We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Chelsea Handler on Happiness, Groundedness & the Upcoming Election
Episode Date: April 23, 2024302. Chelsea Handler on Happiness, Groundedness & the Upcoming Election Chelsea Handler is back to join Glennon, Amanda, and Abby for a heartfelt and hilarious conversation about life. She tells us h...ow she found her happiness, how to take accountability in your own life, and why – if she has to confront someone doing something WILD or offensive – she’s going to have a little fun! Discover: -Why being selfish is the ultimate gift we can give to the world and each other; -The unexpected side-effect Chelsea experienced from therapy and how to move through it if it’s happening to you, too; -Chelsea’s thoughts about how to navigate big feelings during the upcoming election cycle; and -Chelsea’s story about a stranger on a chairlift and their exchange about Taylor Swift. For our previous conversation with Chelsea, check out: 115. Chelsea Handler: On Breaking Up & Being Unbreakable About Chelsea Chelsea Handler is a comedian, television host, podcast host, author, and advocate whose humor and candor have established her as one of the most celebrated voices in entertainment and pop culture. Chelsea is the author of six New York Times bestsellers, five of which are #1 bestsellers – including Life Will Be the Death of Me. She hosts the iHeart Radio advice podcast, Dear Chelsea – and her most recent critically acclaimed comedy special, Revolution, is available on Netflix. If you want to see her live, Chelsea is currently on her Little Big Bitch stand-up tour. IG: @chelseahandler 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)
Oh my god, my favorite three women!
Look at you!
You're such a fucking love bug.
Oh my god, I'm filled with it!
Look at you guys!
Hi!
Long time no see!
Just love your face.
Oh, thanks.
Pod Squad, obviously we're here with Chelsea Handler.
Just one of our favorite humans. Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
Chelsea Handler is a comedian, television host.
Doesn't it feel funny to have to introduce Chelsea Handler?
Yeah. If you don't know...
You do. Podcast host.. If you don't know.
You do.
Podcast host.
Chelsea, you can't even handle her.
Don't try to.
No one can handle it.
That's the truth.
Cece, did you think of that last night in bed and think, I can't wait.
No, I just thought of it right now and then I was going to be so embarrassed because I'm
sure Chelsea's heard it like a thousand times.
But I was like, I'm feeling free.
I'm going with it.
Good job.
In my high school yearbook, you had to write, like, I forget what, what it
was, like people wrote things about you and this guy that I had a huge crush on.
His name was Patrick Conforti.
He wrote something about, and let's not forget our favorites.
He said something about our freshmen favorite, the handler full of fun.
And I was like, ah, that sounds like a lot more than what happened.
But thank you.
I think.
Patrick.
At that time in my life, I took that as a compliment.
Of course you did.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I get that.
Any attention was good attention in high school.
Exactly.
Okay, wait.
Chelsea is the author of six New York Times bestsellers.
It's crazy.
Five of which are number one New York Times bestsellers. It's crazy. Five of which are number one New York Times bestsellers.
We have the same editor now, Glennon.
I know.
We have the same book editor.
They were like, oh, I have a new book coming
or I'm writing a book.
And they were like, oh, this is the editor.
We were talking about which editor I would go with.
And they're like, this is the editor of Glennon's books.
And then the editor of Laureln Jackson's and then Elise Lohan, like all these people in our little
writers circle. And I was like, Oh my God, well, that's where I have to be.
I mean, Chelsea, Whitney, Frick, we started our career together. Sister and I went to
New York. I'd never been to New York before. Oh gosh. Well, if you had your druthers, you never would have been.
That's right.
And I've never been since.
But we sat down with her at the very beginning of this whole thing and we have gone with
her to every different place she goes.
And then she started Dial Press and she has curated the most amazing group of thinkers.
Makes perfect sense to me that you're with
her. I think it's so funny that I still have not gotten through the first
sentence of this intro. So five of which are number one bestsellers including
Life Will Be the Death of Me. God that book just... She hosts the iHeart radio
advice podcast Dear Chelsea which Abby and I try to be on once a month.
And her most recent critically acclaimed comedy special,
Revolution, so fucking good, is available on Netflix.
If you want to see her live, and you must,
Chelsea is currently on her Little Big Bitch stand-up tour,
which did I actually pee in my pants?
I did pee in my pants.
I had to change my underwear when I got home. Sissy, where were you? Where were you? I'm pee in my pants? Yeah. I did pee in my pants. It had to change my underwear when I got home.
Sissy, where were you?
Where were you?
I'm stuck in Virginia.
Oh, I think I'm coming to Richmond, Virginia.
Are you by Richmond?
No, but I will be in Richmond.
Yay!
I will come to you.
I'm gonna set you up with tickets if you can make it
and then we can hang afterward.
I wanna see you, Sissy.
This is ridiculous.
I've never even seen you
in person. I don't believe that you exist.
I barely do, Chelsea.
It's just on this podcast. That's the only time I've ever seen you.
Won't it be freaky when she walks in to see you and you're like, oh, you see the whole
person?
And she's like six foot four. And I'm like, wait, what? What is this?
She is tall.
She is tall.
How tall are you, Sissy?
I used to be 5'9", but life has been the death of me and now I'm 5'8".
We're all shrinking.
You guys, my oldest dog, Bernice, is shrinking.
Every day I'm like, she's like a shrinky dink.
I'm like, she's transitioning into the afterlife.
And she just keeps getting smaller and smaller, but it's so fucking cute.
She is like a little teddy bear and she used to be a big bitch and now she's older and softening rather than hardening. And I'm just having these last months with her have
been beautiful, but she's actually not, I mean, she's fine, but you know, she's on her
way out. I think.
Did you name your tour after her? She's a little big bitch now?
A little big bitch, no, but it was an inspiration. I mean, I'm her mother, so we take on a lot of the same qualities.
You know, they say your dogs end up like you.
And she definitely is. She has no time for bullshit.
She doesn't pretend to care about people's feelings.
She doesn't try to make people more comfortable.
When they come up to pet her, she's like, no, thank you.
Not interested. People want to take photos with her.
