We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Cheryl Strayed Tells Us What the Hell to Do Next (Best Of)
Episode Date: June 22, 2025How to end a relationship lovingly, how to love an addict, and how to keep surprising yourself in midlife (buy the tap dancing shoes). Plus, why Cheryl decided to cut down her drinking. For our p...ast episodes with Cheryl, listen to Episode 118 Cheryl Strayed: Don’t Let Your Dreams Ruin Your Life and Episode 119 It’s Okay to Want What You Want: Cheryl Strayed as Dear Sugar. For the Amanda episode Cheryl mentioned, listen to Episode 177 How to Face Your Biggest Fears with Amanda Doyle. About Cheryl: Cheryl Strayed is the author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail, which has sold more than 4 million copies worldwide and was made into an Oscar-nominated film. Her bestselling collection of Dear Sugar columns, Tiny Beautiful Things, was adapted for a Hulu television show that will be released in April. In 2016, the book was adapted as a play that continues to be staged in theaters around the world. Strayed is also the author of the critically acclaimed novel, Torch, and the bestselling collection Brave Enough. She lives in Portland, Oregon. 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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This summer, more travelers are choosing to discover Canada in a different way by staying in an Airbnb.
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a coastal escape near Victoria, or a mountain view stay in Banff.
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Even better, Airbnb has options for every kind of trip.
Whether you're visiting families in Manitoba, heading to the beach in Nova
Scotia, or taking a quiet weekend in Quebec's eastern townships.
Think your own kitchen, no shared walls, room to relax, and even space for the family dog. And after a long day,
the kids can head to bed while the grown-ups wind down in peace. When there's more space to connect,
unwind, and feel at home, the trip just feels better. So if you're planning to explore
Canada this summer, make it unforgettable with Airbnb. Yay! Cheryl Strayed is back!
Cheryl Strayed is the author of the number one New York Times bestseller, Wild, from
Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail,
which has sold more than four million copies worldwide
and was made into an Oscar nominated film
starring Lise Witherspoon.
Her bestselling collection of Dear Sugar Columns,
Tiny Beautiful Things, one of my favorites,
was adapted for a newly released television show
starring Kathryn Hahn,
and is available now for streaming on Hulu.
Strait is also the author
of the critically acclaimed novel Torch
and the bestselling collection Brave Enough.
She lives in Portland, Oregon.
And if you have not listened
to our first episodes with Cheryl, they were amazing.
So go back and check out episodes 118 and 119.
I love you so much. You know this.
And I'm now even more obsessed and I have to say Amanda,
one of my favorite episodes is like the All About Amanda episode.
Did you relate to that one, Cheryl?
I did. Well, namely because I have spent my life as a flirt too.
But though I have to to say I'm reformed
and I'm more like Abby now because you can only play with fire for so long kids without getting
burned. This is a follow-up episode I need to have with you. What Abby said, I was like,
oh, I so relate to that. That idea of like, you know, here we are launching
into this flirtation thing.
I'm sure that's not what you guys wanted to talk about
right after that.
Yeah, it is.
We love it.
That's what I want to talk about, Cheryl.
Yeah, but like what Abby was saying,
it was like, you realize like, okay,
you've got to flirt responsibly, you know,
the energy, people misinterpret it.
Yeah.
That's right.
Flirt responsibly. I feel like that's kind of like drink responsibly. Some
of us can, some of us never can again. That's true. I'm so mad at everyone who can drink
responsibly. If I were not an alcoholic, Cheryl, I would drink every damn day.
You know, my joke used to be, I'm so glad that I'm not an alcoholic because I love to drink. I've been on an alcohol journey of the last year, actually, because I am somebody who
can drink responsibly and loves to drink.
But also I did start to realize, you know what, this isn't good for me.
This isn't healthy there, you know, all of that stuff.
So I've really just got on a personal journey
of drinking less and hardly at all anymore.
Wow.
When you say not healthy for you,
in what ways was it impacting you that you're like,
this is not good?
I actually answered this letter in my most recent,
Dear Sugar column.
I do a once a month on Substack letter.
And essentially what happened
is I realized I was starting to get letters from people who were saying, listen, I don't
have a drinking problem. I'm not an alcoholic. But this letter writer I answered, she said,
I tried to do Dry January in support of my friend who does have a problem with drinking.
And what I found is I couldn't stop drinking. I kept saying
I wouldn't drink and then I would just pour myself a drink at the end of the day. And
I answered her letter because I felt like this was reflective of the awakening I've
had over this last year or so. And I know that there are so many people out there, I
call it, who have a problem without a problem.
You know, there's this weird binary
that we've fallen into in this culture
where it's like the alcoholics are the people
who have a problem and everyone else
just gets to drink their heads off every day.
And I realized that that was false.
And last summer I got COVID, I was in Greece,
I got COVID, I was sick, it was like a nightmare.
But when I recovered, I had that experience
that I often have after a time of struggle
is I felt awake and aware.
And I wrote a letter to myself,
it's very Liz Gilbert of me.
And I sat there in Corfu in the Syrian heat
and I just wrote this letter,
Dear Cheryl, here's what you need to do to take better
care of yourself. Here's what you've known for ages. And I wrote all kinds of things
that I knew. And surprisingly, one of the things I wrote is you need to drink less.
Because what was happening is even though I never got drunk, even though I didn't, all
the bad consequences of alcohol, I was drinking pretty much every day.
I was drinking pretty much two or three glasses
every day of wine, which is like triple
what is recommended by the CDC.
And I wanted to deny, I wanted to say,
well, I'm a moderate drinker
because I think by most people's assessment,
I am and was, but by all the doctors
and people who know about this stuff say, no, that's
actually not moderate at all.
So I started to just be mindful about that and to pay attention to how I was using alcohol
and why.
And I slowly but surely have pretty much stopped drinking.
