We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Christen Press: How to Get Your Bliss Back
Episode Date: September 20, 20221. The moment Abby – as Christen’s USWNT roommate – walked into their hotel room and knew Christen was very different than any soccer player she’d ever known. 2. The boundary that helps Chr...isten love her people while protecting herself. 3. Christen’s take on death and how to keep the people we’ve lost alive in our lives. 4. How to show our people (including our little athletes) that we love them for who they are, not what they achieve. 5. The day Christen knew she was ready to fight for – and win – pay equity for the US Women’s National Team. About Christen: Christen Press is a two-time World Cup Champion and Olympian, as well as a leading forward at Los Angeles Angel City FC. An entrepreneur and advocate for inclusivity, Christen, along with US Women’s National teammates – Megan Rapinoe, Tobin Heath, and Meghan Klingenberg – launched their company re—inc, a purpose-driven, global lifestyle brand. Christen was one of the key players leading the charge for the “Equal Play, Equal Pay” campaign to highlight the pay discrepancy between the women’s and men’s national teams, which led to the new CBA agreement – and to her role as Player Representative for the US Women's National Team Players Association. IG: @christenpress To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Whether you're doing a dance to your favorite artist in the office parking lot,
or being guided into Warrior I in the break room before your shift,
whether you're running on your Peloton tread at your mom's house while she watches the baby,
or counting your breaths on the subway.
Peloton is for all of us, wherever we are whenever we need it, download the free Peloton app today.
Peloton app available through free tier, or pay subscription starting at $12.99 per month.
And I continue to believe that I'm the one for me.
for me. OK, welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
We are very excited today because on the podcast,
we have a sporty, spirit spice.
This is my kind of day.
OK.
And you're kind of day.
Yeah, and I'm not going to exactly.
That's why we love this person.
Yes.
Because we feel like she's half you and half me.
That's right. She's someone we can agree upon
Tell real quick before we introduce who it is. Okay, it's Kristen Press
Which everyone already knows by that interaction. I always love it. We try to like surprise. I know the secret because I talk about her all the time
They know because it's already in like the
the secret because I talk about her all the time. They know because it's already in like the past.
That's right.
So tell me before we bring her on, can you tell the story
that you told me the first time you ever met Kristen?
Yes.
So this is my one of my first memories of you, Kristen.
And I remember we got roomed together.
And I don't remember what country we were in,
but we were in a different country.
And I walked into the hotel room
and you were on the bed with your back straight
up against the headboard and your eyes were closed.
And I looked at you and I thought,
what the fuck is she doing?
Is she okay?
What's happening right now?
And like,
because you had never seen anyone meditate before.
She was meditating.
Right, right, right, obviously.
Yeah.
And it was the first time I had seen somebody do that
in real life, like in the national team environment.
So I think I tried to be quiet.
I checked her pulse first.
And that was like impossible.
So eventually you came to.
And I think I probably asked you about it
and was super curious because I think I've always been
very curious in that spiritual space.
And what happened next was actually quite interesting
because it kind of developed an intimidation. I was like intimidated by you
because you have this part in you that you were exploring that I wished that I could explore in
myself. And because she wasn't asking you for advice. She was looking inside herself. That's
what drove you nuts. Did you know that you have
always intimidated Abby one walk? No, this is news to me. I have definitely startled quite a
few roommates with my meditation practice, especially early on in the national team because I'm
pretty quiet. So I didn't tell people I was going to meditate. They just found me that way.
But this is news to me that I ever intimidated you
because I quite certainly was going through
the same thing on my end, but maybe for different reasons.
Yeah, I just thought it was so cool
for such a young kid to come into the kind of environment
like the national team.
And to actually do your own thing, it was super common for all of environment, like the national team, and to actually do your own thing.
It was super common for all of us,
myself included, to just assimilate
and just like do whatever anybody else is doing
and just try to do it harder and more.
I just love that memory of you
and it kind of solidified this deep respect,
even though, you know, people don't understand this
about the national team. Like, we are close, but we're also competing against each other
for like time on the field, and that time on the field has repercussions in lots of
different ways.
Pod Squad, just think about that, okay? You're like, you're hanging out with your best friends
in a room, and then somebody blows a whistle and is like, everybody run.
And one of you have to win.
Like a matchin.
We don't have to imagine.
We lift that.
We, I still lift that.
Yes.
It's so wild.
Okay, Kristen Press is a two-time World Cup champion
and Olympian.
I'm sorry, we're just imagining racing all of my friends. Okay.