She's like, also, I didn't sign up for this life.
I'm like, that's right, Bernice. You stand up for yourself.
Have some self-respect.
Yeah.
I feel like our dogs mirror us too.
We have a French bulldog and a really, really sweet golden
doodle who does remind me of Abby.
Who do you think the French bulldog reminds people of?
I can't imagine.
Who could it be?
Oh my god, congrats to Trish on her new song!
I know!
How fucking cool is that? You must be beaming, exploding with pride.
She played at the hotel cafe the other night.
She's just Chelsea. She's just a baby and she's on the stage and she's so fucking good!
I know. Isn't that amazing? Isn't it amazing that you can create something
and then they blow you away?
You're like, wait, what? This is mine?
Yeah. It feels like, you know, in Pinocchio,
there's Geppetto and he's just like making the doll
and then the doll comes to life.
That's how I feel. I'm like, wait,
because it's weird when your kid does something
that you don't know how to do at all,
because then you realize that something fucking magical
is going on here.
Yeah, but here's the thing.
The thing that I think that is so cool about it
and I can relate in some ways when I was young
and like a great athlete,
because we don't understand good singing or music really,
we don't understand anything about it.
When she comes off stage and we're like, wow,
that was amazing.
She's like, are you guys surprised?
Like, I work on this every day.
This is what I do.
Why are you so surprised?
And I totally understand that.
I'm like, so she came off the stage and I'm like, good job.
I thought you did well.
I thought you did well.
Way to go.
We expected that.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think Brandi's trying to teach me to chill.
She tells me less enthusiasm, more allyship of Tish, but.
More allyship.
I know, I'm like, whatever.
But.
I'm like, how am I supposed to be your ally?
I'm her mother.
And less enthusiasm.
Okay, I'll work on that.
So Brandi's kid is somehow this amazing soccer player.
And so, yeah.
And so Brandi's relying on this one.
And let me tell you, she's really fucking enthusiastic
because she's like, what?
How did this happen?
Anyway.
That's perfect.
It's like a kid swap.
Exactly.
It's exactly right.
We are swapping.
Can you tell me how your book's going and what you're writing about?
Well we'll see. I handed it in, most of it, not all of it. I'm not done, but I handed
in a big chunk of it last week. So I'm waiting for feedback.
Oh God, that's the worst.
So it's about being a woman and it's about not listening to any of the constructs that
anyone tells you make you valuable
and that you don't have to be a wife or a mother
or do any of the bullshit that people tell us we have to do
in order to be valuable in society
and that this life that I've created
with a lot of help from my fans is glorious
and filled with unadulterated joy.
And I want all women to know that it's possible to achieve unadulterated joy. And I want all women to know that it's possible to achieve
unadulterated blissfulness. If you really get after it, if you really are true to who you are,
and you listen to who you are, and you do the work, and you make sure that you heal from whatever
screwed you up. And you continue to look and grow and think and ask questions that you can live
an incredible life without any of
those things. And in doing so, you can actually even have an impact on more people. I feel like
I have for sure. I mean, I've been Whistler. I come up here for the winter to ski. I've been
here for three months, basically, mostly. I've been touring a little bit in Canada, but I have
basically a daycare center going on at my house. I have so many children coming through this house, ages 2 to 10 to 15, boys, girls, they
all come over here.
If I had my kids, I wouldn't have any time for that.
So I have time and energy and the bandwidth for all sorts of gloriousness.
And I get so much joy out of having kids over and then kicking them out.
It's a wrap. I'm not your mother. Get out of here.
Yes. We have two homes because we're a broken family. So we also get to do that.
We get to say, I am your mother, but you still have to go.
Yeah.
And they go back.
Well, nobody really talks about the positives of broken homes.
That's right.
They don't ever talk about divorce, allowing you to get your life back because someone else who also cares as much about your children is getting them 50% of the time.
You get a break and then you're able to dive in even more and more healthfully when you get your
kids back. So I feel like people should be advertising that. I had this moment. I was on
a walk with a friend recently, which is so exciting for me to say. I went on a walk with a friend.
She just really needed to work that in. That's the end of her comment.
Glenn, it's like, what kind of activities can I say I got up to this week?
I did. I walked. Okay. I walked with a new friend. And she was talking about her broken family.
And she was talking about how the kids leave and go to their dads and she said, I feel so bad when they leave because I want to be with them all the time. And I stopped her and I said,
is that true? And she goes, no.
No, it's not true for anyone. No one wants that.
It's not fucking true. And you know what's cool is
you keep saying unadulterated joy. And it's such a funny word. It's like to have that
you have to not just do all the things that people tell you adults have to do. It's like
you're unadulterated. And then yes. And then you have to really like be searching for happiness.
I don't want to be unhappy. I want to be happy. So for happiness. I don't wanna be unhappy, I wanna be happy.
So anything that's in my way that's unhappy,
instead of, you know, I'm just like,
oh, that doesn't fit in.
And learning how to deal with the things that aren't,
you know, vibing with your life
or not getting so upset when something doesn't go well,
to understand that that's okay too.
Like it's your attitude that makes the impact.
It's your attitude that makes the difference. If you have an attitude that's like, yeah, okay, this didn't work out,
but I'm still going to be in a good mood. That's all I can control. I can't control the outcome of
things. All I can control is my positive disposition. And this wasn't how I was my whole life. This is,
you know, in my forties, I realized like, okay, how do I get truly happy and make myself happy
and be selfish without being
guilty? And all of those things that you think, you know, I remember growing up thinking whenever
I had feelings of jealousy or insecurity, or if I wanted somebody to get their own karma
served up to them, you know, when someone does you dirty and you're like, I can't wait
for them to get it. I would have those thoughts and think I'm a bad person. Like I must be
a bad person. And it's like, no, no, you're a human being.
Those are just thoughts.
You're not acting on them.
You're not purposely seeking out a way
for this person to get retribution,
but to accept everything the way that it is
and to actually not think like I always used to think,
oh, selfish is so bad, selfish is so bad.
Selfish is not so bad.
You need to be a little bit selfish in order to be happy.
