family doesn't know best for you and maybe you do. So
find a professional. And if you need that help, get the help you need. Our last
question is from Sarah. Hey, my name is Sarah. I'm so lost in myself when I'm
having anxiety. I feel detached from everyone and everything.
Have you ever found anything that helps make
those tougher days better?
Thanks.
What is her name, Sarah?
Sarah, I love your description detached.
That's so good.
That feels right to me.
That's, I don't know.
I always describe anxiety as like a shaky hovering. I don't
know, it's like, it's that tigerness, right? Like the tigerness of always being too high
or too low. Like for me, that the anxiety feels high and the depression feels too low, but both make it absolutely impossible to access
the right level of life, which is like in the middle, which is right here, right now,
which is in the moment, right?
So if all of these spiritual teachers are right and joy in life is in the moment, then anxiety
and depression steal rob that of us, because it's like freaking
positional.
It's like, oh, no, no, I'm not down there.
I'm up here.
Or I'm like, oh, I'm not up there with you.
I'm too low in depression.
It's interesting.
Detached feels right to me.
I, a couple things that I want to say about that.
I used to believe that at some point,
I was going to figure
this out. I think this is like an idea that we get planted in us when we're young, that I have
found to be completely untrue, which is that we will like work really hard and grow and grow and grow
and then someday we will be grown up. Right. And then magically change, right?
So I'm 45.
I have finally realized that that is not going to happen.
I keep waking up being the exact same freaking person.
Like it's just no matter what I do, no matter who I'm really in relationship with, no
matter where I move, no matter what my job is, I still wherever I go, there I am, right?
Same, same, same. New year, same me over
and over again, right? So one of the things that helps is to know that I'm not two weeks
away from fixing my anxiety, that this is something that I'm going to live with for the rest
of my life, okay? Now that is not to say that medicine and therapy and spiritual practices
and all of those things have not helped because they do.
They allow me to deal healthfully with this thing that I have, okay? But I'm also going to have it forever. So I can stop holding my breath about that. And the breath is an interesting thing. So
a lot of this has to do, anxiety has to do with our nervous system.
Okay, so it helps me to think of this in terms of spiritual stuff, but also science, right? Like my nervous system is
extra nervous
Okay, it's like which is what it's for you have a very nervous system. I have a very nervous system, right?
So what I have found things that help me are things that actually are proven to calm the nervous system. So I do a lot of breathing exercises.
Breathing. I have this one that I learned a long time ago. I think it's called like the
box method or something, but it's like you breathe in for five seconds and then you hold
it. And it's like I'm envisioning going across a box
and then the holding is going down
and then the exhale is going across again
and then the holding is going up.
And then so it's like breathing for four, hold.
Breathe out for four, hold.
That is something I've returned to over and over again
that actually helps me.
And a detached freaking out, anxious moment. Okay. For me, anxiety is all about not being present in my
body. It is that detached thing. It is that shaky hovering. So whatever I can do to get back to the
moment, to get back to reality. So I have an exercise that someone,
taught me a long time ago that is like,
think of something you can not think of.
What can you feel?
Grab something, what can you feel?
Feel it, feel your feet on the ground.
What can you see?
Taken something that you can see.
What can you hear?
Right, activating the senses, brings me back into the moment
and into my body and out of the spinning of my head,
which helps every time, not sometimes.
That helps me every single time.
It's interesting.
Yeah.
And then the, one of the things that helps me
is this idea of whenever I'm in anxiety
I'm not in the moment. I'm freaking out usually about something that
Might happen or and so
There's this thing I say to myself is okay. I'm in what if I'm in what if but what is
What is right now? What is right now?
So 100% of the time.
If I focus, if I get out of what if and I focus on what is, like what is right now?
Okay, I'm in my house, my kids are at school, I'm okay, I'm in my body, I have food, I'm, what is is always okay.
I am always okay in what is, right? So a reminder, whenever I'm in what if to go back to what is
grounding myself in my senses, returning to my breath, those are the things that help me moment by
moment.
That one, even as someone who doesn't have clinical anxiety, you taught me that one. And that helps so much because in the moments when I'm spinning with like worrying,
it's certain about my kids, it's very rarely if ever what is happening in that moment.
It's to me what I'm projecting that moment means for their life, you know, next month, in five years
when they're adults.
And then I'm losing it because I'm thinking, oh my God, are they going to be okay?
But really, they're very much okay in this moment.
