We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Being the Boss of Yourself with RHOBH’s Bozoma Saint John (Best Of)
Episode Date: March 12, 20251. The inspiring pep talk Bozoma gives herself in the mirror – and why we might all want to start using it to rally ourselves. 2. How to navigate the tightrope of corporate expectations for wome...n: to be both self-assured and humble; both hard and soft. 3. The revolutionary realization that you don’t have to be the savior of others – you can save yourself, too. 4. How to know when to dig deep, and stay and fight for change – and when to stop digging and go – and the moment Bozoma knew it was time to leave Netflix. 5. Why our inability to forgive ourselves for wrong decisions keep us in bad situations – and how Boz’s “it’s not you, it’s me” philosophy can guide us out. About Bozoma: Bozoma Saint John is a Hall of Fame inducted Marketing Executive, author, entrepreneur, and general badass. Boz has led Global Consumer Marketing at Apple Music & iTunes; she was Chief Brand Officer at Uber; and Global Chief Marketing Officer at Netflix. Boz is currently named #1 Most Influential CMO in the world by Forbes, and has been named one of Billboard’s Most Powerful Women in Music for 10 consecutive years. In 2021, Harvard Business School published a multi-media case study on her career, titled “Leading with Authenticity and Urgency”; through which she developed and taught a program at the University aptly named “The Anatomy of a Badass.” Boz was named as an Ambassador for the African Diaspora and Special Envoy to the President of Ghana. In the Spring of 2023, Penguin Books will publish her memoir, “The Urgent Life.” Boz counts her highest achievement as being a mother to her 12 year old daughter, Lael. TW: @badassboz IG: @badassboz To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
As the weather warms up and spring is in the air,
it's the perfect time to escape the usual routine
and take a refreshing getaway.
I recently discovered how special a spring retreat can be
when I book an Airbnb instead of a hotel.
We found a peaceful cottage, so cute,
tucked away in the countryside,
surrounded by so many blooming flowers
and the sound of birds chirping.
It was exactly what we needed.
A quiet little escape with all the comforts of home.
We had the whole place to ourselves
with plenty of space to cook breakfast
and enjoy meals at our own pace.
Unwind with a good book and a cozy corner
and even step outside to relax on the porch.
Whether you're with family, friends or flying solo,
Airbnb gives you the home away from home experience
with the space and freedom to truly relax.
If you're looking for your own spring retreat,
Airbnb has the perfect spot waiting for you. So question, first question.
Glennon, are you still being an African auntie?
Are you checking your WhatsApp?
No, I don't check WhatsApp anymore.
I'm very, very disappointed, Clay. Okay.
Because Lovie and I taught you about WhatsApp and the importance of it.
If you were going to be a true African auntie, you have to check your WhatsApp because that's
how the messages come.
Okay.
And I sent you a video from this morning.
Wait, hold on.
Let me see if I can display it here so you can see it.
Maybe you won't hear the sound.
This was critical this morning.
It was God talking to me this morning.
Okay, what did God say to you?
God said this.
Can you kind of see?
God said.
It's my mother.
What?
And her shirt says, I can do hard things.
No way.
This morning?
This morning.
I came in from the gym and she was in the kitchen.
And she was-
Dancing around, wearing a shirt
that said I can do hard things.
And I looked at her and I was just like,
where did that come from?
And she was like, oh, do you like it?
I was like, why did you do that? And she was like, oh, this is like it? I was like, do you, why did you do that?
And she was like, oh, I just, this is just a shirt.
I just put it on.
We both freaked out when I told her
what was going on this today.
Oh my gosh.
So I sent it to you on WhatsApp and look at you.
You missed the message.
Well, look, I deserve to miss that beautiful message
because I did not check in.
But I feel like this is,
this is what we were meant to do today.
Yep.
It was destined.
Destined?
I know it was destined because we have been so delighted all morning because we knew we were
about to see your face and we haven't seen you for a while.
Yeah.
I know. I miss both of you so much.
First of all, I should tell everyone what's happening.
There are a lot of people listening and they're like,
this is a lovely conversation, but who's talking?
What's happening?
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
Yes.
We have over time noticed, Bose,
that the pod squad here in We Can Do Hard Things
has 40 million questions about being a woman
in the workforce.
Or really being any kind of marginalized human in the workforce.
And I want to answer their questions, but I am not really in the workforce.
I am mostly in the bathtub.
Confirm.
Right?
So we decided, Abby and I,
that there really couldn't be any more qualified
human being on the earth.
Ever.
Ever.
To discuss and guide the world really,
through the minefield of work and womanhood.
And that human being is Bozema St. John,
who also happens to be a
dear friend of ours. Can you introduce? Yes, Bozema St. John is a Hall of Fame
inducted marketing executive, author, entrepreneur and in our opinion a
general badass. Also the world's opinion. Bozema has led global consumer marketing at
Apple, music and iTunes.
She was chief brand officer Uber and global chief marketing officer at Netflix.