You have to.
Yeah.
The selfish, that word doesn't work because it has so much cultural meaning
around it that doesn't even make sense.
I always think about how self-centered is pejorative, but then no one asks, if
you weren't centered on yourself, what the fuck are you centered on?
Others.
Exactly.
What are you supposed to be centered on?
That just doesn't even make any sense.
Yeah. I used to think that. I used to think, oh God, it's so funny because when you go to therapy,
in my instance, I was trying to get my own head out of my own ass. I thought I was too self-absorbed
because there's all these self things, self-absorbed because there's all these self things, you know, self-absorbed,
self-centered, self- and the irony is that in order to become less self-absorbed, you
have to sit around and talk about yourself at infinitum for possibly years.
So you're like, wait, I'm trying to get out of my own ass and all I'm doing is sitting
here talking to a therapist about me.
So it's a tricky endeavor.
And I also think that, like,
I've just gotten into therapy recently over the last six months.
And the thing that I've gathered the most is
I have really prided myself on being so other minded
that I have lost a sense of myself.
And I think that that in order to be able to
have a good balance of those things,
first and foremost, you have to have a relationship
with yourself.
And to call it selfish,
it's like the very first thing that you need
in order to be able, it's like putting on your own mask,
you know, on an airplane first,
before you can take care of somebody else. You can't do it. in order to be able, it's like putting on your own mask, you know, on an airplane first,
before you can take care of somebody else.
You can't do it.
Selfishness, a healthy dose of it,
leads to self-respect.
Yes.
Because if you are selfish enough,
like to know what you need and know what you're gonna do,
like what you need to perform well for the world, right?
Like the reason I meditate every day
is to make sure I'm not a cunt.
I'm like, okay, don't be a cunt today. You are one, try really hard not to be, and we're
going to try. And it's gotten easier and easier not to be one, right? But in doing that, in
having self-respect and having my selfish time or in having selfish acts, which, you
know, some people could say, oh, you have to meditate every morning. They could categorize
that as selfish. Like anything could be considered selfish,
but selfishness leads to self-respect.
I do believe that because I do respect myself.
I know what I need.
I know when I'm gonna have like a full cup of energy
or if I'm depleted and I need to remove myself
from the situation because I'm not bringing my best vibes,
and not to expose other people to that
when you're not in the best mood
or you're in a
negative headspace or anything like that. And the more you practice that, the less that becomes your norm.
How does meditating, this is also how I decuntify myself. How does meditating make you less of a
cunt? Because I sit there, I'm giving myself that 20 minutes each morning or 15,
whatever it ends up being.
And it's my intention is to be joyful and spread good vibes and to spread joy
and to be calm and nonreactive and to understand.
Not everything is my responsibility.
And just to be like a light breeze going through the world
so that when anybody interacts with me,
they feel better after it rather than worse.
That's good.
I always feel like I have to meet
with so many people during the day.
And so I should know who they're gonna meet.
Like that's what meditating is for me.
It's like, I wake up every morning and I'm like,
I don't know what we're gonna get today.
And so sitting for a while and just letting whoever I am
that day arise is good information for me to have
as I go in to sit with other people.
Sometimes she'll text me and be like,
we're about to jump on this meeting.
I need you to know that the self I am today is homicidal.
So I might pick some fights.
So I'm just going to need you to just be aware of that.
Isn't that helpful?
Because then it's not personal to the other person.
Like if somebody is a dick to me, I think that they don't like me.
But if somebody tells me before they talk to me that they are a dick today, then I just
think they're a dick.
That's helpful. That's helpful.
That is helpful.
Yeah.
Okay.
Wiser words have never been spoken.
Thank you, Chelsea.
Thank you.
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Here's how I trust your version of happiness.
Cause I feel like everybody is always like, just find what makes you happy.
Just be blissful, whatever.
But I feel like your sort of happiness is a very hard one.
There's a lot of hard stuff that you have to go into like a lot of ickiness before you
get to figuring out
who you actually are. Sister, ask your question in the way that you were
talking to me about it. Like how do you know who you are? Oh I really hope you
can solve this for me Chelsea. It would really clean up a lot of my life. But you
have this value of being a hundred percent you. Like I am a hundred percent
me. I go out in the world, that's who I am. And
what I'm trying to figure out is how do we know what is really us? We are what we are,
but part of that we came to the world with and part of that we developed because of being
in the world. So like defense mechanisms or trauma responses
or adaptations to help you navigate through your family
when you were little, whatever it is.
And so when we try to start healing,
how do we distinguish between those two things?
Because they all seem to be presenting as who I am.
So how do you make sure you're getting rid of this stuff that isn't truly of you?
Well, don't you think? I mean, I don't think I know this to be true. So I think it's about
how in touch we are with ourselves when we know something that truly makes us happy versus
something that we're told is supposed to make us happy. When I discovered skiing, for instance,
this is the peak of my happiness.
Skiing to me is happy making.
I am so 100% present,
and that's where happiness comes from, from being present,
because that's where all your joy comes from.
When you're laughing at someone
and you're cuddling with someone,
when you're in bed laughing with someone,
you're loving it because you're there.
You're 100% there.
When you're skiing, you have to be 100% there.
When Abby's playing soccer, she's 100% there.
And that's unadulterated bliss because you love it.
You have to pay attention definitely to the things.
Like sometimes when I notice myself pretending
or being fake in the couple of times that's happened.
In that one time in 89?
That's why I'm like, ooh, ooh. Or even if I'm fraudulent in like, in the couple of times that's happened. In that one time in 89?
I'm like, ooh, ooh.
Or even if I'm fraudulent in like, you know, even if there's like a temperature of like
ass kissing or, you know, you have to kind of like be really good to someone or you have
to, I don't know, impress someone, that feeling is so tangible.
Like you know that when you're not feeling authentic, when you're like, oh, I hated that, I just did that.
Or for me, it's like being fake to someone.
I can't be fake to someone.
If I don't like someone, they'll know.
And I'm fine with that too.
I'm not there to make everyone happy.
I'm there to make the people I love and my fans, me happy.
