We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Breast Cancer Awareness Month: In Honor of All Warriors & Survivors
Episode Date: October 23, 2024In honor of Breast Cancer Awareness month – 25 weeks post surgery and outrageously grateful to be cancer free – Amanda revisits an episode from the messy middle of her breast cancer diagnosis. In ...this raw conversation, she talks candidly through her fears while trying to figure out what really matters for her health and life. This is a powerful conversation to share with any breast cancer survivor anyone in the messy middle of battling it now. To listen to the first part of this conversation with Amanda, go to: Episode 309 Amanda’s Diagnosis & What’s Next (Pt. 1). And for more episodes on Breast Cancer Awareness, please also check out: Episode 316 Amanda Returns Post Surgery: Here’s What She Wants You To Know Episode 317 What Amanda’s Learned About Life, Love & Community (Post Surgery Pt 2) Episode 320 Early Detection, Mammograms & Breast Cancer Care with Dr. Rachel Brem Episode 321 Expert Advice on Genetic Testing, Cancer Prevention & Care Disparities with Dr. Rachel Brem 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)
Every October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month and October 2024 feels different to me because
this is the first time that Breast Cancer Awareness Month has happened where I have
had an awareness of what it feels like to go through that process of diagnosis and learning and
trying to find out the information you need and all of the emotions of getting through
it and all of the support and love you feel and all of the fear.
Today we're revisiting an episode in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month that we recorded
back in April.
April was when I shared from the messy middle after my diagnosis and before surgery.
This was actually the second episode of a raw conversation when I was working through
my fears and trying to figure out what really mattered for my health
and for my life. This week I am delighted and so grateful that I am 25 weeks
post-surgery, I am cancer-free, and I am feeling well. And I'm feeling grateful
for each of you and all of the stories we've heard about the way
that the things that we shared have made you feel, have galvanized you to advocate for
your own care, to get the tests you need, to ask the additional questions.
It is a great, great honor to have been able
to be part of your process and to hear your stories.
Nothing makes me feel more grateful
than to see the tweets and comments
that you got your mammograms, you pushed for your MRIs,
you found out your breast density
because of what you learned in these episodes.
It's a real joy to me.
So take care of yourself, take care of your people, schedule your appointments, ask your
questions, figure out your density, and let's keep learning everything we can and help to
find as much breast cancer in the earliest curable stages as possible.
That is the goal.
That's what we're going to do through the education
and sharing we're doing together. Please enjoy this episode today and share the other episodes.
The other ones where we talked about this are 309, 316, 317, 320, and 321, where we talk about all
kinds of expert advice and the messy middle parts of going through it. So if you know anyone who's struggling with this,
please send them those episodes.
They really helped folks.
All right, love y'all.
Bye.
Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things.
If you have not listened to the previous episode,
you are going to want to before you listen to this one. Sister, in case people are going
to disobey me and not listen to the episode.
Woe to those who disobey you. Woe unto them.
I mean truly woe to them
because they don't know what's about to hit them.
But can you in just a quick sentence
tell us what we are continuing to talk about today?
Yes, we are continuing to talk about the fact
and the effect of me learning three weeks from when we are recording this that I have
breast cancer and that I will be having one week from right now a double mastectomy in
an effort to remove all of the cancer from my body and that God willing that mastectomy
will do all the work that we need to be done.
And if not, there will be other steps to take including removing lymph nodes, possible radiation, possible chemo, possible endocrine therapy, et cetera, to take care of it.
And that the prognosis is very good and that whether this is a little blip or a longer
period that all systems say, we're going to be all set, you bet,
after a hot minute of going through
what we'll need to go through.
So we're just talking about,
we talked a lot about the logistics in the last episode
and some of the deep, big questions
that this has got you thinking about.
And right after we stopped recording that one,
we started talking offline, off recording,
I don't know, off tape, whatever,
about what we're gonna do next in terms of sharing,
in terms of what we're gonna share with you, the pod squad,
and what we're not gonna share.
And it turned into a very interesting conversation
about how to walk through this as a public person.
And that opened up a lot of other questions.
So Abby said, there's so many people going through this
and going into surgery.
Like maybe you should talk about it right before.