It's what I'm assuming it means about not being okay in the future.
Spinning.
It's all the spinning.
So all of those are to say that whenever I can get out of my mind and out of the future tripping and all of that and back into the moment right now, whatever takes to get me back into my body back into the moment right now, I am always okay.
And that will always be true forever, which is comforting.
Yeah. Great questions.
Great questions.
Good job, Kirsten Sarah Samantha.
Alright, you all, thank you so much for all the questions
and don't forget to send your hard questions about
anything at all. 747-205-307. 7.
Welcome to the next right thing.
So the reason we created this segment is this, during my 45 years on Earth.
I have learned that tragically there is no
five-year plan. Every time someone asks me, my long-term plans I just laugh. In fact,
I've always hated the AA one day at a time mantra, because in case no one has noticed,
days are very, very long. All I can handle is deciding the next
straight thing, one thing at a time. Whenever I'm uncertain, which is always, all I can handle is deciding the next right thing, one thing in a time.
Whenever I'm uncertain, which is always, all I can do is go inside, feel around for my intuition,
and do the next thing.
It nudges me toward.
I can't see the whole path, but I've learned that if I just do the next right thing, one
thing in a time, life
becomes like a yellow brick road. And one brick at a time, I can find my way home. So this
segment will figure out a next right thing that we can all try before we meet up again
next week. Okay, so my dear friend Allison, who is helping produce this podcast right now,
recently told me about this cool thing
that she and her friends started during COVID.
Every Friday afternoon, she and her friends
would meet on a pass and they would take a long walk together.
And each friend would bring the hardest thing
she was facing that week, whether it was in her life,
or marriage, or friendships, or work, or world, whatever.
And they'd talk about it as they walked.
And nobody had any answers, just time, just honesty,
just solidarity.
And Allison said that as a result of these walks,
this little group of friends had become tighter than ever,
and she had started to feel less alone than ever.
And she suspected that this was because they had been friends
for so long, but they'd
never gotten so real with each other before.
They'd never brought to each other the real heavy stuff that as friends, they were meant
to help each other carry.
And COVID kind of forced them to share this hard, which turned out to be exactly what their
friend group had always needed.
And that is my dream for this podcast. That it will be
like a weekly hard things walk that you and sister and I and your closest people will take
together, dropping all the fake and sharing and helping each other carry the hard. So
that for the rest of the week, we can all walk a little lighter, unless alone.
So here you go. You ready for your next right thing? Okay. Your next right thing is to build your
pod squad. Okay, you know how people have book clubs? We are going to have pod squads. Okay, you know how people have book clubs? We are going to have pod squads, okay?
I want you to think of a few people that you might like to deepen your relationships
with, that you might like to get real with, and I want you to send them a link to this
podcast.
Just ask if they want to be in your pod squad.
If you think that term is cheesy like Sister does, then just ask them if they want to follow and listen with you.
See if listening together opens up conversations and helps you begin to build deeper relationships based on the messy truth, not surface stuff.
So just text them this episode and say, want to start listening with me. And also listen up, if you are someone who
doesn't have a person or people to invite into this journey, do not worry. Sister and I didn't
either. That's why we started this podcast. Sister and I will be your pod squad. Okay, to close us out,
Close us out. I have an amazing gift to give you.
This is actually a gift from my daughter, Tish, who many of you might remember from
Untamed.
Tish is a deeply-feeling person and a musician.
And she wrote a song for us.
She wrote it after reading Untamed,
and after learning that her mom was going to start this podcast.
And the song is called We Can Do Hard Things.
She wrote it all by herself in her bedroom,
both the lyrics and the music.
She sent it to our dear friend, Brandy Carlyle, and Brandi loved it so much
that she decided to sing back up and produce it as a gift to Tish and to you for this podcast.
This song has already become a personal anthem for me and it's helped me through many hard days.
And I hope it will become our
family's pod squad at them too. I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle. I'm 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 walk the line
Cause we're adventurers in heartbreak
So man, a final destination We've 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
But I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak so mad A final destination with that
We stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard
This road finished her rose and heartbreak some mat We might get lost but we're only in that
Stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be long
We'll finally find our way back home
And 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.
Be sure to rate, review, and follow the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Odyssey, or
wherever you get your podcasts, especially be sure to rate and review the podcast if
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If you didn't, don't worry about it.
It's fine.
and don't worry about it. It's fine.