We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Cheryl Strayed: Don’t Let Your Dreams Ruin Your Life
Episode Date: August 2, 20221. Why Cheryl chose Strayed as her last name – the only one not given to her by a man. 2. How she ruined her life when her mom died, and how we can bear the unbearable. 3. Cheryl’s greatest le...sson from her 3-month hike of the PCT, and her mom’s advice she uses everyday. 4. How to make peace with our ITS – “inner terrible someone” – who lives in each of us. 5. Why and how Cheryl is now exploring: “Can I be happy if my kids aren’t?” About Cheryl: Cheryl Strayed is the author of the #1 New York Times bestselling memoir Wild, as well as the bestsellers Tiny Beautiful Things, Brave Enough, and Torch. Wild was adapted into an Oscar-nominated film starring Reese Witherspoon and Laura Dern. Tiny Beautiful Things is currently being adapted for a TV show for Hulu and will star Kathryn Hahn. In addition to writing her widely acclaimed essays, stories and scripts, Strayed has hosted two hit podcasts for the New York Times — Sugar Calling and Dear Sugars, which she co-hosted with Steve Almond. She lives in Portland, Oregon with her husband Brian Lindstrom and their two teenagers. TW: @CherylStrayed IG: @cherylstrayed To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I walk through a fire I came out the other side.
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. We have been waiting for this day for low
so many months. The day is here when we get to sit down with the Cheryl
Strayed. Cheryl Strayed is here today. Yay! I'm so thrilled to be here. Oh yeah. I
mean I already said this. I love you guys and I I love this podcast, so thank you. We love you back. Cheryl Strait is the author of the number one, New York Times, best selling memoir Wilde,
as well as the best seller's tiny beautiful things.
Brave enough, I know.
Kind of torch.
Wilde was adapted into an Oscar-nominated film starring Reese Witherspoon and Laura Dern.
Tiny Beautiful Things is currently being adapted for a TV show for Hulu and Warranty. into an Oscar-nominated film starring Reese Witherspoon and Laura Dern.
Tiny, beautiful things is currently being adapted for a TV show for Hulu and will star Catherine Hahn.
Oh.
That have been cast any better?
No.
Obsessed?
I know.
I'd love Catherine Hahn.
We were looking for somebody who would be able to do, like, really funny,
but also really, really deep,
and poignant and serious, and some really heavy stuff.
And of course, she's the master of all of that.
Yes, she is.
Katherine Hans, one of my favorite actors,
but tiny, beautiful things,
is one of my favorite books of all time.
Oh, thank you.
This is a very big happening.
Okay, in addition to writing,
her widely acclaimed essay stories and scripts,
straight as hosted two hit podcasts
for the New York Times, sugar-calling and dear sugars, which she co-hosted with Steve Allman.
She lives in Portland, Oregon with her husband Brian Lindstrom and their two teenagers and
their two dogs and their three cats.
Is that right?
That's right.
And probably counting.
It seems like we're always being conned into more animals living in our house.
Okay. There's something that happens with the animals, but I actually have a deep
discomfort in my body with the idea that I can't have all the animals. When I see a dog,
I think that should be my dog, and then I think all the dog should be my dog, and that's not
going to happen, but maybe that's what heaven is.
Yeah, maybe we have three teenagers,
and Glenn would then be the fourth,
because teenagers are like, can we get a new dog?
Can we get a new cat?
And Glenn is like, can we get a new dog?
I'm not the bad guy.
I'm like, no, we can't have 17,000 animals
running around this house.
That's right, because animals require things.
No, Abby, I just want to tell you, my husband, Brian and I have been conned into this over and over and over.
My kids, Carver and Bobby, who are now Bobby 16, my daughter 16, my son Carver is 18.
They're going into their junior and senior years in high school.
And since they were little babies, they would say, we promise we will walk the dogs,
we will, you know, to do the litter box. They don't even, I mean, no, they don't follow through
with it. It's just lies. I just think that they're all lies. It just lies. And then we get to
the animals. And then what happens is you end up loving them, you know, because you can't, yeah.
I mean, because they're the best. I mean, really, they are. I do think not only do they bring us joy and pleasure and laughter and cuteness and all
that stuff, which I think you especially need when you have teenagers who maybe don't
want you like loving on them and stroking them and cooing at them all the time.
They're like a medium for emotions that kids don't want a direct emotion.
They can't give a back rest, but we just stand around the dog and we're like,
look at me loving the dog.
Are you receiving the transmittal for you?
And maybe that's like a biological evolutionary.
They con us because they know we need a transition animal.
Yeah.
Many years ago when my kids were little and still in that phase
where they wanted to like snuggle and bed and be all like,
love you, dummy. My friend Natalie had two teenagers and she had this little dog
that she just loved. She said, oh, I'm so bonded to this dog and she said, you know,
I had to get him because then I would have at least one person in my family who
loved me. Yeah. You know, I know. And what I thought at the time is my kids will
never be that way.
And of course now her kids are in their 20s
and they do love her and they always loved her.
But they didn't necessarily act like it.
Oh, exactly.
So now I understand what she was talking about
because my kids are in the, you know,
just more like, they want a socially distance.
More.
More.
Yes.
Like when the fans ever came there at this age,
I was like, we're being told to socially distance from everyone and they were forced to be,
like, not socially distance with the two people they most wanted to socially distance.