And then my perspective on that, there's a cost to that.
Like I don't care what anyone says
because I've been doing it.
I know that there's a cost to double living,
double consciousness.
So like you're preparing for yourself to go into surgery.
And then you're also thinking,
what am I going to say about this experience going into surgery? I don't recommend that for
you right now. Knowing the cost of it. I think if you have a couple thoughts pre-surgery that
you're like, this is a moment, shut it down. I just don't want you to have a double consciousness
going in. I just feel like it's bullshit. You need all your energy. What are your thoughts
about... It's a big question. Like how I have friends who are artists who find that when
they have hard experiences, making meaning out of it and sharing is how they get through,
I sometimes feel like I tend to avoid
my own process of things by making things and giving it to other people.
Like that can be an avoidance of presence and experience.
By making meaning of things?
By every single thing that happens, thinking,
oh, well, this is just the universe has given me more shit
that I can spin into gold.
And if I turn this into a story and share it,
then I will be fixing pain.
Lemons?
How I fix pain is spinning it into gold,
giving it to other people.
That is the art and service as therapy model,
which I can say has not worked for me completely.
So.
Completely I think is an important word.
Right, so I'm wondering
what you think would be of best service to you.
Well, first of all, I think when we stopped recording that first episode,
it just felt like that's wild. It's been three weeks of nonstop, tumult and drama and fear and anxiety.
And then we're just like,
okay, that's the story in 45, 50 minutes,
whatever the hell that was.
And it just feels like that can't be right.
Like it was so much.
More than that, We should say more. And so that's part of why I asked you
to, if we could get on to talk about it from where we are right now, not ready. And because
I remember you talking about your diagnosis and from the messy middle, you called
it Glennon, and that talking about how you weren't ready to talk about it, but that you
wanted to talk about it because so few people talked about it from the part where you didn't
yet know what you wanted to say.
And I feel like that I wanted to do for this and also relates exactly to what you're talking
about right now, which is that by saying something about it, you are necessarily changing it.
And I don't think that applies just to people who are public people or people who have a
lot of people listening to them.
I truly believe that it happens to every single person who has news that they share with others.
So I think what we're talking about, it's just on a bigger scale right now because of
the platform that this podcast is.
But I believe because I've experienced it over the past several days that probably anyone
with a cancer diagnosis, anyone with a big loss in their lives that then has to tell their families and their neighbors and their
friends and their community about it is doing what you're talking about right now.
Because there's something that happens in the curating and repackaging of whatever you're going through
and presenting it in the way that you decide to present it to people outside of your body
that is claiming it to be a certain way or a certain thing or a certain brand or a certain thing, or a certain brand, or a certain tone that is defining in some
ways of what your experience is.
And as soon as you define your experience for outward consumption, is your internal
experience then adopting that narrative as the truth?
Yep.
And it's not at all true, I would guess in the vast majority of cases, including mine,
that I consulted my internal experience before determining what would be packaged
as my description of what I was going through. Yes, I get that.
It's you do it the other way around.
That's it.
I will create the narrative.
I'm not even consulting my body or reality.
I'm in my brain, create the narrative.
Then we all revolve around that narrative.
I don't even know if it's real.
Yeah, and it could be very real. It could be real, but it could not be what is your truest,
realist experience inside of you. Because by definition, we are not all having it. You're presenting something to the community. God willing, if you have a community, I'm very blessed to have a community that wants
to support me, that wants to love me, that wants to be there for my kids, that wants
to be there for me and John.
I want that.
I'm grateful for that.
And we are collectively having a community experience, which is, you know, that is the
gift that Wendy gave us.
That is a powerful force in life and one of the greatest forces in life. It is different fundamentally from an internal
experience of something. Wendy wasn't having our communal experience of her cancer journey.
She was having the reality of cancer in her body,
overtaking her body that she knew would take her
off the planet and take her away from her son.
Those are two, they were in parallel,
but they were not the same.
Yeah.