Boz is currently named the number one most influential CMO in the world by Forbes and
has been named one of billboards most powerful women music for 10 consecutive years.
Same.
In 2021 Harvard Business School published
a multimedia case study on her career,
titled Leading with Authenticity and Urgency,
through which she developed and taught a program
at the university aptly named The Anatomy of a Badass.
Bose was named as an ambassador for the African diaspora
and special envoy to the president of Ghana.
And in the spring of 2023,
Penguin Books will publish her memoir,
The Urgent Life.
Bose counts her highest achievement
as being a mother to her 12 year old daughter, Lael.
No, you guys.
Welcome.
Do you listen to your bio and say,
what is my life?
What did I do? How... what?
Yeah, all of that. All of that. Yes. Yes.
I am also in awe of all the things.
It doesn't actually make sense because the stats
are not in my favor and have never been.
And so it is... yes, it strikes me as awe-inspiring too.
Yeah. Honey, do you remember the first time we met Bose?
Of course. We met Bose...
Yeah.
-...on the Together tour. Yeah. Yeah.
That's right.
I walked into room and you were already there.
I told Abby this morning, the first thing I noticed about you
was your clothes.
Abby said, is it okay to say that?
Is that objectifying?
And I was like, I don't know.
It's Bose.
I'm just going to...
It's fine.
Yeah, totally fine.
Yeah.
I thought you were the most incredibly beautifully dressed human I'd ever seen.
And I was intimidated because of your fancy...
Were all the words behind your name?
When you were on stage though, talking,
what I was telling Abby this morning
that I was most struck by was you were so bold and strong
when you were talking about work in the world.
And then the conversation switched
to your daughter and motherhood.
And then this unbelievable vulnerability came forward. Then the conversation switched to your daughter and motherhood.
And then this unbelievable vulnerability came forward.
The softness, you just never see both.
Mm-hmm.
Yes.
Either the strong or the soft, right?
Yeah.
Your strong and soft are both so...
Do you remember meeting us?
Were we rememberable?
Rememberable?
Oh, rememberable.
Yes, you were rememberable. You were rememberable because also I had seen both of you separately
before I saw you in person, obviously.
Abby, clearly.
Hello. The whole world had seen you already.
I knew that. I was very excited about that.
Glennon, I don't even know if I even told you this.
I first saw you on Oprah stage. Oh. At USC. Oh, I didn't even know if I even told you this. I first saw you on Oprah stage at USC.
Oh, I didn't know that.
I was only able to be there for like one session,
and it was yours.
And I sat in the audience, and then this sprite of a person
came across the stage, and I was like, oh, this
is the most interesting white woman
I have ever seen in my life.
Like, I was like, oh, OK, the most interesting white woman I have ever seen in my life.
Like, I was like, oh, okay, yeah, her, that one, this one.
Oh.
And honest.
You know, I hadn't heard such honesty before.
So by the time we got to the Together Live Tour,
oh, I knew exactly who in the hell y'all were.
Oh, I did not know that.
And you did not disappoint. Oh, that's good. I was like, ohall were. No, I did not know that. And you did not disappoint.
Oh, that's good.
I was like, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Still honest, even backstage, still honest.
So I was very, very impressed by you both in person.
Thank you both.
So one of our themes this year on this pod
is how to know when to dig deep and stay and how to know when to stop digging
and go.
This is something that we have not figured out yet, okay?
Just to preface you with that.
But I keep thinking of it in terms of you because I've read some quotes that you've
said recently.
So you recently left Netflix where you were the global chief marketing officer and you said this,
you have to know when time is up and keep it moving.
And then you said, you don't have to be the savior.
You can save yourself too.
So chills.
How did you know when it was time to leave Netflix?
Like, how do you know when it's time to leave a place?
What settles in?
It is so hard to articulate.
It really is.
It's hard to articulate because of that hard place of trying to figure out whether
or not the problem is you or the problem is them. You know, when they say like, oh, yeah,
yeah, no, no, it's not you. It's not you. It's me. It's like, how many times do you have to say that
before you realize that, no, no, it's actually not me at all.
It's them. Yes.
And then the disappointment in that.
In knowing that you chose, you decided.
And they were the problem.
To be able to admit that is so hard.
So then, yeah, you spend the time trying to prove that you actually were not wrong, that
you chose right.
That's the way you spend your energy doing.
So that's what happens to me too.
That often I'm in a situation and I'm like, oh yeah, no, no, no. I chose right
because I'm good at choosing. I thought about it. I have followed my intuition. God told
me and I moved. I went. And then at some point you're like, uh-oh, I don't think this is
right.
Yes. But I've spent so much time then trying to convince myself that I wasn't wrong.
You know, that it must be me.
That if I'm only smarter, if I'm only more likeable, if I'm only wittier, if I'm only more amenable, then maybe I'm not wrong.
Because how could I be wrong?
Right?
I know myself.
I take no shit.
I could never be wrong in that.
It's become very humbling, actually.
We were talking about like being strong and soft.
It's like, you can be self-assured and also humble.