That's interesting.
Oh my god, that's so freaking true.
Yeah.
14-aiders are in the pandemic.
I know.
So, Cheryl, we want to start by talking about your beloved mama because your love for
her has been such a...
No, guiding teacher.
Light for all of us.
It's helped all of us a lot.
Yeah, so after your mama died, you were only 22.
That's right.
And she was only 45.
And she was only 45. You were both seniors in college,
right? Yes, we were. We were. So one of the things I heard you say that I thought was so fascinating
is you spiraled for a while after that. Yeah. In self-proclaimed what you would call unhealthy
promiscuity and heroin use. Of that time you said in so many ways
I was trying to honor my mother by ruining my life. That just rang a bell in me. Can you talk
to us about what you meant by that in that time? Yeah, so you know, let's back up. I just want to
tell you a bit about my mom. I mean, you know about her,
but maybe some people listening don't,
you know, she was really in so many ways my hero, you know,
she was this incredibly wonderful loving mom
and really difficult circumstances.
She got pregnant in 1965 when she had just graduated high school
and she didn't want to be pregnant and didn't want to marry my father.
But you know, she really considered having an illegal abortion.
Her parents, when she told her parents, she was pregnant.
They said, unless you get married, we'll send you to a home for wayward girls.
And you can have the baby. And, um, you know, she was, they wanted her to give her the baby and they would raise it
as their own and pretend it was their own.
So, you know, her choices were really limited.
A lot of women in that era ended up getting married because they were pregnant.
And that was my mom.
And so she found herself really in this relationship that by day three was violent.
My father beat her up for the first time on the third day they were together.
And over the course of the next 10 years, she had three kids with him.
I'm the middle child.
I have an older sister.
I'm the middle and then a younger brother.
And you know, some of my earliest memories, I have this really kind of split childhood memories.
My earliest memories, some of them are the most beautiful, lovely, wonderful, loving things
you'd ever imagined with my mom, who made life magic in hard circumstances and loved
us in a devoted, you know, with wild abandon, essentially. And then the terror and the fear and the sorrow of my father,
who abused her physically in front of us all the time.
And also to a lesser extent, abused us.
And I remember fleeing the house with my mom,
her piling us into the car and driving on night,
because this was the 70s.
I think a lot of us forget like how recent
this any understanding of, you know, intimate partner violence is really actually a new thing.
The first, what we used to call better women's shelter was opened in 1975 in the nation. So this
is like really within my lifetime, I'm 53 has changed. There was nowhere for my mom to go.
There were no resources for her to leave that marriage.
And she finally and bravely did.
Then I was the child of a single mom.
And we were poor.
I spent every year of my childhood in poverty.
And yet, it was only economic poverty.
I spent every year of my childhood in riches.
And it was because I had an incredibly emotionally rich mother
who knew how to love and who really loved her kids.
And so I think even though there were many hardships
in my childhood, I do think, wow, what a glorious,
glorious life I got to have because
I had a mother who made me know with every breath that I was loved. And so we did go
off to college, it ended up being together. It was a pretty amazing experience in those
years that I was for the first time stepping through that portal and becoming this kind of educated person,
I wanted to be the writer.
I wanted to become a writer from the beginning,
but to see my mom go through that transformation.
And when she died in our senior year,
on the spring break of our senior year,
very suddenly of cancer,
she only knew she had cancer for seven weeks before she died.
She was like a perfectly healthy woman who wasn't a smoker, who was told she had advanced stage
lung cancer and died. And I, the only words I have for it, and their words that I knew the day she
died, I felt like life as I knew it ended the day my mother died. I thought for many years that I knew the day she died, I felt like life as I knew it ended the day my mother died.
I thought for many years that I was crazy to say that.
And now of course, through my writing about grief, I've met thousands of people around the
world who say, yes, that's how it feels when you lose somebody essential.
And so I felt like, how do I live in the world without my mother?
And one of the things that was so painful that I know now too
is a really universal feeling is that the world goes on
and doesn't notice that somebody extraordinary has gone.
My mother on paper was the most ordinary woman ever,
but in life to the people who are to her children,
to the people who loved her, she was extraordinary.
And I didn't have anything as a young woman, but my own life, my own body, my own trajectory,
you know, I didn't have anything with which to prove to the world that her death mattered.
So I wanted to say very loudly, listen world, we lost something big and I'm going to wreck
myself to prove it.
I'm going to ruin my life to show you how much her life mattered.
And of course, I didn't do it consciously.
It wasn't until years later, I was understanding that this was an act of love, you know, that this decision
to say, okay, I'm going to turn away from that ambitious girl I'd been and become somebody
who was promiscuous in ways that are self-destructive, that does drugs that says yes to all the bad
things, to say, yeah, I'm going to show you. That's how I'm going to love my mother.
I love it.
Does that make sense?
Yes.
It makes utterly perfect sense to me.
I mean, it floored me.
It's like, oh my gosh, you, to be able to come to that realization as well, I think one
of the most interesting things that I've learned about you is that straight, in fact, is not
your, yeah, you're born into
last name.
You chose it.
Why did you choose straight?
Yeah.
Well, it's complicated, I think, for a lot of us who have, you know, who carry our father's
names and who, you know, those of us who have fathers who aren't people who were, what
a father should be to us, who harmed us, rather than loved us,
who abandoned us, rather than be there for us.