So I think it's the knowing that, you know,
Glennon talks about in her books also, is that knowing.
Like when you sit with yourself,
you know what is real and what isn't
and what really does make you happy.
For me, it's laughter, it's skiing,
it's fun with my friends, it's having chaos around.
Like I love chaos, I love tons of people in my house.
I love that.
Especially when I'm downstairs or upstairs out of it
and I can hear it from afar.
I'm like, that is joyful to me.
You know, like I'm not in charge, but it's around. And we've dealt this whole card
our whole lives about what we're supposed to do. And it's like, instead of actually
thinking and drilling down about what we really want, we're always trying to make everyone
else happy. And when you're making other people happy, that's not a recipe for your own happiness. So it is about listening to yourself. It's about listening to you,
who you are and the stillness. And also I get that from meditation to understand who
I am. And you know, there was a period of time, I don't know if I spoke about this last
time I was on this podcast, but there was a period of time after therapy, like I thought,
okay, I'm going to go to two years of therapy and then great. And then I'll be done and
I'll be fixed. But the application of what you learn in therapy after therapy is also its own thing.
And the self-awareness that comes with therapy leads to a lot of self-criticism, emulation,
where you're like, oh my God, I was so embarrassing. I can't believe I used to act like that. I can't
believe I went off on this person in front of all all of that comes up and that is not happy.
That is unpleasant and those feelings are like enveloping
you and you're kind of ashamed,
at least I was ashamed of my behavior.
And then I got to a point where I realized like,
okay, the past is the past.
All you have control of is making a new impression
to anyone you've offended,
to anyone you were not nice to or kind to or anyone you blew off or whatever. When those wagons circle
around again, you have an opportunity to make a new impression instead of beating yourself
up for what has been because there's nothing you can do about that. And I know the saying
like the adage, there's nothing you can do about the past. I don't even think it's an
adage. It's just a sentence, but you like there really isn't all you can do about the past. I don't even think it's an adage. It's just a sentence. But you like, there really isn't.
All you can do is pivot and focus on who you are going to be moving forward.
And with that comes a lot of calm because you're like, yeah, I can handle that.
I'm not going to fuck up again in that way.
I'm going to actually be more graceful and act with more aplomb moving forward.
And there's a lot of freedom in that.
And that is a daily practice.
That's like, okay, every day I'm on it
to be better than I used to be, you know?
Instead of harping on that,
because a lot of people get stuck in that, you know,
or they're working towards the future.
And that's the other thing
that I've learned through meditation.
And I do a lot of guided meditations.
It's like, you can't be worried about the past
or the future when you, I mean, obviously we're all worried about the future.
We're all thinking about whatever the election, your children, college careers, blah, blah,
blah.
But really to be present in each moment is a gift that we give ourselves and it's up
to us to kind of cultivate that.
And I'm not like a, you know, corny person.
I'm a realist.
So if I know about it and I'm telling people about it,
it's true and it works.
You're very Buddhist.
Are you Buddhist?
No, I'm not Buddhist.
Okay.
But I love that body type.
Yeah.
God.
I have a new dog, Doug.
He is full bodied and I call him Buddha all the time
because I love, there's nothing I love more
than a full bodbodied dog.
Okay, so you're a little Buddhist is what you're saying.
Yes, yes.
She's Buddhist.
She's Buddhist.
Yeah, Buddhist, Buddhist.
It's onto something, but is it possible you guys,
this is what I suspect,
that there's really no such thing as personality
as like something that's inherent to who we actually are.
Like I think that the reason why meditation, therapy, all of this stuff works is because
it does make you realize that you are just a collection of adaptations, survival adaptations,
and that who we actually are underneath that, which we usually only get like glimpses of,
is what you're describing.
Is this awareness, this consciousness, this beauty,
this joy, this peace, this full presence,
that that is actually what we are at our core.
It's just like this pure, beautiful awareness.
And everything else is shit we put on
to make it through this earth.
But who we are, of course we all develop personalities
but I think who we are is that, is who we are in meditation.
Yeah, it's our essence, right?
Like our essence is the best version of ourselves,
the purest version of ourselves, like ebullience, you know?
Like lightness and joy.
Not everyone is that, but deep down,
yeah, I think we all are that.
It's exactly what you're saying.
And I always think of that. Like I always think, okay, what's my essence? Because when I'm not firing at
150, it's like, well, that my essence is up here. Am I going to meet my essence? Like
the essence is the best version that you have of yourself. Yes. And it's pure. And that's
why it's hilarious to think that it's selfish or whatever to do these things, to go to therapy,
to meditate, because what the world needs is that version of you in the world.
When you do those things and then you expose yourself to the world, you are what everyone
on earth needs to be around.
And also when you really are centered and focused and you're doing all of your healing
and all of those things, you are lending light to other people also.
So like you're giving back without even knowing it because that's why people are attracted
to you.
That's why people want to be around you because they want that energy.
They want that vibe.
They want to feel good.
They want to laugh.
They want to have fun.
And I used to think of that as a responsibility, almost like an onus, like,
oh god, I can't go to this party. Everyone's going to expect me to be the life of the party.
No one's expecting you to do that. But if it's your choice and you love doing that,
then that's a different set of, you're putting the blame on others for your own kind of,
you know, what you like about yourself. And that's where you get tricked up, I think,
or at least that's where I got tricked up,
where I thought I had a responsibility
and then it became a burden to have a personality,
to be like I am.
And I'm like, wait a second, no, no, no, no, no, no.
This is who I am.
Why am I blaming other people for wanting me to be who I am?
You know, that's not their responsibility.
That's my responsibility.
So you have to dig deeper and understand why you're upset
that people wanna be around you or that they like being around you. You know, I mean,
it's much better than people not wanting to be around you. I mean, I speak for myself, Glennon.
I know you don't want people to be around you. Correct. Her real essence is not wanting people
around you. It's alone. I actually disagree. No, I'm a fucking delight these days. I disagree with that now.
She's done a lot of work over the last couple of years and-
Go on walk with a friend.
Yeah, you're doing things.