I'm so thankful you said that because I do feel like
we have this polarization where it's either
if you don't have a DUI and you haven't been arrested
and your family's still together,
then surely you can't have a problem with alcohol.
Like there's this bucket and you almost need a justification.
If you go out in the world and you're not drinking, it's like, whoa, whoa, whoa.
You can't just elect to not do that.
You have to have a demonstrated history of a problem to do something that aggressive
to the world.
Absolutely.
Like a lot of stuff that a lot of us wake up to and realize, wait a minute, we've been
fed this false binary that it's like, you're either this or that, you're good or bad, you're an alcoholic or you're fine. Whatever it is, almost always
that binary is a false narrative. And if you can bring mindfulness, I feel like, obviously,
there are lots of people out there who are like, no, I can't drink again, because it
was a destructive force in my life. But I'm not one of those people. I don't have a list
of things that I could say,
this is what alcohol ruined for me.
But what I do know is that it was slowly kind of silently,
probably ruining my health, that it is better.
I do enjoy having a clearer mind
and waking up in the morning,
not feeling that little tiny teeny-eeny beanie hangover,
all of that stuff, you know?
And so I just think that there's so much conversation not feeling that little tiny teeny beanie hangover, all of that stuff.
And so I just think that there's so much conversation right now about mindful drinking and sober
curious and that whole category of drinkers who would do well to think more mindfully
about their drinking, even if they're not going to completely give it up.
Holly Whitaker does a beautiful job in her book, Quit Like a Woman, talking about how big alcohol is the one that
even put out the idea, drink responsibly,
because actually, what does that mean?
They created this idea that there's a group of people
that alcohol is bad for.
And you can find them in AA meetings.
And then the rest of the world alcohol is good for.
But actually, instead of asking ourselves,
do I have a problem?
We could always ask, is this benefiting me in my life?
Like, is it helpful for me to be drinking alcohol?
And one of the things I always think about is most tragic
about all of the things we do to kind of take the edge off.
I get taking the edge off,
it's probably why I go to bed at 730.
Like, I know I've got that. That's when the edge off. I get taking the edge off, it's probably why I go to bed at 730. Like, I know I've got that.
That's when the edge really emerges.
Right.
So she's like, good night moon, I'm out.
But I know I've said this before, but I think it's so important to me.
It's like the edge, that discomfort, or that little bit of suffering that we take off with
the booze or the shopping or whatever, that discomfort
is usually what propels us to change.
This suffering that makes us make changes in our life, we're like, oh, this friendship
sucks and then we just drink it away.
Oh, I need to switch jobs.
I can't stay on my job.
And then we kind of drink the edge away.
But the edge of discomfort is there
so that we won't stay in discomfort,
so that we will move, so that we will change,
so that we will make the hard decision.
So I always think of it in terms of like,
the edge is there for a reason.
Like it's a gift to you to point you in one direction or not.
And when we dull that edge forever, we just stay in meh.
Yeah, absolutely. And I think too that there are healthy ways of dulling that edge.
One of them is sleep. One of them is going to bed at 730 instead of having a drink or going for a
walk or calling someone you'd care about. I know Glennon, you're against phone calls, but you know, connecting, texting.
And you know, for me, what I realized,
cause that was the thing.
When I decided in Corfu, I had to drink less,
my feeling wasn't like, yes, I can do this.
My feeling was like, I can't, I can't.
Because that's what I do every night.
When the day is over and I'm cooking dinner or whatever, that's my glass of wine. That's my treat for myself. I give so much to so
many people. Can't I give myself anything? And I was almost mad that I was going to have
to surrender this. But here's what happened. It ended up being much easier than I thought
it would be because once I just decided, Cheryl, you can keep giving yourself something at day's end.
It just isn't going to be alcohol.
I replaced it with other stuff because there are like really cool ways to take the edge
off.
Some of the things I listed, but I had a bad habit and we can change our bad habits.
And now, I don't know what my drinking life ahead is gonna be.
I'm still sort of exploring,
but one of the ideas I've sort of flashed onto
is maybe I drink alcohol as often
as maybe I eat birthday cake.
But it's kind of like every once in a blue moon,
I will have a glass or two of wine.
Kind of with the regularity,
I might have a piece of birthday cake, right?
I love that.
And when I think about alcohol,
I've been sober almost seven years now.
It's like the human body is our processing vessel.
So if we are poisoning it,
because whether we want to admit this or not,
alcohol is poison.
And if we do that,
we are not giving ourselves the ability to be fully human.
I think about this so often in terms of creativity,
in terms of planning podcasts, in terms of my business,
in terms of my family, I need to be completely on
all the time so that nothing falls through the cracks.
And I am so grateful every morning to wake up
and to know that I have nothing that I have to like,
worry about.
Oh, God. Yeah. Apologize for. Oh, gosh.
Do you still wake up after parties being like, what did I say? Oh my God. And then I'm like,
wait, I don't need to worry about that anymore. Yes.
Well, at least most of the time, everyone's smile. I'll say something really ridiculous,
even though I'm stone cold sober. Yeah, that's the thing. We're still ourselves,
aren't we? We're still ourselves. But it I'm stone cold sober. Yeah, that's the thing. We're still ourselves, aren't we?
But it can be applied to everything.
Like, Cheryl, what you just said is so important.
The anger about being like, I give to everyone else,
and this is the one thing.
And so you're saying, not only do I need to keep giving
to everyone else, now I can't have my one thing,
but that's so true in our relationships.
It's true.
You can't just take away alcohol.
You can't take away anything.
You have to replace the thing that is meeting that need with something else that's working
better for you.
And so don't just take away.
Say, what am I going to add?
What was missing that I was filling with this thing?
And give yourself the time and the money and the like invitation to do that.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, absolutely.
And the permission to, you know, for me, one of the things is I went on a journey of the
non-alcoholic wine replacement beverages.