And that was that name I carried all through, you know, my childhood nylon, my name was
Cheryl Nyland.
I mean, we're sort of leaving ahead, but, you know, I got married super crazily young.
And we wanted to be like this, my ex-husband, and I were like these feminists,
and we're like, we're gonna take on each other's names,
which was of course, then I had this like long,
complicated, hyphenated name that nobody could ever say.
Cheryl N Islandlidic, Cheryl N Islandlidic.
And my ex-husband also took on my name,
which of course, then he was like congratulated for being
this amazing man, you know, and I was just like,
this troublesome person who had insisted
that he do this, of course,
but even though he did it willingly.
So when we got divorced,
when I was like 25,
what it was really a simple thing, Abby,
is I got, you know, we were doing like,
do it yourself divorce,
because like we had no kids,
we had two cats and, you know, nothing.
Like maybe a, like, I don't know, like some towels. Yeah. I don't even think we had a couch, you know nothing like maybe like I don't know like
some towels. Yeah. I don't even think we had a couch about that okay. So we're
doing this like do it yourself divorce and that you fill out the form and it
literally says my name after the divorce will be and you know you could have
written like Mickey Mouse in there and I was really struck by that line. And of course, as someone who cares
an awful lot about words,
and at that point in my life, I realized,
okay, I'm alone, I'm an orphan.
My mom's dead.
I don't have a father.
He was still alive then, but I don't have a father.
I'm nobody's daughter or wife or mother. And I need to step into my
life in a powerful way. And what better way to do it than to define it through language. And so
I spent some time searching for words, what am I? Am I a stone? I ran through all these different
words. And I landed upon straight,
and I saw the definition of it.
And I just, it was like a punch to the gut
because I knew, this is me, this is me.
And straight, you know, it has layers of definitions
and meanings, but you know, at root,
it's somebody who finds her way on an alternate path,
who finds her way in the world without a mother and a father,
somebody who carries her own home on her back.
And it fit.
What's interesting to me about that too is a lot of people, I'm so glad you asked the question
the way you asked it out because so many people will say, well, straight isn't your real
name.
And which I find interesting that we use that language,
because of course, if I had taken on a man's name
through marriage, nobody would say
that's not your real name.
That's right.
People just feel really threatened and adult
and bewildered by people choosing their own names.
Yeah.
I think it's cool, badass.
That's amazing.
Thank you.
Cheryl straight longer than I've been any other name and it feels like my heritage.
Mm.
I read something where you were talking about how so many people
think of Strade as kind of an escape,
but you think of it more as seeking and finding ourselves.
Was that related to your hike?
Yeah, one of the most interesting things that I've come to understand about human experiences,
so many things that seem like one thing are actually at core the other. So, you know,
like when you go on the kind of journey that I went on in my, allowed 100 mile hike on the Pacific Crest Trail, very often that's kind of framed as escape.
You know, you're escaping, you're running away from your, and I always think it's,
we're stepping into. And I even came to understand honestly my, my foray into using heroin, is that way. In so many ways, what was compelling to me about
heroin, and I know anyone who has any experience with drugs, you know, understands this, and it's like,
you use it, and you think, I think you, I have escaped. Now, there's this other world that feels more
bearable to me. It feels like a world that I don't feel my suffering. So even I, when I stepped into heroin, I was like, okay, this is
the escape. And really what I was looking for, and looking for that experience is a way back in,
a way into the depths of my suffering, a deeper understanding of how I could live with my
suffering, not a way to escape it. And that's everything, too, that happened on my Pacific
Crest Trail journey.
I was alone, but never did I feel more connected to everyone
in my life and to the world at large, like not just the humans,
all the living things.
I felt myself a part of the world again when I was radically
alone.
And it was because I was consciously stepping in
while also in some ways going away.
And sometimes we have to go away to do that
to understand how it is we're connected.
So was that a way, because you talked about doing
the destructive things ruining your life
to do something big enough to show your pain?
So was hiking the trail,
something that you thought would be
a positive, huge action to show your loss?
Was it constructive, huge act instead of destructive, huge act?
And how does one decide?
Because most people are like,
okay, I gotta get my shit together.
So I'm gonna, I don't know, go to a yoga class.
You're like, no.
I'm gonna go,
hike 1100 miles.
Glen, and I sometimes, I somehow think
that we're kindred spirits in this way.
In fact, all three of you, I go big, rather than go.
So, here's what happened.
I reached that place, I guess, of rock bottom
that we talk about the bottom place,
which I think is the glorious place of beginning.
Because the only place to go when you hit the bottom is up.
When I teach writing workshops,
if I say, let's write about that hardest moment,
it's always the thing that also brought people
their greatest strength,
encourage, and beauty.
And so what happened to me is I was ruining my life.
I was using heroin.
I had gotten pregnant by the guy I was doing heroin with,
who had really become a heroin addict and stayed a heroin addict for many years.
And I realized I was pregnant. And it was
honestly for me, I woke up and I thought, what has come of me? What has happened to me? Who am I?
And the awakening I had was it was really connected with this destruction. I was like, I love my
mother world. So I'm going to destroy myself. And then I realized that the exact opposite thing was true. This is what I said. It's
like something that looks one way, it's very often the other way. That what was true is, I have been
loved too well to ruin my life. I, if I want the world to love my mother, if I want to honor my mother's life with
my own life, I actually have to become everything she raised me to be. I have to become everything
I ever intended to be. I have to live again, ambitiously, like that girl I used to be
before she died, who was going to say
unapologetically, I want to be a great American writer.