One or two people she has around her now.
Yeah.
Sometimes two.
But I understand so much what you're saying
because actually I was sitting with Whitney in a car,
I've told this story many times, but in New York,
and I had to go into some meeting and do the thing.
I said, I don't know, I can't, I don't think I can do this. And she said, all you have to do is be yourself.
And I said, Whitney, I do not know how much longer I can keep that up.
And I also meant it. Oh, that's a great line.
But it's so true because it's like that thing that you're talking about
But it's so true because it's like that thing that you're talking about at the center of like, this is my personality, this is who I am.
Therefore, wherever I go, this is what people are going to expect of me.
And therefore, that becomes like, I'm performing my own personality for them.
Yes.
Right.
Right.
With you and you are just a comedy genius. Like you
are so fucking funny. But it's hard for me to divorce that from what it seems to me.
Like you grew up being funny because you felt that burden to make your family happy again, to bring laughter back into your home
after you lost your brother.
So you did that to help the people around you.
And then in your life that's expected of you,
it just seems like maybe it doesn't matter
where it originally came from.
Maybe that intellectual exercise that I keep being like, if it is born
of trauma, if it is born of pain, then it needs to be eradicated. Maybe that's bullshit. That's the
whole like not being present. If presently right now, this is what I want and who I am, then it's
okay. Well, it's like turning your pain into purpose, right? I mean, what is pain if you
don't turn it into something
powerful? And being able to make people laugh or smile or feel good is a gift, and it's not a
burden. So I think until you, well, until I did all of my own personal digging, I started to get
irritated at the responsibility that was expected of me.
Like, ugh, I have to go to this thing
and they're gonna want this and that.
Like just cunty attitude.
And then I flipped it and I was like,
life can be so much easier when you're positive
and when you're optimistic.
Even though sometimes that just seems unfathomable,
it can be so much easier instead of fighting
and resisting what's happening, going with it.
Like for instance, I'm on tour,
but I'm only doing Canadian dates while I'm here in winter
because I like to be up here in Whistler
and base myself out of here.
And you know, less guns.
I was like, oh, I don't even, sometimes I'm like,
oh, I have to go away this weekend.
Like I have to go to Vancouver and then go to the airport.
And then, oh, I don't even allow that anymore.
I'm like, you're lucky that people are paying money
to see you live.
You're so lucky that you get to live this life
and that you get to go on stage in front of all these people
that pay money to see you.
Do you know how grateful like I am now
that I understand how lucky I am
instead of being that kind of immature kid
that was like, oh, oh, oh. And I'm not talking about like Glennon. I know, you know, it's
different. Everyone has anxiety or they have some situation they're dealing with. I don't have lots
of anxiety. So it's not like I'm getting over something like that. It is more natural to me.
But the attitude shift wasn't something I was aware of.
And then once I started practicing it, like, just be grateful.
Like I used to be annoyed with my agents.
I'm like, I don't want this.
They come to me with some offer.
I'm like, are you think I'm going to do that?
Like just total.
Why?
I just like, if anything happens, anything, someone calls the door, don't know about knocks
email, opportunity. Eww. Yes. Someone calls, the doorbell knocks, email, opportunity, ill.
Yes. What is that? I don't know. It's just like, you're bothering me. There's a mosquito on my
shoulder. Get away. Like I'm having a good time right now. Don't bother me. And once I was like,
stop that. Stop all of that. Just be grateful for everything that comes your way, whether you're
going to do it or not. Thank you. Thank you so much for bringing this my way. Thank you. Like now I send my agents,
my publicists, my managers, whomever's on my team, I'm always sending everyone. Thank you so much.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. I don't get an email without responding to it. Actually,
if anyone's listening to this, they're going to disagree because I'm sure that I have some
emails I haven't responded to. You are an amazing responder. Thank you. That is the biggest gift that I have learned
is just to be so appreciative and so grateful for everything that comes your way. You're not too good
for anything. Just be appreciative. And by doing that, all my relationships have changed. All my
professional relationships where it used to be like a level of irritation. Like, I have to go
to this photo shoot. You better tell them I can only do two hours. level of irritation, like, I have to go to this photo shoot,
you better tell them I can only do two hours.
It's like, yeah, you better tell them
I can only do two hours,
but I'm gonna be in a really good mood when I get there.
Yes.
God, because it's changing your neural pathways.
Totally, exactly.
That's what's happening.
The thing happens, it's not our fault.
We just made a habit.
It's like water goes into our brain
and there's one path for it to go down,
which is, fuck, somebody else asked me to do something.
And you're just like stopping the water, putting it down a different pathway,
which then it starts to go down there by itself,
which is actually your experience of your day and every minute becomes joyful
because the water's going down gratitude instead of duty, I guess.
Absolutely. Yeah, yeah.
That's been the biggest shift in my life.
Yeah, I know now like situations like,
no, no, don't go down that road.
If someone's really negative around me,
I won't hang out with that person again.
If someone's complaining all the time,
no, I don't have the bandwidth for it.
I'm here to spread happiness and light.
That's what I'm doing.
That's my job in life.
Is that whole agent shift
from defensiveness and annoyance to gratitude? I feel like that could be very
very much related to the whole self-centered thing we were talking
about before. Because if you don't center yourself, then it's actually the most
selfish thing you can do. Because then if you are not taking't center yourself, then it's actually the most selfish thing you can do.
Because then, if you are not taking care of yourself, then every person around you,
de facto, you are requiring them to take care of you.
That's what I do.
You are extracting from them the expectation that since I'm sacrificing myself to not take care of myself,
on y'all's behalf, you better
be taking care of me. Yep. And then when you shift that and you're like, no, I've got me,
then the natural outgrowth of that is I don't have to be defensive and suspicious of you and
worried that you're going to fuck me over because I'm not going to get fucked over because I'm
taking care of myself. God, that's it. Yeah, like you're the tree.
I'm the tree.
You're not gonna fucking blow me away.
I'm here to stay and I'm solid and I'm on my feet
and I'm grounded.
Like grounded is the word of the last five years for me
because I've never felt more grounded.