And humble in knowing that sometimes you get it wrong.
Sometimes you get it wrong again, and again,
and again, and again.
That's right.
In that rawness, it's okay, you still survive.
You can be wrong.
You know, I'm very comfortable in being wrong now. Very, very comfortable. I'm like, oh, wrong turn again. And everyone will know.
And God is like the GPS. That's like redirecting, redirecting.
You missed your turn.
It's so fascinating, Bose.
I've never heard anyone describe it like that.
But it is like at some point, whether it's a marriage or a job, relationship, whatever,
at some point you realize, oh, it's me either way, because either it's me in this situation
that's making it hard or it's me that made the decision before to go into this relationship.
Yes.
Yes. Either it's me. it's me, it's me.
It's not them, it's me.
And that is such a hard thing.
It is a hard thing to acknowledge.
It's a hard thing to accept, you know, and then it's a hard thing to correct.
You have the moment where you're like, either way, it's me, whether it was me that got me into this,
or it's me that's making being in it hard,
I'm choosing me.
I'm choosing me, I'm getting the hell out.
Yes, and I'm forgiving me.
I'm forgiving me for making the wrong choice.
Again, we're so hard on ourselves.
You know what? Beat yourself up.
I should have known better.
I've seen it before.
I should have seen it again.
Yeah. Right.
And so then it's like forgiving myself.
And I'm talking about me.
I constantly have to forgive myself
for sometimes making the wrong call for myself.
You know, it's so much easier, right, to like forgive other people. Yeah. myself for sometimes making the wrong call for myself.
You know, it's so much easier, right? To like forgive other people.
Yeah.
Not so much, not sometimes it's hard, but you know,
it's so much easier to say,
oh, well that person made a mistake.
Like if I look at my daughter
and she makes a mistake, right?
I'm like, oh, hun, it's fine.
You're still an amazing person.
Like that was just, that was just, it was bad for the moment. It's okay, it's fine. You're still an amazing person. Like that was just, that was just,
it was bad for the moment.
It's okay, it's okay.
We're gonna figure it out.
Right?
I encourage her that she can make mistakes
and that she can turn around and do better.
But yet for myself, oh, I could spend months,
you know, saying like, well, why did you do that? You knew better. You know, and
that's what becomes so hard about the staying or the going. How fast can I forgive myself
for making the wrong decision?
Oh, that's good.
Will determine how quickly I'm able to get out and correct.
It's that thing about when you grab on to barbed wire, don't just hold on forever.
Like, don't keep making the mistake
because you've put so much time into making the mistake.
Like...
The quickest, we always talk about the squishing the time,
like all of our suffering comes in the time
between the knowing and the doing.
Like, right?
Yes. Yes.
Yes. I was like- Yes.
Yes.
I was having a conversation with a friend
and I was like, you know that time,
you know when you hit your shin?
And that moment between knowing you've hit your shin
and when the pain sets in is like the worst?
Yes.
Cause you're just sitting there waiting for the pain
to come up.
You're like, oh, I know this is gonna hurt.
Yeah.
That moment right there is what sometimes we're sitting in.
Because you don't want the pain to come.
And so then we're sitting there being like, Ooh, I made a mistake.
Uh-oh, I hit my shin.
How long can I wait before the pain sets in?
Yes. Now, I understand, like from a personal perspective, you might view some of these choices that
you've made as a mistake, but I have kind of another perspective that the world is only ready when it's ready.
So corporate America might only be ready for a Bosama St. John in their minds.
And then in practicality, Bosama St. John walks to the door and starts to fuck shit
up and starts to do her work.
And they're like, ah, actually, I don't know if we're this ready yet.
I don't know.
Right.
And so maybe it feels like a personal mistake or a personal decision that you've
made that you don't think was great or in hindsight, you may have chosen
differently, but from the perspective of the macro,
I think what you're doing is you're laying a foundation
for those of us who will come after you
and getting the corporate worlds
or all of those tables you sat at a little bit more ready
for people in certain ways.
And I think that that's really important
not to get lost in this conversation
that your presence and representation
at some of those tables.
And this leads me to my question.
You've been at all of the most powerful tables
in the corporate world.
How does it feel to so often be the one
who looks like you at those tables? The only one, I'm sure.
Yeah, probably the only one.
Yeah, yeah.
No, look, Abby, thank you for that perspective,
because I do often need the reminder of that too.
And so I think both can be true.
Part of the reason why I stopped looking at them as the cause or the reason why sometimes
something didn't work or, you know, for me to figure that out is that I felt like I was
giving my power away.
And perhaps that's a survival mechanism, you know, that I was like, well, if I look at myself, if I say it's me, then I'm better
able to feel like, okay, I can make something else happen.
I can be the one who chooses because I chose to come and I can choose to leave.
And if I put the power over there, then it feels like I can't choose because I'm waiting for them to do the thing that's right.
And so when I'm sitting at those tables, and yes, almost always by myself,
it is both frustrating to know that I'm probably doing the right thing for the future,
to know that I'm probably doing the right thing for the future,
but also that I'm the one who has to take the brunt of it.