So then let me just tell you, they all taste like apple cider vinegar.
So I would pour my glass of apple cider vinegar and say to my husband, I'm in the mood for
a tasty glass of vinegar.
But it helped me through.
And I tried all these different ones.
And you mentioned Holly Whitaker, Glennon, and also Laura McCowan, people who've written
really pretty amazing books that have been so illuminating
and enlightening to me. And one of the things that honestly, I have to say, I'm 54. I didn't
know really about alcohol. Abby, you said that it is a poison. It really is. And that
too shifted my thinking when I understood that no amount of alcohol is good for you.
Now, of course, we all consume other things that are good for us too, but to really think about that
and take that fact in, the fact that it took me this long to actually know that,
and it's thanks to those books by those women and others, says something about our culture
and the culture of alcohol. Yeah.
Cheryl, will you tell us anything else that was in that letter of the list of things that
you knew about yourself that you wrote to yourself?
Yeah, it's interesting because they were all actually about this kind of thing, which is
to in some ways, you ways, love myself. I think that I am really good at looking outward and seeing
like, what do people need from me? How can I support the people in my life, my kids,
my partner, my friends, the frankly even readers and fans? How do I put my energy outward in
a way that makes them happy?
I know how to do that. I've nailed that. What I really struggle with is prioritizing myself. And I think this experience with COVID, what ended up happening is I was alone
in an Airbnb for a week in Corfu, where I knew not one person. So I'm just in Greece,
sick as hell with COVID. And I emerged from this
Airbnb and just sat on the street writing that letter to myself. And it was all about
how the primacy of the body and how I need to care for me, me, and exercise, diet, drink
less. And by diet, I don't mean eat less.
I mean, be more mindful about nurturing myself, nurturing, consuming things that make me feel
good.
And then the spirit, making space in my life for the things that bring me joy, making space
in my artistic life for the things that I actually am curious about pursuing.
Again, I'm 54.
All my life, I've wanted to learn how to, this is going to sound insane, okay? But I'm going to tell you. Again, I'm 54 all my life. I've wanted to learn how
to, this is going to sound insane. Okay. But I'm going to tell you.
No, it will not. I know you're going to say something that I've-
I know you guys are going to laugh. And I know I would look ridiculous doing it, but
I've always wanted to learn how to tap dance. And my husband, every year he's like, I'm
going to give you tap dance lessons for Christmas. And I'm like, don't, don't. It'll just be a burden because I don't have time to learn how to tap dance. So, you know, maybe I need
to learn how to tap dance. Yes.
You do, Cheryl Strayed.
We are sending you tap shoes.
Doesn't that sound like fun?
It sounds amazing.
It sounds absurd. And that is why it's Yes. Because we don't have any absurdity.
We just have this practical shit all day long.
I know.
And here's the thing too.
What I know is I would laugh the whole time.
Yes.
I would laugh the whole time.
Me too.
I would imagine myself tap dancing.
It's so good.
And have you ever had this experience?
I've had this experience lately
cause it has been not the easiest time in my life
the last two years.
And that I actually, when I laugh with abandoned,
I actually feel it in my body, like a good thing.
It's like a wave of something really positive.
It's like an orgasm when you're really laughing.
Yeah.
Yes.
My new theory is like actually seeking that out,
seeking out laughter is one of the most healing acts of love
we can give ourselves.
So good.
I've been doing that exercise with smiling.
It's so weird, but even if you like put a fake smile on,
I'll do it for like a few minutes a day.
And I feel ridiculous doing it.
It looks ridiculous.
But I actually feel better.
There's something chemically happening.
I know it for sure in my bones.
So just go out there and laugh,
find laughter and also just smile to yourself.
Cheryl, we were just talking to Gloria Steinem
and she said that one of the many reasons
why laughter is so magical is because it's proof of freedom.
Because people can make us do anything, like you can be compelled to do anything,
except you cannot make someone laugh, which is so funny because that's the way we use the language.
We say, I made her laugh, I made him laugh.
But it's the one thing that either has to be faked, if you're going to make
somebody laugh, right? But a true laugh can't be compelled. It can only be given.
And it's one of the only ways you can surprise yourself.
In this world where nothing's a surprise except, oh, we need a new transmission on the vehicle.
There's no fun surprises left in life.
Except like when something makes you laugh hard,
it's very often a not expected, you weren't planning that in your day. And it's just like, we lose the surprise, the unexpected and laughing is like,
I just surprised myself.
What a damn joy.
Yeah, you just made me laugh Amanda,
because yeah, the transmission and like,
oh, the cat vomited again on the floor.
I mean, do you guys have this life too?
Yes.
Like my life is all that.
Yes. Yes.
Yes. Yes.
Yeah, we just had it this morning.
Basically all we talk about is when our dog took a shit
and when she threw up.
That's what we talk about all day.
Yeah.
Well, I have two dogs and three cats.
So there's a lot of that going on.
A lot of that for sure.
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["Tiny Beautiful Things"]
Cheryl, I have to tell you a couple things.
Abby and I just binge watched all of Tiny Beautiful Things.
Yes.
I was scared, because Tiny Beautiful Things
is one of the books that I give away the most in the world.
Oh, thank you.
I still, I will always. I just, it's a magical thing, that book.
And I was nervous about them trying to translate it to TV.
I felt very protective and, oh my God, it's so beautiful.
Are you so happy with it all the magic of
time of the book is in it. Catherine Hahn get out of here with Catherine Hahn. Everybody
in the production how do you feel about it? Well first of all I feel so thrilled that you guys
loved it. You're among the very first kind of people outside the project who I've talked to about it. So thank you so much. And yes, I am really touched by it and proud of it. I was very involved
in the making of it. I was in the writer's room, which was led by the amazing showrunner
and creator, Liz Diggilar, and this, a team of just beautiful, amazing writers. And then on the set last summer,
watching these spectacular, all the cast and crew,
bringing their beauty to it and their lives to it.