When you're flying around, you know, like a bunch of leaves,
you can't help anyone.
You can't be a good influence on anyone.
You don't have the bandwidth for other people
because you're not centered and there's nothing you can give't be a good influence on anyone. You don't have the bandwidth for other people because you're not centered.
And there's nothing you can give because you're barely hanging on yourself.
So I think what you said is so beautiful. Like that is so true.
You're giving a gift to the world when you get your own shit together.
Yes, you are. And it's, it's, I don't got me. That's what I was saying.
Every time somebody asked me for anything, I think it's fear. Yes.
It's genuine genuine real survival.
I don't know what my boundaries are.
I don't know how to get out of this if I need to.
I don't know.
So just fuck off all the time, you know,
instead of like, oh yeah, come in
because I know the second I feel like you're not being here,
I'll ask you to leave.
Like I've got me.
So it allows you to be more generous.
Absolutely more generous. And you're right. I mean,
what you said is so on the money. It is selfish not to do the work. It is selfish to sit around in a
state of irritation constantly at people and think they're tugging at you. No, you put yourself in
that situation to begin with. So you owe it to everybody to do the work. I mean, I've been
dealing with this a lot in my life recently. There's a lot of people in my life that are kind of at a crossroads or need
some sort of intervention. And I'll go the distance for people I care about. I will go and I will sit
with you and hold your hand until you get your feet underneath you. But when someone isn't trying
to help themselves, when you're trying to help them, you feel so not disrespected because it's
not an ego thing. It's just so disappointed. It's like, it doesn't have to be this way.
When people are unhappy in their lives, you don't have to be that way. It doesn't have to be that
way. And people think like, that's the default and, oh, well, nothing works out for me. And it's like,
but there's a reason you can turn that around. We're all capable of turning the beat around.
Why do we take this grounded, joyful energy
and maintain it through this next time of our lives,
which is going to be the election? I need you to help us understand
because just like I trust your happiness because of how you found
it, I also trust your happiness because you do not get happy and then abandon all of us.
Like you get happy and you stay powerful and you stay engaged and you do not go to sleep
like Sleeping Beauty.
You like stay civically aware and engaged.
So what are we going to do to not lose our shit
like we did last time?
How are we gonna stay grounded?
The good news is we've been through this once before.
So it's not the first time.
I'm not looking forward to this period of time at all,
but I also agree with you.
I'm not sitting anything out.
I did realize last time that
my voice is much more helpful when I use a little bit more discernment and strategy rather
than like screaming and yelling about how much I hate Donald Trump and Ivanka's veneers.
We've already gone down this road and not that this wouldn't be worse if this
were to come to fruition. But I know now how to calibrate my efforts and when to use my
voice so that it's actually meaningful instead of just a cacophony of me shouting and yelling.
Like that's something I've learned too. And I'm sure you guys can relate to that because
it's like, we're all like, you know, everything that's going on, you want to be involved.
And obviously as a woman, this is serious.
But I'm hopeful that this won't happen,
that, you know, Trump doesn't get in office
and that we do have another four years of Biden.
You know, I was talking to this kid yesterday
and he was like, oh, well, student loans,
I didn't get it, you know, Biden fucked that up.
I'm like, Biden, what are you talking about? Like, you don't get it. You know, why didn't fuck that up? I'm like, Biden, what are you talking about?
Like, you don't even understand what's happening.
Biden didn't screw that up.
There's so much on the line here.
You think Biden, as an 81 year old, two year old,
whatever, is excited to be the president again?
Like, he is doing us a service.
So, let me not go off on that tangent.
I already did.
But I guess to answer your question,
I don't have an answer to that question.
I don't know how we maintain joyfulness during this time, but
I do know how to maintain optimism and not become a defeatist and to just keep looking,
keep your eye on the ball and keep figuring out how to be engaged in what we're dealing
with, how to help educate people, how to use your voice in ways that are going to be beneficial instead of just screaming and yelling all the time. But I don't have
an answer if the worst thing does happen, what we do then, because that is despair on
behalf of women everywhere. We talked about this last time he was elected. Yes, women
like me maybe aren't so affected. I can't afford to leave the country. I can't afford to get an abortion if I need one.
I mean, if I do need one, that would be a big surprise
because I'm 49.
But you're fighting for the next generation.
We're fighting for the children of this country.
We're fighting for the future of this country.
And I think there's a lot of optimism in that
just by nature of wanting the best for people.
And to just keep that, we want to move
forward. We want to keep the ball rolling forward, lends itself to optimism without looking at every
loss like, and also I think it's very, very healthy to not be in it every single day.
Not to be reading the news. There's no reason we have a two year ramp up to an election.
Who wants to fucking listen to this noise for two years? You know, we could have skipped
Ron DeSantis altogether. Like, why would we be paying attention to that when he's not
even a nominee? So I don't know. I mean, I'm all over the map with that. I don't think
I answered your question, but I do think that optimism is necessary to achieve the goal,
the intention and to educate people. They're both 82 years old. Okay. Do you think that optimism is necessary to achieve the goal, the intention and to educate
people?
They're both 82 years old.
Okay.
Do you want someone who cares about people or do you want the other one?
Yeah.
It feels like we're going to have to do what we did and you did with the gratitude neural
pathways.
That's how I feel like I have to figure out a way to change my neural pathways every time I hear something meant to ruin my day. Like it has to be like, nope,
not that. Every time it has to be that I'm forcing the water to another thing that's
like, that's awful. What am I going to do and say that's smart, strategic, careful,
responsible. Exactly. Exactly. That's not just self-indulgent, but that is actually helpful.
Yes. Right. And you're getting information. Everything's a data point, right? We get
information, then we know how to be active. So even if it's bad information, it gives us knowledge
and information for us to move forward in a different direction. You know,
okay, we've got to combat this now. Now we have to fight for this. It's not a defeatist like,
oh, the world's ending. Because that's how I was the first time. And I refuse to let that happen again. I'm not
going to be, you know, sitting there watching the news on a 24 hour spin cycle. It's cancerous.