You know that I actually, again, like I've been,
I've been thinking a lot lately, ever since I left my job,
doing a lot of thinking. And I was just like, damn, the idea of hidden figures hurts so much.
Because to think that perhaps you were the catalyst
for something and then nobody remembers your name.
Nobody gives you the credit.
And that's what it feels like when I'm in the room.
You know, I'm thinking, this is gonna be so great
for the people who come after.
But will anybody remember me?
Will remember my pain, this moment, this choice I made.
And if not, is that okay?
Am I all right with it?
You know, am I okay with the sacrifice?
And if I'm being totally transparent and honest, I'm not.
I'm not okay with it. I don't want to be hidden. I don't want to be forgotten. And yes, people can say, oh, but how can you be here? Didn't mean the hall of fame. You're this and your dad and
people know your name. No, no, no. I want, I want the credit. I want it.
Of course you do. I deserve it.
And it, and it, for me,
it makes me think about being in those rooms and the temptation of wanting to
align and become them and to align with the men,
the white men in those rooms, how easy and alluring that is.
You've talked about that. You know, and I feel like this is the real fight is to resist, to keep resisting the
urge in that alignment. How do you do that?
And then that's what you're doing.
Yeah.
And then that's why it's not working.
That's why it's that. Yes. Because look, I think one of the most obvious places,
and you know, this happens a lot, it happens every time,
but one of the most obvious, I think for everyone
who sees it will understand,
was the moment I took the stage of the Apple keynote,
WWDC, where no other black person,
forget black, no other black person
had presented the software before.
I mean, Steve Jobs' stage, right?
You've got all of the known people on the stage,
Eddie Kew and Craig Federici and Phil Schiller.
They're the ones who present, right?
And leading up to that moment,
first of all, there was a lot of doubt
that I should even do it, right?
Because look, I'm a marketer, I'm not an engineer.
Black woman, although nobody wants to say that out loud. You know?
They're like, she's a marketer, not an engineer.
Yeah. I'm like, uh-huh.
And that whole statement about like, oh, I don't know if they'll believe you. Yeah. Uh-huh. I know
why. You know? But Abby, your point about the allure of just aligning to make things easier, that was my choice that day
too. Where it's like, look, everybody showed up in their jeans and button-down shirt.
Like a literal visual. I walked into the green room in the back of the stage and there were, it was just a rack of jeans and blue button
down shirts and pink button down shirts and khaki colored things. And I just looked at
it and I was standing there in my curly afro, my very tight pink dress, my Louboutin solettos with a little poof on the back too.
Of course.
How dare me, right?
A little poof on the back just to add insult to injury.
And I was standing back there and it was like, you know, Tim Cook went first to start the
presentation and then Eddie went and Eddie is supposed to introduce me.
And I'm standing back there and I was just like,
whoo, one of these things is not like the other.
You know, waiting for my turn.
And when I went on that stage,
I know it would have been easier for me too, by the way,
if I had just put on the jeans and the button down.
If I had just tried to look like
everybody else, maybe that would be one less barrier, you know, than even how I appear
to be. Not even, I hadn't even opened my mouth yet. That I had not even presented one idea
yet. Just how I look. And so for all of us who are showing up in these spaces,
of course you just want to align.
In that little moment of like just walking in the door,
knowing everybody's gonna turn and look at you.
If you didn't have that hair,
if you didn't have on that crazy outfit,
if you weren't wearing those dang-on earrings, if you didn't have on that crazy outfit, if you weren't wearing those Dagon earrings,
if your nails weren't painted a certain way,
if you weren't wearing those shoes, clickety-clack-clack-clack,
here I come down the hallway, you know I'm coming
because you heard my heels clicking.
-♪ LAUGHS AND GIGGLES, LAUGHS CONTINUE. -♪
It would be so much easier.
But I refuse to do that.
Because I do know all the people who are walking behind me. Nobody refused to do that.
Because I do know all the people who were walking behind me.
I am very aware of that.
And it still hurts.
Both of those things can be true.
So no, I am not like some, you know, like humble martyr out here.
I want my roses. Yes. I want my roses.
I want them now.
I can, yes, both can be true that I want it for them too,
but I want mine.
You know, and that's why I choose.
That's why when I'm sitting there and I'm like,
oh, you know what?
This ain't right.
Let me just, where's my purse at?
Let me just pack my things and get up the hell out of here
because I recognize that unless I do that, I will be that hidden figure.
Nobody will know my name.
I love you so much.
And it's amazing when you think about, I don't know how to put this into words, you will, but like how the corporate
world and the whole world uses words that cover the racism and the misogyny, uses words
like professionalism.
Yes.
When what it really means is whiteness.
So, well, we just want you to wear this.
We just want you to talk like this.
We just want you to because it's professional.
Yes.
Without dissecting what they're actually saying by professional.
White maleness, not just whiteness.
Right.
That's right.
That's right.
Or when we are creating strategies, right?