So I'm thrilled.
It's so touching to me to see the ways
that that book has traveled, you know?
And I couldn't be more excited for everyone to see the show.
It's so beautiful. For anyone who doesn't know, can you talk to our audience about
Dear Sugar and how that all started and what it has become to you?
Yes. So back in early 2010, I had just finished the first draft of Wilde and I
sent it to my editor and I got this email in this
sort of downtime that I was waiting for my editor to get back to me with Wild Notes
from Steve Allman. At the time, he was just an acquaintance, but he's now my friend. And
he said, Cheryl, I have been writing this Dear Sugar column for the Rumpus. It's an
advice column. I write anonymously. I know you read it because I've only received one
fan letter and it was from you.
Early adopter, Cheryl Strayed.
That's right. That's right. And later I was like, that's not true. Right? And he said,
no, literally, you're the only person who ever read it and wrote to me. And he said,
listen, when I got your email, I realized you are the real sugar. And he had read my essays on my first novel Torch at
that time. And he said, I don't want to do it anymore. It pays nothing. Nobody reads
it. Nobody writes to me asking for advice. Would you like to take it over?
Sounds like an offer you couldn't refuse, Cheryl.
I mean, it's like no pay and no recognition. Sign me up. You know, and which I know sounds insane, but I did. I said yes. And
that did go on to become some of the really core pieces of advice I give to people over
and over again is, you know, trust your gut, trust yourself. Maybe that letter I wrote
to myself in Corfu, I mean, that's the place from which I was speaking then too, saying,
here's what you know is true.
And it's the stuff that sparks you to life. So I said, yes. And the great thing about
writing for no pay is you can do whatever the hell you want to do.
And I decided that I wasn't going to write a traditional advice column where I am like
the person who knows everything and I tell you what to do. I was going to use story to help save others because stories have saved me.
And I really went in there and essentially wrote essays about many aspects of life, telling
stories from my own life, telling stories sometimes about my friends' lives with their
permission. And I just really believed that that kind of storytelling
would be something that would help illuminate
people's questions rather than just tell them
like what I think they should do.
And it grew following online.
And so over the years, a couple of years later,
I revealed my identity as Sugar
and then published Tiny Beautiful Things,
which is a collection of these columns.
And now there's a new edition of it out, the 10th anniversary edition with some new columns.
It's why everyone listens to you because what you do is again and again in beautiful new
ways every time say, you already know the answer.
That's right. And is that why the things we do to take the edge off are so dangerous?
Because I think we do those things so we can stop knowing.
Yes.
Right?
So-
That's right.
That's it.
You nailed it, Glennon.
You want to take over?
It's your sugar.
But no, that's it.
And that's it.
Over and over again, you see me in the letter saying, I have absolute clarity about what
you should do.
Here it is.
And not because I think you should do it, but because you think you should do it.
And you know what you want and you're afraid to know it.
You're afraid to know it.
Just like that drink less thing for me, I was afraid to know it because guess what happens
when you know something, you have to act on it.
And that's no fun sometimes or that's scary sometimes
or that breaks our heart sometimes,
at least in the short run.
But I promise you, in the long run,
you will be better for it.
In the long run, the broken heart you will carry
if you don't act on that knowing
is a mighty burden to bear.
I will never forget your line from the book. The worst thing for us is believing that a lie will
keep us safe and truth is where the danger lies. We hide from acknowledging what we know is true
not from acknowledging what we know is true, because we think if we stay on this side of acknowledging it,
we're gonna somehow be safe, but we're never safe there.
Absolutely, I know all of us have lived that, right?
And also lived on the other side to be like,
okay, I'm not going to say this thing or do this thing
or make this move because
it feels risky. It feels like I'll be endangering myself. And then the journey we all went on
is we learned that that was the lie. That actually like when you bring things into the
light, when you speak your truth, when you live out what you know is the right way, that
puts you in the safer zone because then you're aligned. The most painful thing
is to be misaligned, to have your life out here be different from your life in here.
I'm thinking about what you just said when you said, Glenn, I know you don't do phone
calls. And I was thinking about how that has become less true over the last eight, nine months
of my life.
When I started recovery and had to take away the thing I was doing to not know a lot of
anorexia restriction, I had to replace, you have to replace things.
And so I started accepting phone calls and like actually even calling people every once in a while to say,
ah, help, like whatever people do when they're hurting. And I think it's so interesting
that we have to reach out to people so that they can act as mirrors for us,
because strangers are writing to you. And you're seeing in their letter one line
or two lines that gives you the clue that they already know exactly what they need to
do and then you're saying to them, I see you, go forth.
You have permission to do the thing that you want to do.
And that's what all the phone calls are about for me.
Like I call the people that I know are just going to mirror me back to me. It's just so amazing how we all say, you
already know what to do. And that is half of it. And then you need someone else to see
that about you and say, you have permission to do what you know to do. Mm-hmm. Absolutely.
I mean, I learned this over and over again
that validating, just validating people's lives
and experiences and perceptions about who they are,
we all need that.
And it's such a healing act
and it can also be an incredibly motivating one.
If somebody can just say to you, yeah, Glennon, I see
that this is your struggle. And that somehow allows you to keep going, right?
Yeah. Yes.
It's a powerful thing. I mean, that's what connection is that we, for a moment, become
one. Right? I hear very deeply what you're saying and you feel heard.
And then it goes the other way too.
It's a beautiful thing.
And when we don't call people, Glennon, we deny ourselves the ability to get that.
And I relate to that.
I have found myself, and especially when I am feeling sad or struggling or having a hard
time with something, I slay that.
I think we all do, right?