Yeah. Yes. It is. And on the deepest level, because there's the like top level of public
engagement, you know, how do we get people to not go numb, to not ignore it, to stay engaged?
And there's the strategy level.
And then there's also the deeply personal level
of when you are a person with self-respect.
Rage is a very reasonable visceral response
to who the fuck are these people trying to tell me and
actually telling me what I can do with my body. Who are these people trying to
tell trans people that they don't have a right to exist and they can't get their
kids the health care that they need. So I'm just talking about like at the
cellular level during the last election. I am for sure it took a couple of years off my life.
My actual wellness and being because of the way that my body metabolized that rage and
fear.
And I just as a matter of justice, can't let those people who are trying to ruin my life actually ruin my body
too, in my experience of life. So have you found a way so that you can metabolize that rage
instead of letting it metastasize like you're talking about it becoming a cancer? Like
how does it move through you when you hear those things?
answer? Like, how does it move through you when you hear those things? I don't have so much weight on everything the way that I used to, like every decision
that comes down that like, you know, now, you know, an embryo is a person, like, that's
so stupid that I can't even, I'm like, I don't have time to even consider this.
It's just too dumb.
And that's not the answer because it does affect people.
The level of ridiculousness makes it almost comical.
Like, you're like, I can't even participate in going back and forth about that because
it's too stupid.
It's like you telling me the sky is green and when it's blue, I'm not going to sit
there and talk to you.
I was on the chairlift the other day and I was with a friend of mine and he and I were
going skiing and this woman's next to us and we were just talking about how Taylor Swift,
how she's crushing it, how she is like the most powerful person in the world right now
and with regard to the election.
Oh, I wonder what her plan is, if she's going to do something.
And the woman on the chairlift was sitting at the end said, well, you know,
I don't believe Taylor Swift is who she says she is. And it's a beautiful day. There's snow
everywhere. And I look and I said, I'm sorry, what? And she says, I don't believe Taylor Swift
is who she says she is. If you read about the cabal, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And I said,
Miss, and I said this in the most with the most sunny disposition. I said, please don't speak again, please. I'm having a wonderful day.
You seem great, but that is really, really stupid. And I don't want to hear about a cabal on my day
off. Meanwhile, I've had like 30 days off, but she doesn't know that. And then she was telling me,
I've spent a lot of time researching this. I go, well, then that's really sad that you're researching Taylor Swift being part of some sort of Republican cabal. This is,
this is not critical thinking. And she started to go in, I go, Miss, I have to tell you,
you have got to stop talking to me. You have to stop talking to me. I don't have time for this in
my like, in my brain. And that's how I feel. Don't bother me with your thoughts. Go over there and
think that you don't impress them upon me. I'm not open to them me with your thoughts. Go over there and think them.
Don't impress them upon me.
I'm not open to them.
And I don't have to yell and scream at you anymore.
I just have to be firm that I'm not interested in or open to hearing about it.
That's a different approach though.
That's a different approach.
My job is not to convince you of anything.
Like that is a neuropath.
I have recently figured that out.
Just recently. Oh, I have recently figured that out.
Just recently. Oh, I'm supposed to analyze everything,
do what helps me sleep at night. And that is my job.
But my job is actually not to explain it 17 times to every single person who
disagrees with me. Oh my God. That's so helpful.
I used to fucking argue with anyone. I'd go at it. And now I'm like, no, no, no, no, I don't hate to argue with you. And also I smile now when I'm saying things like that.
I'm not yelling or screaming.
I'm like, oh, that's fun.
Please stop talking to me.
Smile.
That's it.
I had this guy the other day.
I was writing about this.
I had this guy.
This is a few months ago.
I pulled up to a parking meter and you know, I've had trouble with men my whole life. So I get out and I run into this nail salon because
I forgot my wallet. And he goes, Miss, Miss, you didn't feed your meter. And I looked at
him and I went, Yeah, I know. It's me. I'm me. And that's the meter. And I know I didn't
feed it. I'm sorry. I go, What are you getting at? He goes, Well, you're gonna get a ticket. And I said, but why do you care what I'm doing? Like I'm, you think this is
my first interaction with a parking meter? Look at me. I'm in my forties and I'm smiling.
Like I wasn't yelling at him. And you know, cause when you're dealing with men, you have
to be soft because otherwise they're like, you're a bitch. And I'm like, no, no, no.
I go, I'm just so curious.
Why do you care? Like, why are you so invested in my parking meter? He's like, I'm trying
to help you. And I go, but would you say that to a guy? Would you if a man pulled up here
and didn't pay his meter? Would you scream after him saying, sir, you forgot to feed
your meter? He's like, absolutely. And I go, okay, just think about that. Just I'm going
to stay here with you. I put my arm on a shoulder. I go, let's just think about that. I'm gonna stay here with you. I put my arm on his shoulder.
I go, let's think about it together.
Would you really?
And then he went, oh.
And I went, so what you did just now
could be construed as thoughtful.
I think you thought you were being thoughtful.
And that is nice that you're being thoughtful.
But just think about what it's like to be a woman
and having some strange man who's not a meter maid
telling you to feed your meter.
I go, it's a bunch of micro annoyances. and having some strange man who's not a meter maid telling you to feed your meter.
I go, it's a bunch of micro annoyances.
And throughout the day, when you have enough of those,
they become macro and then you become the enemy.
And now I have to mansplain to you
why women are so annoyed with men.
Like you wouldn't say that to a man
and you know you wouldn't.
And he was like, no, you're right, I wouldn't.
And I never got aggressive because I know now
that that doesn't get your point.
You know, you can't land your point when you're yelling or screaming.
That's a loss of control.
So it's so much funner to be smiling,
and so much funner, so much more fun to be smi-
Actually, I'm going to go back to funner.
Funner is good.
It's so much funner to just be like flirty almost,
you know, when you're going at it with someone,
to be jocular and flirty and be like flirty almost, you know, when you're going at it with someone to be jocular and
flirty and be like, isn't that funny that you did that? Don't you think it's funny?