Or telling stories, especially as are creating strategies, right, or telling stories,
especially as a marketer, right, that's my whole job is to create narratives about things. And
you have to make it for the mass market. Right? Meaning that my story doesn't matter in it. But how can that be?
Very early on in my career, I contemplated that.
I was like, so how am I supposed to
create this narrative for
white men when I've never been one?
That's very strange. Then I thought,
I must be smarter than all the rest of y'all because because if I can do it and you can't tell my story,
oh, then I'm very fucking good.
Cause I could tell my story and yours.
Oh my God.
That's where it started from, right?
Cause I was just like, oh, I see.
You're trying to tell me that I'm not as good as you,
but actually I'm better.
Cause I can do both.
You could only do one.
And then at some point I was like,
oh, but wait, but my story is actually really important too.
So then how do I put my story into the thing?
You know, how do I add my perspective onto the story
to really tell it.
It was so interesting how much resistance you can get
when you're simply just trying to show up as yourself.
It's still surprising to me.
Most times I'm just like, but this is gonna be,
like you can't really ignore me, right?
Like you wouldn't be that overt about it,
but no, it's true.
Yes, we hide it in all the words that like,
no, it's gotta be mass market.
It's got to hit the majority.
And therefore your story is not important.
Your perspective is not important.
Please consider everybody else before yourself.
And perhaps that's also what is striking me
because I've been conditioned
that that's what I'm supposed to do.
Whether it's for the opening the doors for everybody else,
consider everybody else with myself.
Or in the narrative telling or in the strategy setting,
consider everybody else with myself.
And I'm just at the point where I'm just like,
no, I'm only considering myself.
How about that?
Yes, that's what you're doing myself. How about that? Yes.
Because that's what you're doing
for the people that come behind you.
Like, that's the difference between freaking diversity
because especially for a woman like you,
when they hire you, they say,
we want you for your perspective,
we want you for your story,
we want you for your whatever.
And then the second you get there,
that's not what they want you for.
No, no, no, no, exactly.
They want you for their sheets that says we have for. No, no, no, no. They want you for their sheets that says, we have her.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
And to appear to be different, but not actually be different.
You know?
So and that was another thing that I've realized is that, look, I actually really do show up
as myself, really.
And so when that happens, people are just like, oh, but wait, I thought you would then
just fit into our culture because our culture is our thing and you're supposed to fit into
it.
And what's so interesting to me is although I love the arts, I'm really a science gal.
And I'm like, molecules are so interesting. When you think about matter, it's like in any matter,
could be DNA, it could be water, it could be anything. You add a molecule into the matter
and the whole matter changes. It doesn't matter what you're talking about. So if you consider that the matter is a culture,
whether it's society or it's a company or it's a family,
you have matter.
Then the one molecule that enters that matter changes it.
It is not the same.
Then you've got to contemplate, well,
then if that is true because it's true in
science, if I walk into a corporate culture, I am the molecule, the matter has to change.
It's not even a choice.
It has to change.
So then why would I consider myself insignificant?
Even if I'm just one.
Because if you have a glass of water
and you drop some red dye into it,
regardless of how small that drop is, it changes.
It is no longer the same.
That's right.
So that little drop can't be insignificant.
So I am not insignificant.
Yes.
Why would I behave that way?
That's why it's not working.
MUSIC
MUSIC
At the end of the day, Bose, is it
that a lot of places want to say and get credit for
wanting to change, but at the end of the day, that's the last thing that's wanted?
They don't want it.
They don't want the actual change.
They don't want the change.
They don't want the change because the change is also too hard.
I think they really do want it because we all want things.
You know what I mean because we all want things. We all want things. But
just as in the name of this podcast, it's hard. It is hard. Like everything else, I
don't think anything is just black and white. I do believe that there is a desire to change,
a sincere one. A sincere, a sincere acknowledgement that like,
oh yes, okay, no, we are all the same here
and we do need to have perspectives that are different.
But then that difference comes and it's like,
ooh, that's way too different.
Can you just behave a certain way?
You know, can you just not say the things?
Can you not bring up that story when you're talking?
You know, because we know that's just, that doesn't fit into the thing we're trying
to say.
Speaking of hard, I think it's important.
What is it like communicating with white women?
An easy question.
That's interesting.
What's the hardest part of communicating with white women?
The hardest part about communicating with white women is that they still think we're the same.
Somehow just being women means that we're the same. And that is not true.
Again, I think intellectually we all know that, but practically do we know that?
I think it's like intellectually we all know that, but practically do we know that? Emotionally, do we know that?
I don't think so.
And so then the idea of our united sort of energy and our united mission falls apart
because we're still working inside of a society in which whiteness then is the superior. And so it's like the superiority of the white
women experience is completely a giant as compared to mine. And so then mine doesn't
really matter. So the individual kind of struggles or other types of challenges that I have,
because there's so many other connection points
in whiteness to white men that I simply don't have, right?
And so you would think, oh, well, look,
I have the connection to women, regardless of race.