I would say those things out loud and it seemed audacious and wrong and I lost my way.
Like I lost my sense of that ambition.
And so I woke up and I was like, okay, I have to do something big,
not to become a different person,
but to find my way back to the person
I knew I was inside of me.
And I think that's almost always true.
That's the journey we need to take.
It's not a, like, go find that great person.
It's dig it back up, you know,
you buried it inside of you. I'm Jonathan M. Hevar.
I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I wanna talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing, and strangely intimate things
about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner, I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy.
A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
It is one of my greatest dreams to hike the Appalachian Trail.
And so when your book came out, and then, of course, it
got turned into a movie, I was so
invested. I've struggled with addiction stuff throughout my life. So this felt like it was
such an important point. It didn't think specifically to me. And so I have yet to do the Appalachian
Trail. I am sober now. So that's good. What is the greatest lesson you learn? Like what am I,
what am I hoping to get out of hiking thousands of miles?
Yeah, and just tell us that we don't have to do it.
Okay, yeah.
I was gonna say, first of all, Abby, I want to know when you're gonna do it, because I don't
want you to, you know, like, I've always wanted to, I've always wanted to, like, you've got
to do it, you've got to make a plan, okay?
Yeah.
Even though it's like 10 years from now.
Also, I hope, are you planning to bring,
have you met Glenin?
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
I just feel like time apart is important for a little.
I literally spent.
No, last week she just said for the first time
in our marriage that maybe she could go camping
for one night.
Because Cheryl, I went hiking with my son.
Yeah.
And we hiked and hiked and hiked for hours and hours and hours.
I felt very straight.
And you thought of me.
And I thought, I saw the PCT.
I didn't.
You wanted it.
No, you did.
You hiked a little portion of the PCT.
A little portion.
OK.
Anyway, I also learned some great lessons.
But I assume that you maybe learned more.
I mean, I was on it for 12 minutes.
I'm proud of you, ex-I'm really proud of you, but Abby, maybe you and I've always wanted to hike the AT2, maybe we'll go together.
That would be amazing.
And then we write a memoir called Really Wild.
Yes.
What I learned, again, really just the biggest things as I know you all know are those tiny,
tiny things that you're like, oh my gosh, if I can just live with this, if I can hold this,
it was really acceptance. And what I mean by that is this, it was so hard so often that I just
had to accept each moment. And I had to say, I know I have a long way to go,
but the only thing I can do to get there
is to take this step and then the next step
and the step after that.
And so this kind of like the humility and the,
the, I guess, strength in the acceptance demands,
it was something I had to do every day,
is to say, oh, it's really hot right now,
but here I am, this is where I live, this is my home.
It's raining, it's snowing, I'm scared,
I'm alone, I'm hungry, I'm mad at myself for being here.
Because I was 26, and I was,
one of the things I kept thinking about is I would get so mad at myself sometimes
and think like all of my friends are having so much more fun than me. They're like somewhere drinking margaritas and
lounging around and I'm just out here eating re-fried beans by myself in the dirt. But it was really good for me to just accept what was.
And it really has allowed me to do that
in other parts of my life too.
To realize that the only way we ever get anywhere
is one step at a time, even if we want to tell ourselves
otherwise, it's not true.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
We felt like when we were talking about this part,
we felt like it so reminded us of the
we can do hard things idea because you said part of being able to bear the things we
can't bear is not about tossing them off, not about making the weight lighter, but simply
learning that we have the capacity to carry it.
So it's not, we should do easier things,
or like we could do a few less hard,
it's like we can do this hard thing
that's been placed upon us.
I would say that,
that like if there was just one core kind of sentence,
I would use to describe why like what message people
are like what message would you take from it? No, I didn't plan to message in there but what I
think wild is a core about is that we can bear the unbearable and of course that was true
when it came to lifting a backpack that I literally couldn't lift and carrying this through
the wilderness. And also in a more emotional and metaphorical sense, like I thought I can't live without
my mother and everyone out there who's lost anyone who was essential to them thinks I can't
live without that person.
And then what's true is that we can and we will and we do.
And so, you know, I've always I love that you're famous for that we can and we will and we do. And so, I've always, I love that you're famous for that.
We can do hard things and it's totally connected to,
we can bear the imbarables,
just different language for a very similar idea.
And I think it's one that it's incredibly important
for all of us to remember every day
because very often our first response is, I can't.
Yeah.
And what's so cool about that is you don't have to believe it
because the part of the grief is that you can't believe it.
You can't believe that you can live without your mother.
It's just the one step on the trail at a time,
one day at a time, and then you realize that
even though you can't go on, you are.
Yeah.
And therefore you can.
Yeah. You can do it because you believe you can't go on, you are. And therefore you can. It's not like you can do it because you believe you can.
It's you can do it and therefore you begin to believe
that you can.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I think it's also about rejecting
that kind of dichotomy, like the ways that we think
about what courage looks like or strength looks like.
It's like when people say like,
I could never do that.
And it's like, well, you actually could, you know, it's not like
there's one category of people who are the strong ones who can
endure tremendous loss or face very difficult physical circumstances
or like fill in the trouble.