And so I have caught myself over the last couple of days
because out of necessity, needing to and wanting to, very much wanting to, bring my community into this to talk about these
things, to destigmatize these things, to avoid people hearing these things from anyone other than me who I very much care about that confusing that this
experience that I am presenting to you and that you are now participating in is my experience of
this. Yeah, I get that. And I think that I could neglect or kind of bury over the reality that there's a very
different experience that will be required by me to experience separate from the one
that John is having, the one that my kids are having, the one that y'all are having,
the one that my parents are having, the one that my friends are having, the one that my kids are having, the one that y'all are having, the one that my parents are having,
the one that my friends are having,
the one that my community is having,
that I cannot adopt those experiences as my own
and that I need to figure out what mine is.
Is that the, it's like we keep coming back to that,
like that's the terror of this is just the aloneness
and the absolute impossibility of merging experience with anyone, even the people closest
to you.
I mean, I think if you're lucky enough to have people super close to you that are not
full of fear and not in survival mode about how the hell are they gonna deal without you?
Like you and Abby have been so amazing with.
We've already made in the last couple of weeks some very dramatic decisions about, dictated
by this in terms of the projects that we had scheduled that we canceled. The decisions that as far as like what takes
incredible amounts of time in our lives that isn't healthy for us anymore.
And that you're bringing that to me as an offering to change the way that we're living has
made me feel very very not alone. I think there's a very real part that is very
really connected and that can be so powerful. And that has been to me.
Like that gives me hope and joy and relief.
Good, because I do spend some time worrying
if you're gonna feel like I'm taking control from you.
Like I'm canceling things and you're,
I've been very concerned about what's the right amount
of doing this.
I know it's good without making you feel even less control because this is a very vague loss of control time for you.
Nicole Zwaard I think you've navigated it really beautifully. I mean,
I think you've said, here's my intentions. Here's what I want to do. I'm not cutting you out.
You can be involved in this if you desire to be, but these are the two decisions that
I would like to make in terms of these projects and whether they continue.
And do you agree?
That has been the perfect balance for me.
And I would not have brought it up,
but I knew when you said those things
that it felt like a wash of relief in my body
and the fact it felt like, oh, it could be different.
The after this could be different.
And I think the after this needs to be different.
In what ways?
And I also wanna talk about, since we're being so brave and talking about things in
real time, there was a moment in the last episode where I said to you, there's two parallel
paths this is going on.
And one is logistic and one is emotional.
And then you got upset about that because it felt to you
and I probably presented it as a way that when you said
you weren't processing emotionally
and I was very surprised by that,
you felt like I was saying you were doing it wrong.
I want you to know that that was actually how I had,
in my head, structured these episodes.
So I thought the first episode-
You were like, fuck, we're not gonna have any material
for these episodes if we haven't done any processing, lady.
That was in my brain this morning.
Like, oh great, okay, so we've got these two parallel things.
And the first one, episode, we will talk logistic.
And I wasn't trying to stick to that.
I wasn't saying enough, but that was in my brain,
a way we could organize it.
And so in that moment when you said,
I am not processing emotionally,
if there was something on my face
that made you feel like I was shaming you for it,
what I was thinking was,
hi, I wonder how this is gonna go.
Right, right, right.
Well, you said, are you serious?
You're not, so you're not processing,
you're not processing at all then emotionally.
And yes, I do.
I mean, if you listen back to that part of the episode,
it got my Irish a little bit up
because I'm very defensive of myself right now, always.
And so right now, and I think that there,
yeah, I think broadly the idea that there's like a right way to do any of this, I don't want people to feel. And then specifically, I do feel like there's a little bit of this narrative of, well, I don't even
know how to say this. Kind of like when something like this befalls someone, there's a weird
little kind of like penance thing that happens, almost like penance, especially
if you're someone like me who has worked really hard and may be at the detriment of your mental
and physical health and may be not paid as close attention to some things and may or
may not have said at certain times in the past, if I keep working this hard, I'm going to get cancer, that there is an expectation and almost obligation that you will start writing those
ways of living that have gotten you here.
I see that.
Like it's your fault?
I mean, sort of, but no one would say that.
And I don't feel that.
And I also know that there's thousands of vegan
ultra marathoners that are getting diagnosed
with cancer every hour.
So that is not what I mean.
I'm speaking from a very personal space.