And then the white women have the connection to the men
because of race.
So then they're connected here to the men
and they're connected to me because of women. So then they're connected here to the men and they're connected to me
because of women. So they're connected on two points and I'm connected on one. I'm dependent
on that one. And so I'm already at a disadvantage. And so just understanding that as a literal
practical thing, and that's just the bottom of it, right? Everything else like builds
on top of it. But that is the most difficult.
Actually getting the understanding,
not just intellectually, but emotionally,
that we're not on the same playing field
is very, very difficult.
And how would that play out?
Because again, we're talking about alignment.
So when white women who say,
I'm aligned with you because we're women,
you're black, I'm white, but I'm aligned with you.
Do you see it throughout work, throughout?
Oh yeah.
That really the alignment goes the other way.
Really when the shit hits the fan, the alignment, white women align with the power.
With the white men.
That's right.
With the power.
You know, it's a practical one of that.
Do you remember in the Obama administration, you probably read this, where they said that
the women band together to help amplify each other's voices in meetings and whatnot?
I thought that was such a beautiful thing.
And it has taken root in corporate.
You can see it, where women say, okay, we're getting in there.
You have an idea. I'm
gonna support your idea. You know, it's like, and that's such a beautiful thing. But what is
happening also is that in those situations, it is not just my voice that needs to be heard, but my perspective and my story, which sometimes needs to lead, that I find that
white women have a hard time following black women. And so then it's like that whole affirmation
like rah rah rah, let's support each other, only is also one direction. So there's the
meetings before the meetings, but there are meetings
after the meetings. Right? The meetings after the meetings are the ones that are just like,
oh, I'm so glad you said that. And, you know, did you hear me when I supported you? And
I'm like, so you kind of didn't. You kind of said my idea again, and then they heard you.
That's kind of what happened.
And it's like, oh, no, no, no, but we still got the point across.
Like, we, the women, we said the thing and we made the point.
I'm like, no, no, no.
It was my thing, and then you took it and made it yours. And then you came back and said, oh, it's ours.
Nobody remembers that I said it because you said it.
But that's the thing.
It's like, again, I'm just like, ah!
You know, it's like, sometimes you just feel so frustrated because I'm just like, where
is my voice?
You know, it's like, yes, we are going further because the woman's story went forward, but
it was taken forward by the white woman.
And she didn't even acknowledge me.
Yes.
And so then it's like, okay, well, here I am again, by my damn self.
Having to be the kind of jerk afterwards in that post meeting going, actually, no, you stole my idea.
That wasn't ours.
And that makes you feel like a jerk, but like you're still having to do it.
Yes.
And by the way, everybody thinks you're a bitch.
You know how many times I've been called arrogant, selfish, a bitch?
You know how many times?
All the time.
And I'm like, no, I'm not selfish, I'm not a bitch.
I'm just asking to be acknowledged.
Yep.
I'm just asking to be seen.
That's it.
It is the lowest of things I'm asking for.
The lowest.
I didn't even ask you to call me a genius,
which I fucking am.
Yes.
I just asked you to see me, that's it.
That's it.
Low bars here, fuck.
Now I'm selfish.
You know what I mean?
Cause I said, oh no, wasn't your idea, was my idea.
Oh, no, this is teamwork though.
Oh really?
I don't care about that.
You seem to be the only one in the team.
You gotta tell us.
I'm just excited to talk about Share the Mic.
I just... I feel like people are gonna feel so...
Well, I was actually thinking about Share the Mic because when you said,
is anyone hearing my story?
That's what I remember you saying to me.
Glennon!
You said, I'll never forget...
One sentence you said, I'm just... I'm screaming into the wind. I'm screaming into the wind.
I said, how are you or something?
And you said, I'm just, I'm screaming, but no one's hearing me.
I'm screaming into the wind.
Glennon, can we also pause just there for a second?
Because that moment also just needs to be acknowledged because when you and I talked, you said the thing that most white women don't
say. You know, you were like, how do I, how do I help your voice? And I said, I was just
like, oh shit, she want to know how to help amplify my voice. It literally knocked me off my feet. You know, because
I was just like, man, I've been in so many environments, conversations with very well
meaning people. Again, I don't think everything is black and white. Things are very great.
You know, people who mean well, they want to help and all that. But they just take your
voice and then they put theirs on it and it changes.
Then it's out and you can't get it back.
But what you said in that moment is what then led me to say, I feel like I'm just screaming
into the wind.
Nobody hears me.
Then it was like, it almost became an easy solution after that.
Yeah, dig. It was like, of course became an easy solution after that. Yeah, dig.
It was like, of course, of course, of course, you should just be heard.
How do I put you on the platform so you can be heard?
That.
But it was such a fundamentally different question from everybody else.
And also, we have to acknowledge that.
That was not just because I answered,
but because you asked the question.
And then that was a question that led to so low,
so many questions.
Cause then you and Levy, right?
You and Levy came back and were like, you had a whole...
I know you guys didn't, like, 12 minutes.