Because you're like, oh, I don't want to drag everyone down because I
don't have a happy story to tell today. And then if I can push through that and
go out, meet my friends for a walk or tea or whatever, I always feel better.
And it's because of that thing, that connection that's so important.
I just texted Glenn in this yesterday because we're having some friends events happening
over the coming days.
And she texted me, do you think I'll be okay?
Am I gonna get through this?
And I said, you know, I don't think you're equating
what it could positively bring to you.
Like what we're doing is we're just like,
oh, it's effort, it's time,
but we're not also bringing into the equation
how a community of people or reaching out to somebody else
could actually improve your life
or improve your circumstance in some way.
They might not have any advice or help,
but the knowing that somebody is there
might actually make you feel better about your circumstance.
Yeah, for sure.
And it might not even be this deep stuff we're talking about where they're
like, you know, affirming. It might just be that you laugh.
Yeah.
That you go tap dancing together.
That's right.
That's important too, right? Just the joy that others can bring. I have this sort of
theory about travel, that like when we decide to go on a trip, the thing we imagine about
that trip
is just all the like great stuff that we're gonna do
and see and it's just like happy.
And then you get there and you know,
your luggage didn't make it with you
and you eat some bad food and you have diarrhea
and then you get COVID.
You get COVID and grease.
Yeah.
I mean, my grease trip was a disaster, okay.
I always call this retrospective fun, right?
Like then you get home and home and nobody wants to hear
your stories about how beautiful the sunset was over Maui. They want to hear your stories about
when you almost cracked yourself to death in Guatemala. That is a better story. That's a
longer lasting story. And this does actually have a point. Trust me, I'm going to wind back to this
Glennon getting together with friends thing. So maybe the opposite happens when we think about connecting with friends or
making that call or getting together where you think like you're imagining all the negative
stuff like I'm going to have to like get ready and I'm going to have to go somewhere and
I'm going to have to be on for a bit." And then you get there and you have a blast and you think,
why was I having so much anxiety about this?
This was wonderful.
I feel great.
Maybe that there is something to remember about that,
that you're going to feel better after you do it,
and keep that in your mind.
I think that's right.
I used to feel that way with family trips so much.
I think I still do.
Like when kids are little and you go on a family trip,
I used to just be looking at them and you know,
I'd be carrying all their shit and they'd be crying and,
and I would look at them and think one day I'm going to think
this was fun. Like right when I get back,
I'm going to somehow look back on that.
But I was never actually happy.
Retrospective fun.
Yes.
Yeah, it's a real thing.
It really is.
It certainly wasn't very fun to hike the Pacific grass trail.
Right.
I mean, you know, it was a lot of things and it was sometimes fun, but mostly it was like
toil and hardship and pain.
And then of course, it was the best thing I ever did.
But it isn't life about building memories, right?
And not every memory is going to be joyful, but still the memories of traveling with the
kids are the things that you take with you everywhere you go.
Right.
Yeah.
And I think life is about activating all the parts of you.
And if we are only staying in this lane all the time,
we are not activating and accessing all of the multitude
of what we contain.
And so many of us are in this like,
well, my to-do list is 1400 things long
and I know I owe the people all of these things.
And so I wish I had time to be with friends, but I don't.
And I'm a little bitter that people keep telling me to do it because they're lucky enough to
have time when I don't.
But it's the only place where like this funny math works, where that hour that you invest,
it multiplies in your life.
I don't know how it works, but it adds more life and margin to you
than you put into it.
And so, yes, you don't have time.
You don't have time to do it,
but you almost don't have time not to do it
because you need that multiplier in your life.
It's too much.
I've been kind of toying with this idea
of what makes me feel most alive.
And I have figured out that there's a before feeling most alive,
the thinking about something, the doing of something when I feel most alive,
and the after having done something I feel most alive.
All of those alive feelings, the feeling at before, the middle,
and after having done
something, they're all important.
They all have the same amount of importance in my life, in my well-being, in my happiness.
So I don't know if this makes any sense.
I like the framing of aliveness instead of what makes me happy.
Because if I say what makes me happy, I'm like, I'll just still stay on the couch.
Because happiness has a kind of, it's sort of lightweight.
Aliveness is, it's all the levels
and layers. Abby, so how many things are on your list of what makes you feel alive and how
many of them do you do on a daily basis? I love that you asked this because I'm a
data person. So I've actually been trying to toy with creating a list of data points so that I can actually attribute point value
to the things that I do.
If I'm feeling down or low.
Such an athlete.
That I can-
I won today.
Yeah, I can put three things into my day
and the value of my aliveness will go up.
So in terms of the things that make me feel alive
before I do them are like when I look forward to trips,
I feel excited when I look forward to spending time with my family and my kids.
Things that make me feel alive when I'm actually doing them golfing, surfing,
things that make me feel alive after I have done them. Working out, going on a walk. I know that
there are some people who like walking. I like having had walked
because I would prefer running. I would like to get there as quickly as possible and walking
feels like the slowest method. How can you not like walking? Wait a minute. How are we going to
do the AT together, man? I know. If you're going to try to run it. I know. It would be,
it's going to be hard. That would be amazing. The camera shot of Abby like so far away running and hand back to Cheryl.
It's like, plot, plot, plot.
What kind of person is this?
Like somebody who doesn't like puppies.
Like how do you not like walking?
Because it's boring.
Because it's boring.
Okay.
I love walking.
You love walking.
But I know you do.
And you walk every day like me and twice a day.
This though, I have to say is probably why Abby is different from us and she's a champion
world-class athlete.
Yes.
But here's the thing.
I still attribute the same amount of value to when I walk, to when I'm surfing, and to
when I'm thinking about going on a trip.
Like that aliveness is the exact same.
It's like, I still feel the energy from having walked.
So I know that about myself.
I know that I have a predisposition
to have like a little bit of lazy.
I like being a little bit of lazy.