As well as a leading forward at Los Angeles Angel City FC,
Woot Woot, an entrepreneur and advocate for inclusivity.
Kristen, along with her US Women's National teammates,
Megan Rapinoe, Tobin Heath, and Megan Klingenberg,
launched their company Re-Anc,
a purpose-driven global lifestyle brand.
A leader both on and off the field,
Kristen was one of the key players leading the charge for the equal play, equal pay campaign
to highlight the pay discrepancy between the women's and men's national teams,
which led to the new agreement. Enter her role as player representative for the U.S. Women's
National Team Players Association. Kristen Press, welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
You do a lot of hard things.
Thank you for having me.
I'm so happy to be here.
And thanks for that very lovely introduction.
So, Kristen, you weren't always just spirit-spice.
You used to be stress-y spice.
You know me.
Yeah.
In college, you actually talked about being miserable playing soccer that used to cry on the field,
that you constantly felt like you weren't good enough.
Can you take a step back to that time and talk to us about what playing soccer was like
for you then?
Yeah, I have so many thoughts from your story, Abby, just swirling in my head of where
to begin.
But to go back to the beginning, I grew up in Southern California,
which is a hotbed for women's soccer,
in a very competitive family, and on the middle child.
So I was vying for the attention of my parents my whole life.
And soccer was the way that I thought I was going to get that.
And I think many people experience in sport this idea that, you know, if you win a game,
you'll be satisfied or if you score a goal, then your parents are going to be satisfied or
it'll help their life. Um, I think our relationship. So I think my introduction to sport was in a really
quite toxic and quite pressure-ridden environment where I thought that my worth and my value
was dependent on my performance. It's the typical sports story. I think so many people go through that
but it didn't work for me. It didn't work for my well-being. It didn't work, it didn't make my parents happy ultimately, but it also didn't allow me to be my best.
And so, actually, the better I got, the worse it was for me.
And that was all the way through college.
And through college, I saw some of my teammates start to make the national team.
We obviously experienced this huge boom in Women's Soccer work, it became really important.
And there was, like like glory to be had.
And so with that, the pressure of like getting a scholarship and going to college and scoring in
college, the pressure got bigger and bigger. It was make the national team be the best player.
And so the closer I got the worse it was. And that was my experience in college. And I started seeing
some of my teammates on the
national team, and I started to feel the first time in my career that I wasn't reaching
those dreams, that I wasn't able to be the best player, that I wasn't getting that call
up, and I was drowning in that.
And I think both my parents were so invested in my career that they began to drown in
this idea of like, I wouldn't be happy unless I got there.
And then I was feeling like they wouldn't be happy unless I got there.
And actually, this is how my meditation practice was born.
My little sister also played up to college soccer.
And she had a lot of heart over time than I did.
Struggled with mental illness, hated soccer,
got sick when she played so much anxiety.
So in her own journey, she went to meditation
to try to find a way to cope with the stresses of her life
and started a vetic meditation practice
and then convinced our whole family
we should all do it together.
This is how my family is.
So we all go to this guru and now my sister is a meditation instructor, so this is her
whole life.
That's when I found my meditation practice.
And of course, so much applied to sport, the meditative nature of letting things go,
letting thoughts come in and go out.
It's like still applicable when you're on the field.
Like you miss a shot, let it go.
And just like training your brain to be focused.
So it was really applicable to me in like a concrete way.
But ultimately what happened is like once I started
to let go in a larger sense of these dreams
of these accolades of these needs need to succeed, I started playing white butter.
It was like a breath of fresh air.
Also at the same time the women's league that was then folded.
So there was no place for me to play.
I was out of college and I went to
Sweden where I was putting a huge distance between all of those expectations and all of
the people who had expectations and me. Those two things happened at the same time, learn
to meditate, started playing just kind of for the love of it, and gave up on my dream of
making the national team. Just like said, it's never going to happen. But the current coach for the national team was in Sweden,
and I was there for two months before I got my first call up.
And so it was, in my mind, I always say it was the scenic route to the national team.
So hold on, I'm so glad.
Listen, she goes to Sweden.
She's like, screw it, the league folded.
So I'm just going to go to Sweden and actually have Joy playing and play like you say like no one's watching and
The national team coach happened to be watching because she is Swedish. Yep
Holy crap, okay, so then she calls you and it's like actually you are gonna be on the national team surprise surprise and you're like shit
I wish it was all that easy.
It was she called and said, you have a small snowball stance and how long thing I'm going
to ask for you, but you're going to get a chance.