And like, Glennon, you said it to John and me in my bedroom. Like,
if this is an opportunity, this is a time, if you don't take good look at every aspect of your
lives and make sure it's what you want and what you intend, then you are missing this moment and missing this opportunity.
And I believe that. I do believe, and that's why I'm grateful that we're cutting things
out and that's why I want to be super intentional and responsible for my own life and what I'm doing and making sure it's what I want going forward.
And in that moment, in the last episode when you said,
are you really not processing your emotions with a surprise?
I was putting it in that camp of like,
you're doing the thing where you're avoiding
what's important and going with your to-do
list and that is doing it wrong and that is missing the opportunity of this moment and
what you need to be doing.
That is where my head went in that moment.
Yeah, I can definitely see that.
Also I am judgy and there is a dynamic that I feel you feel, which is that I, that you think that, that
you think that I think that you're doing things wrong.
And so when I offer ideas or questions, that there's an undercurrent of judgment in them, which I'm not saying there's not.
So that is what happened, right? Yeah, that is what happened. And I think the part of me
that's like dealing with all of this stuff, and again, I know you're dealing with it as much as
anyone could possibly deal with it who wasn't me. So, I don't mean it as this, but the suggestion of like, what I felt was, how could you possibly
be navigating this time and be failing to address your emotional reality was a little
bit like, fuck all the way off.
I am doing 1000 things in the course of a couple of weeks to prepare my family, my life, my
community and my body for major irreversible surgery and the aftermath thereof.
You know, so yeah, my emotions will come.
And I also, you know, and it's also in the backdrop of I know that that is a very real
thing and I've talked to my friend, Christine,
who we talked about on the pod where she had
that special event to thank people for helping her
and her husband through the heart stuff.
And she asked me how I'm doing.
And a lot of people have done that.
And I'm like, I don't have any idea.
I don't have any idea how I'm't have any idea how I'm doing.
I know what I'm doing, but I don't know how I'm doing.
And she said-
That's good.
You know what you're doing,
but you don't know how you're doing.
That's really good.
What did she say?
Does she have any help for us about that?
She just said,
it sounds like you are going through exactly
in the stages that we went through,
where it was like
what needs to be done? What do we need to do to save ourselves? What are the questions
that need to be answered? What are the resources we need to line up? What are the things now
we go in and get our stuff done? And she said it was really, really hard after because all
of that sadness and fear and anxiety and all of the things that are no doubt
happening because they have to be at some level were kind of like saved up
in a little box for after got through that initial period and then it was
really hard and I'm sure the design of that really sucks because you're at this period where everyone's
like, can I help? I understand. This is your two weeks of grace that the world has given you.
But then you're really sad and mad on weeks seven through nine. But like your graces run out,
the community and the people in your life. There's a statute of limitations on grace.
No more casseroles for you. No more c a statute of limitations on that grace. No more cast rolls for you.
No more cast rolls for you during that time.
Exactly.
Can I just say one thing?
Yes.
Well, two things.
I'm so proud of you, sister,
for telling us that that moment made you feel something.
To me, that shows this time,
there's actual growth happening,
that there's like a boundary you are holding for yourself,
which is like so fucking beautiful.
And in Glennon's defense,
I just know that the judgment is the thing
that covers up her fear
and need to control to keep others and the people she loves safe.
And it's so interesting,
cause I've dealt with this, I don't know,
this covered up judgment, my whole marriage with Glennon.
And as soon as I talked this through with my therapist,
it was kind of a life-changing moment.
Cause every time I hear any sort of judgment, I just think oh Glennon's a little baby
and she's scared and
That's the truth of this. So like good job for saying something
I totally get it though because you're right
Like it is true that it will be those things are there and it will be scary and it will be bad
When I have to face them.
Maybe.
Or maybe it'll be great.
Yeah, maybe.
Maybe it won't be bad.
Maybe it'll be great.
I don't know.
I don't think I believe in bad and good.
It's just like, it's gonna be something.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
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That's R-A-K-U-T-E-N dot C- A. ["C, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A This is the part of the plot where the bad thing happens and changes everything and opens a door where she can see things
She never could see before and thank God for that. I know that that is all
ridiculous
But I hope
That things will be different for me. I've just been thinking about how
Amazingly ironic it is that as a lifetime optimizer of getting the
extra edge and going for that last 5% to make things as good as they can be.