You had a whole plan.
Do you remember what happened next?
Oh, man.
This is when I feel like this...
The ancestors, or the spirits who are not yet here,
the other ones who are waiting, they just all came through.
It really does not feel like, you know, our idea was just, you know, conduit, right,
to let it be born because it just felt that easy. It was like, as soon as we just stopped,
you asked the question, it was like a portal being opened. You asked the question, we went back, we were like, okay. Because I was exhausted. Again, frankly, honestly, I was just exhausted. I was like,
I don't want to talk to nobody. You y'all can keep talking. I'm going to be sitting over here
resting my vocal cords. And from that moment, it was like, look, okay, let's figure out, like, how do we open up our contact lists
and find the white women who have these enormous platforms?
And how do we get them off of there?
Yeah.
How do we get them off?
That's good.
We don't need them saying our thing.
How do we get them out, though?
But we still want their platform.
And it was amazing to think that all we had to do was ask.
Ask the right people who are willing to say, oh, okay, let me just move over. And again, I don't want to pretend like that was an easy thing either because,
look, I feel like Instagram or social media platforms, to some degree,
feel even more sacred
to people than their own homes.
Isn't that interesting? Right?
You invite somebody over to your house
to look in your fridge much quicker
than you would say, oh, go ahead
and just say whatever you want on my Instagram.
What if they say something crazy?
What if they say something you don't like?
What if they say something that's offensive?
You know what that person's gonna say?
It's like, how scary is that?
The bravery on both sides of this incredible movement
that we made of white women being brave and vulnerable
enough to say, look, I'm gonna get out the way.
You're the keys to the house.
You just do whatever you want.
And then the bravery and tirelessness
of black women who were saying,
okay, I'm gonna say it one more time.
I'm gonna say the truth,
and I'm gonna be unafraid
of what people are gonna say about me
because they don't know me. They might judge me. I'm going to say it anyway. And let me tell you, even
for me, right? Somebody who's, I'm out, I'm talking, I'm saying the things. And all of
the work that was going into creating this movement,
I remember I called Lovey.
It was like we had told everybody to go online at like noon or something like that.
And I swear to you, it was like 11.55.
And I called Lovey in a panic and I was like, oh, I forgot I'm supposed to do it too.
I remember that. I totally forgot.
I completely forgot.
Somehow that completely escaped me. And then I was just like, how am I going to do that? I'm so tired. I don't even know what I'm going to say.
I didn't even start thinking about it.
And then I got afraid.
I was like, what if I say the wrong thing?
There's so much expectation.
Like, I don't know what I'm going to do.
I was worried about my outfit.
Forgot what I was going to say.
And then after I was done saying what I wanted to say, I was like, I'm going to do this.
I'm going to do this.
I'm going to do this.
I'm going to do this.
I'm going to do this.
I'm going to do this.
I'm going to do this.
I'm going to do this.
I'm going to do this.
I'm going to do this.
I'm going to do this.
I'm going to do this. I'm going to do this. I'm going to do this. I'm going to do this. I'm going to do. I was worried about my outfit, forgot what I was going to say.
And then after I was done saying what I wanted to say, I fell out, exhausted, completely
drained.
And so I continuously think about that too when I think about the corporate settings
or these business settings where it takes so much energy to show up, to say the thing bravely, to go back outside of that space and still
continue without laying down and taking a break.
You got to do that day after day after day after day. It is a miracle
that we're still able to do this. Look, I had to give myself a pep talk the other day.
I looked at myself in the mirror and I was like, girl, you are just a miracle.
You are a miracle. The fact that you are where you are,
from where you came from,
withstanding what you've been through,
it is a miracle that you're here smiling
with that clear ass melanin skin of yours.
Looking as good as you do.
Having a happy spirit, raising an incredible daughter,
being an awesome friend.
You're a miracle.
So go on ahead, being an awesome friend. You're a miracle. So go ahead.
Keep your head up.
Speaking of miracles, can we talk about that daughter of yours?
I think, you know, Instagram land is really big on love stories.
And we as a culture tend to value most the romantic ones.
But I swear to God...
I have goosebumps already and you all don't know what I'm gonna say,
but I'm just saying that the love story of you and Leo
has got to be one of the most beautiful ones being told right now.
I mean, and for those of you
who don't know, you'll have to go, we'll put all the links to Boze's social so you can
see all of her genius, but also see this love she has. Just tell us about Lael and what
are, even like right now from where you are in the world and what are your dreams for
her?
Oh, Lael. I don't even know where to start with that, you know? Because Lael is my rainbow baby.
Um, I lost a daughter before Lael.
Eve, my first.
Um, and I lost her the day she was born,
which was just devastating and crushing.
That's, to put it mildly.
Um, and... three months after I lost Eve, That's to put it mildly.
And three months after I lost Eve, I was like, I want to have another baby.
I want to be pregnant.
My doctor was like, are you out of your mind?
Sit your ass down and let your body heal.
And I was like, no, I'm determined.
No, this is what I want.