That's from your groundedness. That's from your groundedness. That's more, and I'm not
scared that you just did that. I've got me. So let's have some fun with this. Yes. I have
a theory about the next election and you two handled the last election very similarly I'll just tell you that I know separately the daily experiences
I think this election is gonna be a little bit easier for you no matter what happens Chelsea
because of the work you've done personally, I think
that
Yes, all of this shit is about the country and politics and justice,
but I also think it's about our experience
in our childhood homes.
Like, I truly think that all of the shit
around the strong man, no bodily autonomy,
all of it is cellularly, it activates,
it triggers stuff from being a little girl.
Absolutely.
And also the sentiment,
because that behavior and that male dominance
feels so dated and out of style.
Like when you meet a man of which there are many now
that actually sit and listen to women,
actually Canadian men are very,
they let the women kind of run the show up here.
And I respect them because they know that we're smarter
and that we're capable, you know?
And they're not meek or anything like that.
They're just respectful of women
in a way that it's like, there's something about Canadians.
You know, people are like, oh, they're vanilla or whatever.
I'm like, no, it's nice.
It feels even.
It feels equal.
And men respect you more so than I think in the States
because that quality and that kind of toxicity
of men knowing what's best for us is dated
and it is out of style.
And the way forward is not through that.
So I wouldn't be surprised if Trump won,
but I would be surprised if what feels like
the very beginning of an enlightenment period that we're living through that will go well beyond the time
that we are here, what we need is this huge awakening that people talk about and spiritualists
talk about. And I feel like our conversations in the world about gratitude, about everyone
now is therapy forward. People don, don't look at it.
People in England are going to therapy
and they're the last ones.
Are they?
Are they the stronghold?
They were the last men standing.
So there is something happening here.
There is a movement.
And if that involves Trump serving another term, fine.
But hopefully that's not true.
But we are at, I feel like at the precipice
of a tipping point
where people are really becoming aware and awake
about their spirituality
and about everything we're talking about,
about who you really are and your energy
and that we're just a bunch of cells created here
to make the world a better place, not a worse one.
And you're protecting your energy.
What you're talking about with your approach to,
I am not going
to take my precious, beautiful energy and throw it towards these aggressive voices and
match them with aggressiveness. You are, again, respecting yourself by saying, I'm putting
my energy where it is valuable.
I mean, it makes me think of when dad used to always say,
growing up, don't wrestle with pigs.
You both get dirty and the pig likes it.
That is what it feels like when we feel like
we have to match crazy with crazy.
You can just let crazy be crazy and use that energy
to be in community with not crazy.
And it's the same amount of energy.
Exactly.
And when crazy is left alone, crazy just goes and spins into a cyclone.
Like you're a grounding force.
So when crazy gets you, they're feeding off of your energy and using you to ground them.
And it's like, I'm not your grounding.
I'm my grounding.
So you stay away from me and you have no opening to me.
No, I mean, really the only thing crazier than really spending your one wild and precious life researching whether Taylor Swift is a cabal situation is choosing to have a conversation with someone who has dedicated their life to researching whether Taylor Swift. Right? Like that is
so-
Also, yeah, I said to this woman in our final, I go, but just also, I go, even if that's
true, like say Taylor Swift is an avatar or whatever you think she is, I don't know, the
spaceman, I'm not even sure what you're talking about, but say that's true. I go, what are
you going to do about it? What are you gonna do about it?
I wanna have a good time.
I'm here to have a good time.
So that doesn't fit into my good time.
Chelsea, I just fucking love you so much.
So are you just never gonna come home then?
No, I'm coming home.
I'm coming home. Okay, okay, good.
I'm wrapping up here.
I have to go back to work, you know, at some point.
Okay, all right. Well, text us when you get home.
I will. I will. I sent you a bunch of edibles, but you didn't take them. So I'm disappointed in that.
Oh, stop. Wait, how did I accidentally get high recently?
Wow. You've been on a real tear. I think you sent me. Plus there was that walk,
Chelsea. Yeah. The walk she did with her friend.
I think you sent me. Plus there was that walk, Chelsea.
Go get the walk she did with her friend.
No one, hold on, I'm writing it down.
What's the date?
We were sent some THC gummies
that Glennon thought that they were CBD gummies.
Chelsea sent me a big basket and it was all CBD,
which by the way, I don't think does anything.
All right. It doesn't.
It doesn't, it does nothing.
I mean, it's candy, so that's nice. I'll eat it. But so I ate all that. Nothing happened. I came home from a trip and she was
just acting a little strange. I'm like, what the fuck? I asked her, I was like, are you okay? I
felt scared of you. I was like, I feel scared of you all of a sudden. What's going on? And all of a sudden I realized that there were this thing
that somebody had sent us and I looked close
and it was like five THC, five grams of THC.
I took a few of them and I thought they were CBD.
I was trying to watch Love is Blind and I said,
Abby, this is when she figured out I was high.
I was like, I can't understand any of their intentions.
I was like, what the fuck are you talking about? She's like, I had one of these and I was like, I can't understand any of their intentions. I was like, what the fuck are you talking about?
She's like, I had one of these and I was like,
oh my God, you're stoned, you're in a stone loop.
Listen, I send these packages out all the time
and a lot of people I never hear from again.
So I wonder what's happening, because I always get hit up.
CBD doesn't do anything.
It's like, you might as well just rub it on your body.
Yeah. Because you know, it doesn't have any impact. No, it's do anything. It's like, you might as well just rub it on your body. Yeah.
You know, it doesn't have any impact.
No, it's quite disappointing.
It's a waste of time.
Yeah.
But you are not a waste of time.
And we love you.
Go ski.
Thank you for this hour.
You're a damn joy.
I love you guys.
Bye, Abby.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
I feel like we never have enough time with Chelsea.
But if you would like to listen to more of Chelsea,
we did an incredible episode about love and breaking up
and how to survive it all.
It was episode 115 called On Breaking Up
and Being Unbreakable, check that one out.
All right, we love you
and we will see you back here next time.
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 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,
Dina Kleiner, and Bill Schultz.
Also by Alison Schott and Dina Cabana.