That I just have this feeling that that last five
or 10% of my life won't be there.
And I don't know that that is true, but it could be.
And when you're diagnosed that early, you know, that's why people who are diagnosed
when they're 60, when they're 70, whatever, it's like, okay, you're going to catch me
at 15 year recurrence, you know, good fucking luck.
I'm gonna be fine.
And no, like, I'm not taking away anything
from those people.
I'm just saying statistically, you're in better stead.
It's ironic, because you think the younger you are,
the more likely you'd be like, yes, got it.
But because of the unrelentingness of cancer,
it's just a little scarier the earlier you get diagnosed.
So anyway, if that's true,
I guess I just wanna think differently about my plans
and my horizon living of where I've
always been like, okay, when the next, you know, we'll get through this three years of
this plan, then we'll have that next plan, then on and on forever. I just maybe wanna not think a lot like that anymore.
And just kind of figure out what I want,
figure out what makes me feel good.
That isn't a response to someone else being pleased
that I met their need.
And I guess just be responsible for my experience
and what I want for my experience.
And just like little, little in big ways.
I mean, last night,
Alice couldn't really sleep.
And this morning she woke up and she was talking about how
anxious she was about her one mile run.
You know, the one mile run.
Oh god, it was the worst day of the year.
Yes. It was the worst day of the year.
Yes.
That's the best day of the year. Everybody loved me.
She has only been lamenting the one mile run coming for, you know, three weeks.
It's my girl. It's my girl.
And I'm like, baby, do you think that that's part of why you couldn't sleep last night?
And she was like, oh, maybe.
And she kept being like, they have to take a bus
to the high school to do the mile run there
from the elementary school.
And she was like, I'm just worried that I'm not even gonna
be able to finish it, that the buses will have to leave
before I finish because I think it's gonna take me
a really, really, really long time.
And I was like, that's fine.
The buses won't leave.
You just who won the race?
Did the did the hair win the race?
And she's like, that tortoise won the race.
And so we, we just reviewed that.
And then I was sitting there working on something for work this morning and I was like, I was
just imagining her like, so stressed out.
Doing her little race.
So I just like got in the car and drove to the
high school and I saw her like running around the thing
and she was one of just like a few kids left.
And there were like some other parents there running around the thing and she was one of just like a few kids left.
And there were like some other parents there and they were just like waving at me. And I know like when I usually go to things people like want to talk to me and stuff.
And I was just like, I have no time for any of you.
I don't want any of you getting like an ounce of my energy.
I just want to like find her on the track.
And so I was like, I was able to run over outside the fence. You couldn't go on the track, but like run over on the outside of the fence where she was.
Coming around the bend and she like looked up and saw me and she got.
This huge smile and she like gave me a thumbs up and then she started like
running faster and I just like ran on the outside of the fence while she was running on the track
like the last lap. When I saw her she was like this is my last lap. I was like you can do it,
you can do it. I'm so proud of you. You can do it.
And I was like just running, tracking with her on the outside
until she got to the finish line.
And then she was like done with me then.
She was with her friends and she like ran and hugged all her friends.
And then I left and I was just like,
dollar friends and then I left and I was just like I just want all the years of that you know I just want it I know I'm not gonna be able to do anything for them
but I just want to be like there to like go beside them and see them, see how hard they're trying and see how much they're
doing and doing it with them as much as I can and just telling them how proud I am of them and
proud I am of them and then letting them forget about me and be happy with their friends and I don't know there was something about this certainty that I
was walking up and just like not even making eye contact or engaging with
anyone else and I was like I'm here for my daughter like I need to find her and she's getting
all my energy and none of you are and I just think I want more of that like not giving away
my energy unless I want it to go somewhere. Yep. That sounds good.
It's almost like, what have we been doing?
It is almost like that, Abby.
It's almost exactly like that.
Just like, what are we doing?
To be fair, I think this is the process, right?
Yeah.
You know what's so fucking weird is I was started reading even before, randomly, totally
randomly, even before the biopsy.
And because I'm such a fucking slow reader, I'm still in the process.