This is what I want. This is what I want. And the thing is that like maybe looking back now is again, maybe reaction to trauma, right?
Feeling like, ooh, I was supposed to be a mom and then I'm not a mom. So now I got to
be a mom. I'm going to do everything in my power to do that. As soon as I got pregnant,
I was terrified.
Like sheer, I'm talking about sheer terror.
Trying to think of every way to get out.
Like, okay, I made a mistake again.
Like I made a mistake, it's my fault.
I wasn't supposed to do this.
I don't know why I did it.
Okay.
But I held on and held on and held on.
Lael was born two and a half months early.
And I prayed every single day of my pregnancy
and every single moment of my labor
that she would be born.
Alive, breathing,
kicking, crying, anything. And I promised God, I, kicking, crying, anything.
And I promised God, I was like, if she lived,
that I would name her for him.
So I said, La El, meaning belonging to God.
And she was born on May 29th, 2009, same day as my sister.
She was born on May 29th, 2009, same day as my sister. Aalua!
Yes, Aalua's birthday.
And the doctor had prepped both Peter and I that because she was premature,
because they'd given me a bunch of steroids to help her lungs develop so she could breathe,
that's unfortunately what happened to Eve,
was that she just couldn't breathe.
And he says, she's probably not gonna make a sound.
You won't be able to hold her.
We're gonna deliver her and then she's gonna go.
So just be prepared for that.
And they all came out like lightning.
You know, it was like a crack in the air.
She's like, wow, scream.
And I, I mean, I was in such awe of her in that moment.
I was like, I've delivered a warrior.
A real, like a real life warrior.
And I refuse to let them take her. Cause I was just like, oh no, no, no, she's fine.
And when I tell you, I did one of those, like in the movies,
you know where you just reach down and grab the kid.
That's what I did.
Oh my gosh.
I was like, no, she's mine.
Ripped her right out of my womb, put her on my chest,
took in the scent of her, her heartbeat,
the thin translucent skin that she had,
and felt every inch of her.
She was not bigger than one palm, but I felt it, all of it.
And in the months that followed,
she was in the hospital for a while.
I prayed every day.
She came home right before her due date.
And I thought, now I'm responsible for this warrior.
I thought, now I'm responsible for this warrior, you know, to show her the way,
to make her understand that her life is such a gift, you know, that she was so wanted, so needed, not just for like my own salvation and belief in faith,
but that she is here for such a great purpose. I mean, we all are, but I believe it for her.
I know she's destined for something great. I don't know what that is.
And I won't try to force it.
Whatever the path is, I will follow it
because there was no math that says she should be here,
but yet she is.
And so my hope is that she's just going to walk
in her destiny and fulfill it.
Well, we started this interview with you saying there is no math that says that you should
be here, where you are in this world.
There is also no math that says the little warrior should be where she is, and yet you
both are freaking warriors, gorgeous warriors, a beautiful love story.
When The Urgent Life is ready, will you come back here, please, to tell us the story?
I just cannot wait, Bose.
I cannot wait.
Please send me that book as soon as it's ready.
Okay?
I just...
I will.
I will. I will. And you already know, it's like, you know, the process of writing is so, so difficult.
But this was, it's been a long time coming, you know?
And I was ready.
The moment I sat down, I was ready.
I wasn't ready a moment before that.
But as soon as I sat down, it was like... Everything just started coming.
And so I'm telling all of it, you know?
All of the pain, all of the triumph, all of...
All the things.
What a gift.
Bose, nobody will ever forget your name.
That is for sure.
You are unforgettable.
Thank you for being with us and sharing your story.
And please come back when that book publishes.
And the next right thing for all of you pod squatters
is just to go back and listen again.
Okay?
And then pretend when Boze is giving her pep talks to herself,
that it's for you.
That's right.
Because you are also a miracle.
That's right.
All right.
Bose, go do all of your million important hard things.
We love you forever.
We will always be in your corner.
I love you so much.
And Lailz, we will talk soon.
Thank you for this.
And so rest of you.
Thank you so much.
Carry on, warriors.
Bye.
If this podcast means something to you, it would mean so much to us.
If you'd be willing to take 30 seconds to do these three things, first, can you please
follow or subscribe to We Can Do Hard Things?
Following the pod helps you because you'll never miss an episode and it helps us because
you'll never miss an episode.
To do this, just go to the We Can Do Hard Things show page
on Apple podcasts, Spotify, Odyssey,
or wherever you listen to podcasts,
and then just tap the plus sign
in the upper right-hand corner or click on follow.
This is the most important thing for the pod.
While you're there, if you'd be willing
to give us a five-star rating and review
and share an episode you loved with a friend,
we would be so grateful. We appreciate you very much.
We Can Do Hard Things is created and hosted by Glennon Doyle,
Abby Wambach and Amanda Doyle in partnership with Odyssey.
Our executive producer is Jenna Wise-Berman
and the show is produced by Lauren Legrasso,
Alison Schott, Dina Kleiner, and Bill Schultz.