Whatever the hard thing is, it's like that they're not the people
who can do it. And then there's this other category of people who
can't. It's that if we step into, I guess, embracing that you can,
that both things can be true at once, that this is a hard thing that I don't want to do,
but I'm doing it and I will and I can.
I mean, I think that's really, we can do hard things even if we don't like doing that.
You said before about how even when you were a lot younger, you would say, I'm going to
write the Great American novel.
I'm going to do big things.
I had a shift in me when I heard you talk about, don't let your dreams ruin your life.
So good.
So good.
Can you just tell us about that? Because so many times we have these big dreams
that we know were meant for them,
but in the process of trying to do what we think
is our purpose, we are ruining the entirety of our lives.
Totally.
I'm so glad you asked that Amanda,
because when I said that,
I was like, oh no, people are gonna think that I'm just, yeah, I'm so glad I get to explain this a bit more. I do think it's really important.
When I think about how I became a writer and my own journey into life, I think I really needed
to have that kind of ambition and that sense of like, I'm going to aspire to greatness. And so that in so many ways was
the engine that brought me to a certain place. And then as with anything, our job here is to evolve.
So sometimes you need one story to get to the other story. And that's what I needed. The story I
needed is I'm going to I'm going to be great. And then I found myself in a cottage
in Sheffield, Massachusetts, in my mid-30s,
trying to finish my first book, my novel torch.
I just finished graduate school.
And I was just like, okay, I'm going to just finish this book.
I was like two thirds of the way done with it.
And it was the first time I didn't have a job.
I just was left to write.
My husband was like, finish that dang book
and I was working on it.
Except I ended up distracting myself
with all kinds of other things.
Reality television, for example.
Mm-hmm.
And I would just kind of while the day away. And then in the last 15 minutes
of the day, be like, oh my gosh, I'm going to just write, like try to write. And I got into this
like really deep shame cycle. And I realized like, I can't do this. And maybe actually, not only have
I been lying to everyone else when I keep saying, yes, I'm going to I'm writing the great American
novel that I was lying to myself because I thought, well, if I say that I want to do this, why am I not doing this? And I
really see it was really deep shame and fear that I wouldn't be great. And it was really a powerful
thing for me to sit down and just have that conversation with myself. So what matters more
thing for me to sit down and just have that conversation with myself. So what matters more that I write the great American novel or that I write a novel that I finish
my humble little puny novel that may or may not be good, that may very well just be mediocre.
And I call this my sort of surrender to my own mediocrity moment.
Yes.
And, you know, which it seems like a reverse,
it seems like, you know, it obliterates any, like,
yeah, you go girl message,
but I think it's one of the tourist ones
that we all need to take into our hearts,
where that surrender to my own mediocrity,
what that means to me is I just accepted,
Abby, that lesson from the PCT.
I accepted what was true, which is this.
My dream is to write a book,
and the only book I can possibly write is the one I write.
And I don't know if it's gonna be great or good
or bad or terrible, and that is none of my business,
that my work here, the true thing that I need to do is to let go of greatness, let go of all of those wild dreams.
Don't let those wild dreams get in the way of my wild intention, which is to do this thing, write this story, and to be able to say to myself, I did it, I did it.
And what happens to it after I do it is not up to me. It's none of my business.
And it was such a huge shift in my life to just accept.
It really is ultimately about accepting yourself.
And that word surrender, we think of it as a kind of weakness or a letting go, but in so
many ways, again, it was the opposite of that.
It was me stepping into my truest power, the only true power that
I could wield, which is the work that I could do.
It's so often the pursuit of the thing is what keeps us from the thing.
Like the pursuit of greatness keeps us from greatness.
The pursuit of happiness keeps us from happiness, the pursuit of love.
It keeps us from love because those things are right here in the everyday mundane things
that we're doing, right?
And like the idea of being amazing
is what keeps us from doing the daily mediocre shit.
And it doesn't insulate us from pain either.
I've been a gold medal champion
and a World Cup champion in my life
and I was riddled with an extreme amounts of pain.
So it's gotta be about that intention.
I think that that's so beautifully put.
Well, you have a different,
a different way of looking at that.
Like you said, when we read this quote together,
you said, my dream destroyed my life,
but in a different way, you achieved a dream too,
but she didn't surrender.
She didn't do the surrender and you did before.
And she just kept going to get to the greatness.
And there was a lot of cost to that ambition for greatness.
And so, it's been a really interesting journey
into what I would call mediocrity.
Because now, I'm stepping into a completely different life.
And I think that your quote, this whole concept
is just revolutionary for me right now.
And just being a person, like, I just did soccer really well, and now
I'm a parent, which is the most humbling mediocre situation.
But Abby, I'm curious.
I mean, my assumption is, like, this shift that we're talking about, it's like, in some
ways, if you don't have that surrender to your own mediocrity moment, very often what's
driving you to greatness is outside of you.
Yes, right. And to me that shift, I'm not saying that I'm definitely going to be mediocre. I'm saying
I'm going to be only what I can be and it might be any number of things. It might be failure. It
might be. And so like to be driven by the engine that is inside of you, rather than the engine that is the cultures
or your youthful idea of what success was
or somebody else's expectation or hope for you,
that engine always runs out of steam.
It just does.
And I see so many athletes,
and I never wanted to be one of these athletes
that when they retire, they completely lose themselves.