But Richard Rohr's falling upward and it's all about first half of life, second half
of life. And it's making me feel a lot better
because it's like you can only have the realizations
and the wisdom of the second half of life
because you've done the first half of life that way.
And that it's all about, first half of life
is about survival and identity and ego
and protection and building and building.
And the second half of life is all about burning it down about survival and identity and ego and protection and building and building.
And the second half of life is all about burning it down
because you don't need it anymore.
It is the stuff that you built up because you needed it.
And because now you're here, not only do you not need it,
you need it to go away.
That's right.
But it's not that you were doing it wrong.
Like it's not like this part of life comes
and the one way to look at it would be,
oh my God, what have we been doing?
Yeah, look at the opportunity cost of those 40 years.
If I'd just done those differently,
think of how amazing I'd be.
And that's not it.
And in fact, I actually think that people who are addicted to anything,
people who are really addicted or committed to the building and the protecting
and the achieving and the collecting and the controlling like we all have been,
that the next part of life can be even sweeter because
it's like the absolute value yeah yeah it's like the intensity with which you did that
can be the same intensity with which you dispose of all of that and maybe that that's what i think
people are trying to say and what what I was saying of like,
that's a horrific word of opportunity.
Like that's, I think what people are getting at.
The piece with which we have been quitting things
in the last three weeks, without angst,
without any of the stuff that would have come
before this diagnosis
is what I mean.
It's like such clarity or something.
I was just thinking it is the gift of clarity.
Clarity is the one thing.
It can be real good news.
It can be real awful news.
It can be real scary news.
But if there's clarity in any of that news,
that is a rare and beautiful thing.
Because that's what messes us up is a lack of clarity about what we need, what we want,
what needs to be done.
And when you have clarity, you can kind of get through whatever is the consequences of
it, the unfortunate byproducts of it, all
of it. Because the clarity is what has you continuing down the path regardless of those
things. So I do think clarity is huge. And I think that this has helped that a lot.
Got the image of Alice and then not giving your energy to the other people and just running beside her like, holy shit.
Talk about clarity.
Did she feel so relieved when she crossed the finish line?
Did she cross the finish? She did. She did. She did.
She did cross the finish line. I think she did.
She ran over and got her water and hugged her friends and I was like awesome. And then she and a couple of her friends just like
ran over and waved to me and then I left. But yeah, she did it. I think it was important for both of us.
It felt good. And also just the, I don't know, I was thinking about driving it over and I was there.
So many parents that were there because their kids are runners and they're really good and they want to see
them break their PR or break the elementary school record or break.
And I was like, I'm going there to cheer my kid who is going to be one of the last two
or three people in this race.
And like, I don't give a fuck.
That's what I want is to be like, that's my kid.
I'm here for that one, you know?
You got to teach Alice the word penultimate.
Liz Gilbert came over and taught Tish.
The penultimate, oh, that would be good.
Penultimate means the second to last,
but it sounds so good.
Tish was forced to be part of running, okay, in elementary school.
And if I could say to you the sentence that Tish is not a runner, it's just like,
I mean it metaphorically, I mean it literally, I mean it not.
So it was a bit of torture for her and she'd always be second to last.
Yeah, it was her middle school.
It was her middle school teacher
who always forced her to run cross country.
And at one point, Liz Gilbert was at our house
and Tish was just talking about the absolute misery
and humiliation of it.
And Liz, as Liz does, fixed it and said,
here's what I want you to know.
I want you to know the word penultimate. Okay.
It means the second to last.
All I need you to do is finish these races second to last.
And then when people ask you how it went, you will say to them, I finished penultimate.
They will not know what it is and they will be too embarrassed to ask you because you're
a child, but they will think that you had a glorious finish. It's a fancy-ass word.
Yeah.
Alice is likely penultimate.
And does that mean that the last person, if it's penultimate is second last, the last person is ultimate?
Ultimate! They are amazing! I finished ultimate.
So maybe if you're penultimate, you want to just lag a little bit so you can say you're the ultimate.
Exactly.
The last shall be first and the first shall be last.
We're going to circle back before we end to what we started talking about, which is when do you think you want to share as much as I possibly can
from the education piece of this.