And to counteract that, I have to remind myself,
oh, I feel really alive when I'm done doing a hard thing
that I, that whether it's working out
or lifting weights or going on a run,
I think that it's important for people to,
especially to try to build the habits in life
that to make you feel most alive. So let's hear from some of our listeners who were so excited to ask the sugar some questions about their lives. Can we hear from
Bethany? Hi, my name is Bethany and I had a question for Dear Sugar for Cheryl Strain.
My question is probably not a super unique one. I feel like basic mom asking this question,
but I am in my mid 40s. My kids are growing up and they don't need me as much.
And even before I had kids, never really felt particularly in love with my career or what I
was doing. And now I left that for a little while and I don't know. I kind of don't know where to go
from here. And maybe that's midlife crisis. I don't know. But I'm wondering
if Dears Sugar has any advice for those of us moms who are feeling a little bit lost
in the middle of things. Thanks.
Oh, I love this question. Bethany, congratulations. Welcome to your midlife crisis.
Yes!
That is the good news.
I really do.
I do believe that.
Do you know what I mean?
Yes.
Yes.
It is the best of times.
It is not the worst of times.
It doesn't feel like the best of times always when we're in these transition periods, but
I do think that this is this wonderful moment, Bethany, in your life where things are breaking
open.
And you say you feel lost, you say you don't know where to go from here, and what an exciting
time that is.
Because two things, what I want to say is that when we do feel lost, well, then our
main task is to go about the business of finding our way.
And what that means is you get to go on a journey. You get to follow your curiosity. You get to follow that voice inside of you
that we've been talking about so far, that voice of inner truth that says like, here's
what I know about myself. And the beautiful thing at middle age, you know a lot. You know
you didn't dig your career so much. You know you love your children beyond words and they are needing you less and less as
they grow up.
And now you have more freedom.
And I think so many of us experienced that, you know, that kind of quarter life crisis
in our 20s where the questions are all about the road ahead and all about who am I and
where should I go and what direction should I take.
And you took the direction you did, Bethany, and here you are now, 20 years later in your
mid-40s.
And now the question you get to answer is not, who am I, but who am I really?
And who you are really is the woman who's going to get to live this next chapter of
your life.
And one that possibly, I think, I know, in fact, with great certainty,
will be more aligned with that person you most truly are.
You know, I think about when I think of the word lost,
as someone who gets lost a lot, because I'm not created directions for truly.
Like literally. It's amazing.
You know what?
When you're lost, what you also are is very, very alive.
When you are taking a route that you've known a million times, like sometimes life can be
when our kids are in our, you know, routine, routine, routine, there's a, there's a sleepness.
You can sleepwalk through it.
And then when you are lost and you think about when you're in a new place and
you don't recognize anywhere, you are alive to yourselves.
You're so aware.
And I think that is the magic of this time.
Right.
Um, and it's like crisis is one of my favorite words in the whole world.
Actually, I always think of everybody's talks about crisis as a problem, but it's actually, the root
of it is to sift.
Sifting like that where all the sand falls away, like in one of those sifters and you
just have the treasures left over.
I think stay alive, stay lost, look for the treasures.
It's an exciting time.
Women were stepping into a time of life when people aren't needing us.
Holy shit. There's a lot of freedom in that. Yeah.
And I'd say too, Bethany, to really embrace this, like actually go after those things that might
help you think about what to do next. Go on an actual trip or a journey if you can.
If you can't do that,
try to do something outside your comfort zone right there where you live. Take the tap dancing
class. If you always wanted to be a tap dancer, sign up for something that surprises you and
see what happens.
I love it. I love it. Love it. Okay. I think we have Kate next.
Hi, my name is Kate. My question is, when you have the clarity to understand
that your relationship is not healthy
and you can't stay in it, but you love the person,
how do you walk away with grace and dignity
and let go of the resentment and remorse that may have come from the relationship
and just carry on into the light of yourself.
Oh, Kate. You know, this is a question that I would say that it's really one of the very
most common questions I get because it is hard to tell someone you love
that you no longer want to be with them, that you don't want to stay, that you want to go,
and you want to go even though you love the person, and that you don't want to have that goodbye
be one that's one full of anger and wreckage and animosity. And the advice I give
over and over again, it's such a simple piece of advice and so hard to do. But what I know
for sure, Kate, is you can do it, is that you tell the truth. And you tell the truth
with all of your heart and all of your compassion and all of your intelligence and all of your
courage and all of your strength.
And you hold within you that little beautiful glowing gem of clarity that contains two truths
that are not opposite each other.
That you love this person you've been in partnership with and you want to end the relationship
as it exists now.
And that you always return to that. You
say that you don't want to hold resentment and remorse and all of those things. And I
think that that's about staying mindful about your intentions. Your intentions are to lovingly
end a relationship. And sometimes there's anger and resentment gets tangled up in that.
But I promise you, if you can stay true to that, to that deepest core truth within yourself,
those things won't be what dominate your, your mind or the tenor of this breakup.
Oh, you've just solved so many of the reasons why many of my breakups did not end well.
Both at once is so beautiful.
I just wasn't able to be completely honest.
I just wasn't and I thought it was kindness.
But in fact, my lack of ability to be completely truthful was probably in the long run unkindness.
It's so true.
And Abby, I think that it goes back to this terrible binary thing. I think a lot of people feel like, well, in order to leave, in order for me to say,
you know, this isn't working for me and I want to end this relationship, or at
least in the way that it exists right now, romantic, sexual, whatever, I want to
transition into a friendship or I want to end it all together, whatever it is, is
that we think like, okay, we have to have a reason that is outside of ourselves.
Yes.
It has to be, you're a bad person.
Yes.
You don't meet my needs in this way.
You can't just say like, you are amazing and I love you and I'm so grateful for everything
we shared and everything I learned from you.