So my retirement has been spent trying to identify who I am
and what I want and what is true about me
and what I want out of this life
because I think I spent so much time
exhausting the steam train that was external
that was outside of myself.
So I think that that's really interesting.
I do think it's so important what you said about the, it doesn't mean you're going to be mediocre.
But surrendering to this is my thing to do regardless of whether it's mediocre or amazing.
It's so important because when you think about it, sometimes we don't do things,
even if we think there are purpose, because some part of ourselves is protecting
ourselves to say, well, if I don't do it, I can still tell myself and other people that
if I did do it, it would have been amazing.
Whereas if I do it, and it's not amazing, I can't hold on to that, you know, myth that
if I had done it, it would have been amazing.
It keeps you out of the arena in a way. that. Yeah. You know, myth that if I had done it, it would have been amazing. That's right.
It's really so courageous. It keeps you out of the arena in a way. If you're working on a book,
you're still on that little safe shelf of like, you know, it has the potential, right? Whenever I
get the questions, sometimes people will say, well, how do you write a best-selling book? It's like,
I have absolutely no idea. I have no idea. There is no answer to that
question. You don't sit down and write a best-selling book. You sit down and you write a book
that is in your heart and in your mind and your soul and then come what may. It's
to really wrap your mind around that. You do have to redefine the definition of success, the way
that we've been told that success is measured outside of us
by attention and money and fame and gold medals. You know, Abby, I haven't yet fan-girled all over you,
but like, I mean, that is so thrilling that you have those medals. Like, and there's so that's
a no way to diminish that achievement. And yet, it can't in the end be the thing that drives your
passion for your work and for your life.
Come what may.
Yeah. So one of the last things your mom said to you was, you are a seeker.
Now you see that is true, but it pissed you off at first.
And the fact that it pissed you off, we have talked about this seamlessly this week, because
I just love that it pissed you off at first because it just to me speak so much about the complications and relationship and
Between mother and daughter and like how much you put on what your mom thinks of you and yeah
Tell us about first of all why it pissed you off, you think yeah
Well, it's interesting because it's it's very much born of that era
I was in in my life which which made my mom's death even more complicated.
Again, now I've talked to so many people who relate to this, but when you lose a parent,
when you're in your teens or early 20s, you're developmentally doing that social distancing,
like your actual job as a teenager and early 20s person is to establish yourself separate
from your parents,
right? And so I didn't want my mom to say I was anything like I wanted to define myself. So
there was first this instant recoil like, oh, you can't say who I am or what I am. She said that
to me in the context of I had told her I wanted to join there. There was, in the hospice where she was dying, there was this, like, I saw this sign for this grief support group. And I told her I was going to go
to it. And there was something about it that, um, that embarrassed me too, that like, she could see
in me that kind of longing I had to sort of join, you know, joint world or find others or like find find things, you know.
Mm-hmm.
I think it was a lot of it was really just that not yet
wanting to be seen so clearly by my mother.
And of course, now I would welcome her seeing me.
Longing is embarrassing when you're young.
Yeah.
Anyone seeing you're longing or you're reaching
or you're needing or your needing or your needs like
that's only when you're young. Stop for you. I think at some point we can
yeah good thing. Well good for school. You don't want to invest yourself in you don't want to make yourself vulnerable to it not happening or whatever.
Yeah you don't want to ever admit you don't have everything you need. Yeah. Yeah.
So now though, how do you feel about the word secret?
And what is that to you?
Oh, I think that's what would be one of the words I would use
to define myself.
Yeah, it's beautiful.
I mean, it's interesting, Gunna, that you're
asking about this because I would use that word to define
myself.
That is pretty moving to me to think like,
my mom said that to me all those years ago,
and that's what I've spent my life doing.
And yeah, I think I'm very much a seeker.
And I think in my work as dear sugar,
one of the things I knew when I first took
on the sugar column now, like gosh, 12 years ago or so,
was that I wanted to seek, I wasn't going to be the person
who would have the answers and to just tell people what to do, but that I would seek
with them. The questions that sat beneath their questions. I would seek with them the
ways to see more clearly their conundrum or their sorrow or their suffering or their their question. And I do think that that's my work from a very early age.
What I felt called to do was to be a writer. And it was because as a reader,
I could feel that that sort of big transcendent thing we look for when we read and write.
It's like I could feel myself connected to people who were not me, people through all time and
place. And I've always sought, you know, to make that kind of beauty in my life and to find that beauty in my life
and also to be a person who helped people seek that in their own lives too.
So what do you find yourself seeking now?
What are you seeking?
Oh my goodness.
Well, you know, that's such a great question.
The last couple of years of my life, the last, basically, since the pandemic came.
I would say that they have been the second hardest era of my life after the era during
which my mom died.
It's been a very serious, difficult time, just in my family's life and in my life as a mother,
raising two teenagers through the pandemic has been hard in all the ways that we all have been
reading about and, you know, in the New York Times and elsewhere about like struggles that teens
have had during this time. And I've been right there in the thick of it. And it has brought me,
Abby, you use this word humility. The most humbling thing I've ever done there in the thick of it. And it has brought me, Abby, you use this word humility.
It's the most humbling thing I've ever done is be a mother.
And I'm really trying to find my way, always to figure out how to be the best mother to
my kids and also how to be stable and balanced in my own life when they're struggling.