I don't want any more lady part cancer discussions.
People need to know their history.
They need to know their parents' history.
We owe it to our people to say the words
and destigmatize the words that are our body parts that we're dealing
with medically. I want to share all the learnings of this because it really is too hard to learn
it on your own. I also want to walk through the emotional reality of it as much as I possibly can while also making sure
I maintain a distinct personal experience of this
so that I don't have the pod squad in the community
is having this experience and that is my experience.
Like I need to make sure that I can maintain
an authentic, real,
metabolized individual personal experience
and communicate and be part of the communal one
or else I can't have the communal one because it's really important that I be in my body with it.
Yeah.
Eventually. That's good.
It's like living it inside out as opposed to outside in.
Yeah.
And it is tricky.
I mean, I think, you know, relaying,
even the word like I have to relay the information.
I mean, relaying is like a relay, right?
You're like, I have the baton, I'm passing it to you.
Now you have it.
You're giving it and you're actually not giving it.
People are helping you carry whatever the thing is
that's outside of you.
No one is helping you carry the thing that is inside of you.
They can't, they want to, and they can't.
So like, you've got to figure it out.
I've got to figure it out.
I haven't even fucking gotten close to figuring it out.
I haven't even had a good cry
except for the penultimate runner. And I haven't even fucking gotten close to figuring out. I haven't even had a good cry except for the penultimate runner.
And I haven't figured it out,
but I do know enough to know that it is a fiction,
that all of these beautiful people
that are showing up in my life and wanting to help me
cannot do the part that is only mine to feel and to do.
And I can see why that would get very confusing. the part that is only mine to feel and to do.
And I can see why that would get very confusing. I can see why casseroles and beautiful notes
and love and plants and all the amazing things
that if you're lucky enough to have people they bring you
could make you feel like, look, we're all doing it.
We're all getting through it.
And I just have a hunch that there is something else
that I gotta dive into.
Last night at the dinner table, our youngest was in a bit of an existential crisis about
how unbelievably difficult being a teenager is, including school, including competitive
sports, including friends, including all of it.
She's talking about school
and how hard and relentless it is.
And I was doing the thing where I was,
I just fucking can't take it.
I just can't take it.
Like when they're suffering, you can't take it?
When they're suffering, when they're suffering.
I just, my educated, emotionally aware, parenting
expert responses, let's just fucking move to Hawaii and not do school. This is just,
we're not doing this right. Like more like I can fix this if I just have the right plan
or the right approach. And so I was saying things, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah, blah. And Emma just paused.
And I could tell she wasn't even paying attention to me.
She was having an internal epiphany and she goes,
Oh my God.
I don't think I can get out of this.
I think I just have to do this.
And it was like this moment, right, babe?
She was like, look at these people flailing about me.
They can't help me.
Yeah.
They don't even know we can't get out of this.
This woman.
I am fucked if I listen to them.
She's gonna home college me in Hawaii.
She know anything about Hawaii?
It was as if we were on a boat
and Emma had fallen into the water
and we just kept darting her all of these life-saving
things.
Here's another one.
Here's another one.
And she honestly, it was this beautiful moment that I think that she realized that she was
already in her own life-saving donut that she had herself.
She had to just go through it, that it was hers.
And it was just like, I don't know,
it was this detachment in a beautiful, necessary way
that she needed.
You were throwing her life preservers
to pull her back to the boat,
and she was like turned around,
started swimming to the shore.
That's exactly right.
Well, they think they can keep me in that boat forever,
and that's gonna save me.
But here I go, my ass is breast stroking to the
beach.
But that's so, God, I mean this experience is we all just want to crawl inside each other's
bodies and fix things.
But at the end of the day it's Tish coming to me in the middle of the night and going
I'm so scared.
And me going what are you scared of?
And she says I'm all alone.
And I say you I'm all alone. And I say, you are not all alone.
I am right here with you next to you
at the side of the bed at 3A fucking M
when you're here again.
And she goes, no, I'm just all alone in my body.
I'm all alone in my skin.
I'm all alone in here.
That is it, right?
It's like all of these people that can come help you
with the outer part of it
and no one that can help you with the inner part of it.
Ugh, so annoying.