And I will love you always in a different way, but I no longer want to
be in this relationship."
Just to say with simple clarity, that truth, I think so many people feel that and are terrified
of saying it.
Yes.
And so what they do is then they make it dirty.
Yes.
They get dirty.
They lie, they manipulate and gaslight, they create conflict where there really doesn't need to be any,
all of those things then end up, you know, we make a dirty break instead of a clean one.
We demonize the other person because we think we have to prove ourselves, we have to make
a case for leaving because we don't think we deserve to just go because we want to.
That's right.
That's right. That's right.
So beautiful.
Can we please hear from sweet Erica?
Hi, my name is Erica.
I would like to get Cheryl or sugar thoughts on how to best love and exist with someone
who is in the depths of addiction and depression.
It's not just anyone.
It's one of my most cherished humans on this planet whom I love deeply. It's my
adult friend. I do pretty good, but the ache is always there and the pain is sometimes
unbearable. It's hard for me to even say it out loud. It's a silent pain I feel like I'm
always carrying. I would love to hear your insight on this. Thank you for all you do. Oh, Erica, I think that the experience that you are having with your son is way up there
among the most painful, painful experiences any of us can have. I don't think that there's
anything that I can say that would negate that suffering that you're experiencing. Except to say that I
think the way you love your son is I'm going to guess the way that you have been loving
him all along, which is wildly, deeply, unconditionally, recognizing always that your son is not his
addiction. Those two things are not the same. And I think the most positive way you can love him through this experience is to also
remember to love yourself. That sounds really like maybe trite sometimes to go, we can't forget the
self-care routine. Because I know that that sounds like absolute bullshit in the face of the
monumental suffering that you're experiencing. And yet what I have found, and I want to say Erica,
even though I haven't written about this publicly or talked about this a lot, I have had experiences
that are like yours, not with a child, but with other family members. And there is this
terrible, terrible, powerless one feels when you watch somebody you love so dearly suffering
and you don't know how to help them.
And what I figured out, this love yourself thing, it actually finds its way back to the
question you're asking me, which is how to love your son.
And what I mean by this is I think when we're in pain, we can get very often caught up in
this sense, this kind of powerless cycle of what do I do to change him?
What do I do to help him?
What do I do to change him? What do I do to help him? What do I do to support him? And all of those things are so much outside of our
control. But what is inside of our control is to say, how do I make myself strong and
brave and whole so that I can be that strong, brave, whole person that will be there for this person I love so much.
And what that looks like are the little things, literally, like the thing I said earlier about
like seeking out opportunities to laugh, seeking out opportunities to connect, seeking out
opportunities, not just to do the deep work, obviously, with like a therapist or somebody
who can really help you through the epic psychological tasks that you've been given because you're
in this situation, but the things that actually nurture you and make you stronger, braver,
holer.
Those are the things that will allow you to be the amazing mother to your son that you already are. Because suffering has a way
of depleting us and you are not going to be able to love your son the way I know you want
to love him if you're depleted. So do that and know that actually what you're going to
figure out I think by doing all that stuff is you can bear it.
You can bear this pain.
And that is love.
The strength that you have when it comes to bearing this impossible situation is your
love.
Damn.
Woo wee.
Do you think, Cheryl, when you're talking about finding ways to laugh, finding ways to be
whole, do you get a lot of messages like this that are the thing that she's not asking that
I'm thinking is that old truism of you're only as happy as your least happy child?
Is there something to it that's like, because of the way the universe is now, where my dearest
one is suffering, I can only do my best to suffer because I don't have the right to ever
even try to be happy because that would be breaking the rules of the universe.
I think that's real. And I also think, I mean,
with my own kids, I have two teenagers,
and I think I've mentioned maybe to you guys before
that, you know, it's been a hard couple of years,
and there are times that I have suffered tremendously
because one of my kids was suffering.
And that thing you're describing Amanda,
where it's almost like you think like the greatest act
of love is to actually like have their nervous system
inside your body and suffer for them,
suffer in the ways that they are suffering.
And what I've learned through this experience that I've been through is that actually that
weakens me and that I can't actually be the mother, the strong, brave, whole mother that
I need to be to help my kid who is struggling.
And again, sometimes I think this is why right away when I started
writing Dear Sure Girl, I was like, you know, I'm not like a self-help person. I do sometimes
think that sometimes these messages we get like, just remember gratitude or you know,
all of these that can seem really kind of glib and false and not really validate the
true suffering involved. And the truth is, Erica, that nobody is going to save you from
this. This is one of the most painful things that a human can ever endure, and you have to endure it.
So then when you just simply accept that, that no magic bunny is going to come along and hipity hop,
and then everything is going to be happy, and you're going to feel good about this,
you're never going to feel good if your son is an addict and struggling with depression. You're
just not. Okay? But you can feel better in your suffering if you remember to learn how to be
strong and learn how to be brave and to take care of yourself in those radically deep, simple, complicated, daily ways that
keep you on your two feet.
Yeah. That's why we listen to Dear Sugar.
My gosh.
She tells the truth. Can we please hear from Miranda?
Hi, my name is Miranda. I started to think about what in my life is the most stressful and what controls me the
most and it's money.
I know it's not always the most like socially acceptable thing to talk about and it can
be kind of taboo but like I don't even care about the money like the figures.
I just want to know how to not let it have so much control over my mood and my mental
state.
That might be too much to ask.
Bye.
Oh, money, Miranda.
I love this question.
And I first want to validate, you know, money is absolutely stressful, especially if you
don't have enough or as much as you think you need.
I know this.
I grew up poor.
Every year of my childhood, I lived under the poverty line and I got Medicaid and food
stamps and free government cheese and powdered milk.
On occasion, my family visited food shelves.
I got to go to these places at Christmas and pick out a free Christmas gift.