I said earlier that a teen's job is to find independence and to find themselves
step into their own identity.
I think a lot of parents during this era of kids' lives go through that too.
Who am I without my kids?
Can I be happy if my kids aren't?
Those are questions I've been asking myself a lot. And so the way it's been humbling for me
is to remember that I'll always be a seeker.
And that there are happy times,
and there are sad times, and there are hard times,
and there are easy times,
and they're gonna come and go and come and go and come
and go again.
And I think sometimes there have been parts of my life,
but I've gotten
a little complacent about that. You know, things were great, and I thought everything's going to
stay great. And then things haven't been great. And it's like, wow, how do I move through this
with some intelligence and grace? So humble, seeker that I am, I'm just trying to do that thing.
I've told the world to do. I keep putting one foot in front of the other.
Which leads to my next question.
Do you still hike?
Now that you have a family and a gang.
Of course I hike.
I mean, we're gonna hike the AT together, Abby.
That's right.
Yeah.
Re-skit ready to re-strive your role.
So it's like, do I have a towel?
That was hard.
Just playing her.
Yeah.
So much love to Heik.
It's still my favorite thing to do.
And my family loves to hike too.
My kids know, every mother's staying on my birthday,
they have to go on a hike to me.
But I've also made them hike before the pandemic.
In 2017, we went to New Zealand, and we
hiked the Milford track and the Ru-Burn Track.
New Zealand has amazing hiking trails.
And yeah, I'd love to hike so much.
Yes.
How stressful to go hiking with your mom
and your mom is fucking Cheryl's dream.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You know, like, when can we stop?
She's like just another 400 miles camping.
Well, that is such an awkward thing.
When I have been hiking
and then I meet people on the trail.
And I just always try not to really like say who I am.
Because people are so disappointed.
They're like, your show's great.
Yeah, I'm just an old middle-aged mom
trying to hike along the trail.
So that's so good.
That's amazing.
But so yeah, I'm like, yeah, I'm Cheryl Strait Motherfucker. I'm gonna have to say that on this good. That's amazing. But so yeah, I'm like, yeah, I'm Cheryl Strait Motherfucker.
I love to say that on this podcast.
That's right.
We didn't disappoint it.
That it took this long.
Okay, okay.
Yeah, I'm Cheryl Strait Motherfucker.
Or as Liz Gilbert would say to me,
you're Cheryl fucking straight.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love Liz.
I love your episodes with her.
Isn't she the freaking fierce? Yes, she's the absolute best.
She is.
We're lucky to have her.
We really are.
We really are.
What are your little spiritual practices now?
Like you can't go for a hike, but life is so stressful and you're trying to make it
through the day.
What are your little things that you do to survive?
Walking.
I mean, I know this is different than a hike, but I think of myself as a sort of,
I do like walking meditation.
And I think it's one of the things that I've literally never gone on a walk and felt
worse after one.
Like you always feel a little bit better.
Yes.
It's this part, it actually is part of my creative life.
It's part of my sort of psychological well-being life and part of my creative life. It's part of my sort of psychological wellbeing life
and part of my spiritual life.
To, there's something about silence and motion
that's really powerful, whether it be running or walking.
I used to be a runner, now I just walk.
That's something I turn to a lot.
Books, I mean, it's interesting to me how,
from a very young age, like I said, when I first
felt called to be a writer, and the beauty, and the power, and the truth, in words, makes
me feel like it puts me in contact, I think, with the divine.
And I turn to words.
I turn to stories and poetry and words by others that make me feel less alone. I think that most people don't
think of reading as a sacred act, but I do. I think of literature really kind of as my
religion, to be honest. It's in the pages of books that I've felt. That thing, I think
a lot of people feel when they talk about God. And in writing them too, you know, I feel like all of my work is really spiritual, even
though I am not what you would consider, I guess, I don't really believe in God, but I
think I believe in the divinity that is in all of us, and my portal to that divinity
is absolutely through my writing. Mm. [♪ Music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music advice that you've ever been given that you still keep in the back of your mind and heart?
Well, this one is from my mom and in some ways it's also an answer to your previous question
about what I do to feel better each day and my mother would always say to me,
put yourself in the way of beauty. And when she would say that, I would just be a surly teenager
in all my eyes.
But what I later came to understand is that she was right.
What she would say is no matter how hard things are,
no matter how miserable or ugly things seem in your life
on any given day, you always have the opportunity
to put yourself in the way of beauty.
There's always a sunrise and there's always a sunset. in your life on any given day, you always have the opportunity to put yourself in the way of beauty.
There's always a sunrise and there's always a sunset
and it's up to you to be there for it or not.
And I really did just ignore that
and I was on the Pacific Crest Trail
and I'd been out there maybe 50 days and nine
so by that point and I was standing there watching yet another gorgeous sunset.
And I remembered this advice from my mother.
And I realized she had given me in so many ways
the tools I needed to save myself.