Cause you're all alone in there.
You're all alone in here.
Nobody's coming to save you.
And on that happy note.
Yeah, but it is.
Here's the thing.
Like this is the other thing I talked about
with my therapist.
There's nobody coming to save you.
And then it's like, okay, what does that mean? I go through it and I get to the place like, oh, I have me.
And I have my experience and I have to believe
and understand my experience as holy
in order to really wanna take full responsibility for it.
Because before I think I was just giving away responsibility,
giving away my own life, giving away my own accountability.
And there was something that shifted in me
that was like, that's really hard to give up responsibility
and caring for other people,
because I'm a big caretaker.
I know you are too sister and I know you are too Glennon.
But there is something really magic.
I know and I'm still going there.
I'm still not figured out,
but there is something magic in the surrender
and the acceptance that nobody is coming to save us.
So true.
When I think of all that we're talking about,
I wanna find the Mary Oliver poem
that Glennon sent me. I'm going to read it because I think it's all of this. This is
Mary Oliver's The Journey Glennon sent it to me a few days ago. And I think it's a lot
of what we have been talking about. One day you finally knew what you had to do and began.
Though the voices around you kept shouting their bad advice,
though the whole house began to tremble
and you felt the old tug at your ankles.
Mend my life, each voice cried, but you didn't stop.
You knew what you had to do.
Though the wind pried with its stiff fingers at the very foundations, though their melancholy
was terrible, it was already late enough and a wild night, and the road full of fallen
branches and stones.
But little by little, as you left their voice behind, The stars began to burn through the sheets of clouds.
And there was a new voice, which you slowly recognized as your own, that kept you company
as you strode deeper and deeper into the world, determined to do the only thing you could
do, determined to save the only life you could save.
You know what I always think about with that poem? Why do you think she chose the word their voice instead
of their voices?
Because it's all the same?
I just always think about that.
There's no accidents in these poems that these poets write.
So it's all about a bunch of voices at first, right?
They're shouting their bad ideas.
It's like multiple.
And then when she makes the switch, when she starts listening to her own voice, she realizes that all of
those other voices were just one voice, which makes me think that she is
understanding that it was always from inside her anyway. That there's only two
voices. One that says you can't have what you need and what you need to do is to
save everybody else and one that says you can and what you need to do is to save everybody else. And one that says you can, and what you need to do is save yourself.
It's really just two voices, and they're both internal.
Or that could very well be it.
Or earlier in the poem, she says,
you felt the old tug at your ankles,
mend my life, each voice cried.
So really, even though they're all different people
in your life, they're all coming from
all angles at you. It's only one cry of all of those voices and it's meant my life.
Save you, save my life. So the voice is, there's only two voices. One is save your life
There's only two voices. One is save your life from yourself.
And the other voice, even though it's made up of hundreds
of people is save my life from outside of you.
Yeah.
And you have to choose.
Every time, every time.
Okay, so it could be a million different people saying it,
but it's always just one singular message.
Ignore yourself, save me.
I do think that there's,
like when we look back on this in the future,
we will discover that that voice inside of you
is what you already did start saving yourself.
It's not like you're just gonna start whether or not
you're gonna figure out that voice
after the cancer is over.
It's like that voice of save yourself
is literally what led you to continue
to trust your own instinct and to continue
doing these tests and to do what you needed to do
because nobody else was doing that, including the doctors.
Like that was you and your hunch
and your relentless pursuit
of what that voice was telling you to do.
It's almost like that's-
That's true.
The one and like, now you know what it sounds like or something.
Yeah, maybe that's the part like the first step out of the woods, right?
Who knows?
Well, I love you.
I love you so much.
I love you both so much.
Really, really, really do. Pod Squad, we love you so much. I love you both so much. Really, really, really do.
Pod Squad, we love you too.
Go forth and ignore all the voices
or the one voice that just tells you the men someone else's life instead of your own and
save the only life you ever could save.
We'll see you next time. 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
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To do this, just go to the We Can Do Hard Things show page
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grateful. We appreciate you very much. We Can Do Hard Things is created and hosted by Glennon Doyle,
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Alison Schott, Dina Kleiner, and Bill Schultz.