I know what it is like to live with that stress of money. And I also
witnessed that very much with my mom, who was a single mom, three kids, and saw the
toll it took on her. And I will say it's exhausting and it's all you say. It occupies your mind.
But the advice I want to give to you, and I love that your question, Miranda, is not about money itself.
It's not about like how to earn more money or how to get out of debt or what do I know,
all of those things. It's actually about your mindset when it comes to stress. And it happens
to be stress connected to money, but it could be stressed about something else. But what
I wanted to say is something that I really absorbed, in addition to absorbing the hardships I just described to you
of my youth and into my adult life, I should say, is that so much of our ability to handle
the stress when it comes to money is to make mindful decisions about money's meaning in our
lives and the ways that money defines who we are and what we feel. The thing that my mother would always say when I was a kid and complaining about wanting
something that we couldn't have or being without is she would say, we aren't poor because we're
rich in love.
What I thought at the time as a kid was just, that was ridiculous and I rolled my eyes at my mom. But what I realized later is
that she raised me and my siblings with a theory of abundance rather than scarcity. So at every turn,
when I would say, I want this, like my whole life, for example, wanted brand name jeans. I wanted
Levi's and Lee jeans. I'd never got them until I had my own job at 14 and bought them myself. I got jeans from like Kmart that had no brand.
And she would say, we aren't poor because we're rich in love. Abundance over scarcity.
When I became an adult, I started to really think about what does that mean? And I think
that part of what it means, and I think this thing applies to stress
in every part of our life,
is that we become conscious
about like those received thoughts we have.
It's like, okay, I need more money
and so therefore I feel stressed out
and I feel controlled by it.
What if you take a breath Miranda and say,
okay, I feel acutely right now the things
I don't have because of money.
What are the things that I do have?
And here we are again, and that kind of, oh, you know, just be grateful for everything
and you're going to feel better.
But you know what?
You actually will.
Yeah.
You actually will.
You actually will feel better if you can say, I am rich in these things. And I think that that can be such
a profound shift about so many aspects of our lives. It can liberate us to make choices
that actually lead to our thriving that is beyond money. An example of this, one of my
favorite questions I get when people talk to me about Wild. So in Wild, I write about hiking on
the Pacific Crest Trail. And I also write about how I had no money. Okay. I very often
was hiking with like, you know, 35 cents in my pocket. When I finished my hike on the
trail, I literally had 20 cents. I didn't have any credit cards. I had student loan
debt that I paid off on my 44th birthday, only 10 years ago.
And I just was walking along for literally 1,100 miles for like 94 days.
I'd have a $20 bill in each resupply box.
And then when I spent it, it was gone.
That's how much money I had.
And people will say to me, how could you have hiked the Pacific Crest Trail if you didn't
have enough money? And I always say, but you Crest Trail if you didn't have enough money?
And I always say, but you see, I did. I did have enough money. I hiked the Pacific Crest
Trail. If I didn't have enough money, I couldn't have done it.
We'd still be there.
That's right. And what this is about is that shifting that thinking, what is enough? Am
I going to let money be the thing that stops me from going on an epic journey? Am I going to let fear
be the thing that stops me from going on this epic journey?" The answer was no and no.
And this is about the very thing you're asking about Miranda, which isn't about how much money
do I have and how much do I need to be happy. It's how do I change the way I think of the power it has over me?
The way you do it is you take the power back.
You say, I am the captain of this ship and these are the things I'm going to remember
and think about and feel and allow to have a place in my mind on this day.
And it doesn't mean you'll never feel stressed about money again, trust me.
I mean, I have spent most of my life stressed about money,
but I can say that to make that mental shift
will make all the difference in the world
in the way you feel about it.
Cheryl Strait, I love that every time we talk,
we always end up coming back in the end
to something that your mom taught you.
Every day of the time.
It's true.
It's true.
Isn't that funny?
To put yourself in the way of beauty, that we aren't poor because we're rich in love.
I think that that's really powerful stuff, right?
The mom medicine that I received.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's all over the show. I mean, the- Oh my gosh. The show, it's all over yeah. And it's all over the show.
I mean, the-
Oh my gosh, the show, it's all over the show.
Mothers and daughters and love and all of that.
We love you, your mom and you and your heart and your work
just makes the world feel more connected and braver.
Oh, yeah.
So thank you, Cheryl.
Thank you.
I can't express my gratitude enough because I really think the work that the three of
you are doing with this podcast is tremendously healing and powerful.
I listen to it.
I'm a huge fan, as you know.
I'm going to make you call me, Glennon, and start talking to me on the show.
But also, I hear from so many people all the time about this podcast.
And I just hope you know what important work you're all doing by having these conversations.
And so thank you so much for inviting me onto your show.
And thank you for watching my show, Tiny Beautiful Things.
Thanks, Cheryl.
I always love talking to you.
Hey, and anytime you need Dear Sugar back on the show, I am here for you.
Yes!
You heard it here, Potsgob.
I love these episodes so much.
I'm sitting here, I'm like taking notes.
I'm like, damn, that was really good.
She's gonna go back to all her exes and re-break up with them
and tell them the damn truth this time.
Abby's gonna break up the right way this time.
That's right.
I think they've blocked her number, so probably not.
Yeah, it's done.
Yeah, because you did it so badly.
Exactly.
That's right.
Thank you, Cheryl.
Thank you, Conestrade.
Bye.
Bye.
Keep walking or running.
That's the case.
Bye, Pod Squad.
We'll see you next time.
I love when Cheryl'll straight as the eye. If this podcast means something to you, it would mean so much to us.
If you'd be willing to take 30 seconds to do these three things.
First, can you please follow or subscribe to We Can Do Hard Things?
Following the pod helps you because you'll never miss an episode and it helps us because
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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-Burman, and the show is produced by Lauren Legrasso, Alison Schott, Dina Kleiner, and Bill Schultz.