And it was something that simple,
is that like, you know, seek beauty,
put yourself in the way of beauty,
and your life will be better for it. And I think about that all the time every day, you know, like I told you,
the struggles I've had over these last few years, feeling just like things are difficult
in my life, really each day going and seeking something, something simple, it can be the
simplest thing, the thing that makes you feel that you are in the presence of beauty, that you are part of beauty. It's a powerfully transformative
act to do that. So for our next right thing, this is just a little helpful thing we like to give
people at the end of an episode so that they can, you know, if they just don't forget everything
else, we just said just one little easy thing that they could take with them. Can you talk to us about our
ITSs, our inner terrible someone's and how we can banish them? Just to leave us to say how we
managed that? We can't banish them. What the hell is the ITS? Okay, the ITS. It's your inner terrible
someone. I know all three of you have one inside of you. We all do. Okay, so here's, here's multiple it.
This is my best advice.
I triplet it.
You have like triplets.
Okay, you have a lot of it.
We all do.
Let's put them into one big monster.
It's your inner terrible someone.
And that is that voice inside of you that says,
no, you can't, you shouldn't, you're stupid,
you're ugly, nobody wants you.
Like all that stuff, you can't write,
you're a terrible mother, all that stuff, right?
And what I think is incredibly powerful and important
is to remember that that is not something
that we necessarily need to reject.
Like for a long time, I think I felt like not something that we necessarily need to reject.
Like for a long time, I think I felt like that is a sign
that I'm not an evolved person, a sign that I'm some,
and some way falling down at the job of being like,
an enlightened, healthy, whole person.
And you know, this shift in me, really in my own life
is when I realized, no, no, hello, it's my friend.
You are part of me.
And here is your seat at my table.
You get to be one of the people who guides me in my life,
but the thing you need to know about yourself
is you're like 99.9% of the time dead wrong.
You're not gonna be the thing that rules me.
And we all have a friend like that who's always wrong.
Yeah.
For me, the key glenon was not to work against it.
It's kind of like when I was, you know, a lot of people
asked me like, how did you hike the Pacific
crest trail by yourself?
weren't you afraid?
That's always the question.
weren't you afraid?
Were you afraid?
And one of the very first decisions I made
when I decided to hike that trail of on
is that I could not let fear
rule me, which is different than saying, I wouldn't be afraid.
Okay.
So the decision we're always making is like, here are all the feelings I have.
Shame, fear, doubt, like all of those feelings we have, are they going to be the thing that
makes the decisions for us and rules our lives that tells us what we can and cannot do. My answer to that is absolutely no. So harnessing your it's is saying, I see you,
you're part of me and you're not my ruler. My ruler is my wise inner sage, my deepest inner truth,
that clarity at the core of me that knows that I am worthy of love, that I am capable
of great things, even if they're mediocre. And I'm going to allow that bigger, I guess,
what I think of it as that bigger self within me to guide my life. And it's can, you know,
trail along behind me, you know, Yamarin away saying all those negative things, but they're
not going to be the things I believe
Remind my dad. He always says you're never as good as you think you are gladin and but you're never as bad as you think you are
And it's like the two voices that screw us up are the one you started with and the one you're ending with now the voice that says you are great and you must be great
That grandiosity is just the flip side of the it's right?
That's right. Those two highs and lows of telling us who we are, those, because really what the
voice inside, the wise when you're talking about is always saying, it's just one more step.
That's right. The wise voice isn't the grandiose one. The wise one is to say, it's a very humble, very grounded,
and very, I think, generous and loving.
When I was on the Pacific Crest Trail,
that thing that I said about deciding
fear wasn't going to be my ruler,
and that's what allowed me to go.
And one of the ways that I would trick my brain
as I decided before I went, that whenever I felt afraid,
what I would say to myself,
I would directly like out loud say,
I am not afraid, I am not afraid, I'm not afraid.
And of course, the contradiction is I only said it
when I was afraid.
And I think that in some ways,
like Glennon, you were talking about
those two oppositions, your it's,
and then that grandiose voice,
like for me to say, I'm not afraid while I'm
afraid like but what happens when you you know bring those two together is the center which is okay
I'm a little bit afraid but guess what I'm brave I'm a courageous person I can do this hard thing
and so like doing hard things is not about it being easy. It's not saying like, it's in your imagination that it's hard, it's saying, I can do hard things.
That's the middle path.
Cheryl, thank you for being a sage of the middle.
That's what you do, the two dichotomies.
I cannot go on.
I will go on.
Yeah.
I am afraid.
I am not afraid.
And as wisdom is the ability to hold two different ideas at the same time and
Keep walking. Thank you. That's right
Yes
I could talk to this radio all day long. I mean you're just such wonderful dear brilliant brave good people
Well lucky for us. We are going to continue this conversation. We're going to be right back in a couple days with an incredible episode where Cheryl turns into sugar.
Yes, do not forget. Do not miss this next one. But thank you so much. Cheryl Straib. You are a guide for us. And for the rest of you.
We know you can't go on. But you will go on. See you next time.
Bye.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlyle. I'm a girl fire I came out the other side
I chased is I here I made sure I got what's mine
And I continue to believe that I'm the one for me
And because I'm mine, I want the line
Cause we're adventurers in heartbreak, some map, a final destination
Glad they stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
To be loved, we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache
I hit rock bottom it felt like a brand new star I'm not the problem sometimes things fall apart
And I continue to believe
The best people are free
And it took some time
But I'm finally fine.
Cause we're adventurers in heartbreak,
some man, a final destination with that.
We stopped asking directions,
so places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache
This world finished her rose and heart breaks on land. We might get lost, but we're only in that.
Stopped asking directions Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
Through the joy and pain
That our lives bring We can do hard things, yeah we can do hard things.
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