And what I was waiting for was that chance.
And so I think that's the reason that when I came into the national team, I came with
this determination to stay true to myself.
Because I knew that the traditional competitive pressure,
that type of culture of American sports
did not get me to the national team.
So it wasn't going to keep me on the national team.
Whoa.
And so it was actually quite hard socially
because it's easier when you fit in and when you
follow.
And as a young player kind of being like, I have to be me.
That kind of put a divide between me and a lot of people off the field.
But I knew it was what I had to do to be well and to be successful.
So besides meditating, what are you talking about when you say,
I had to be true to myself and that causes divides?
I think it was just overall approach to training,
to what I thought made me tick,
to putting myself in environments that were right for me,
even if it made other people uncomfortable,
like meditating in my room with a roommate,
that's actually quite uncomfortable.
Um, doing my own recovery when the group
was doing something else and me feeling like this worked.
And I actually remember Abby, I have a number of you asking
Lauren, Cheney, Holiday, who was my friend on the team,
one of my first friends on the team,
like, oh, just Kristen just like being alone.
And she told me that you said that because I was always off kind of doing my own thing.
And I think that that is what made me feel like I had to do that to be there.
But then there was a little bit of like dissonance between how I was behaving
and what was expected for a new player on the team.
Because I'm entering this group,
where everyone's amazing.
And they're at the top of their game,
and there's so much to learn from them.
And there was this little sense of like,
does she not think she needs to learn from us
because she's doing it her own way.
Yeah, I remember that.
When I walked into the room and I saw you meditating,
that was in and around the same time
that I was reading Susan Keyain's book, Quiet,
because Becky Sourbrun was also on the team
and she's like this raging introvert
and I like couldn't connect with her.
I felt like me and her were like oil and water
and I was trying to meet you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yes, it's a very ironic that I've married a raging introvert.
But I just think that I hope you know
That what you did was you freed so many other people to come into that environment and to
Feel a little bit maybe not fully but a little bit more confident in like doing their thing
And so you see some of these players
Expressing themselves in all the kinds of ways. And I actually, like, deeply believe,
Kristen, that you were a really big revolutionary
when it comes to that.
Because it's so much harder to do what you did
than to do what I did where I just stepped in
and I was like, okay, me and him, I'll do whatever you want.
Like, how do you want me to jump?
I'll do it.
I just want you to know that there's so much respect there.
Even if there
was like a feeling of like dissonance or disconnection at times, there was for me at least, I can speak
for myself like I always respected the hell out of you for making that choice because I knew that
it was a harder road, maybe a more lonely road too, so I think it's really amazing.
And it's hopeful to all of us who are, I mean, there's so so many things times we talk on the podcast about like how do we?
Introvert sensitive people, spirit spices, like how do we function inside of cultures that are so
American like so cutthroat and churning and you know, even capital it like all of it just.
cut throat and churning and you know even capital it like all of it just.
So Kristen, I want to ask you, you talk about how you were in a cycle when you were young about trying to impress your parents that you thought they'd never be
happy unless you were great. They thought you wouldn't be happy unless you were
great. You talk about the pursuit of greatness that your family had.
Do you believe in the pursuit of greatness that your family had. Do you believe in the pursuit of greatness?
And what are the downfalls of chasing greatness?
Would that be a theme of your chosen family?
You have one day.
Would you choose chasing greatness as a family value?
100%.
But I think it depends on your definition of greatness. Because I kind of
hear a little bit of your answer in your question. But is the answer? No.
So you've already failed. But I think for me, the pursuit of greatness, while it caused anxiety and stress, and it caused me
to lose myself, it's also what caused me to find myself again, and it pushed me out
of my comfort level to be true to me.
And ultimately, you know, the old cliche, like the journeys, the destination, but that's
only true if you're trying to get somewhere. And that's for me the pursuit of greatness.
And I can take my injury right now where there's this idea that a successful recovery is a speedy recovery,
or there is an idea that I need to get to a certain place,
I need to get back, I need to do these things,
these milestones, and I reject that.
I reject that it needs to be a speedy recovery.
I reject that I need to be on this certain pace,
but in order for me to find value, it's in the intention of my journey and my
journey is to grow and to get better every day and to be well and then to share that as I
can with other people around me as an energy as like a lifestyle. And if I was satisfied with
where I was, where, you know, I can't run, currently, like, I can't do things, I'm sad like that, that's not peace.
So I think it's that intent to be moving, to be growing, that is greatness.
And I think it is helpful to have a target.
And I am very goal oriented.
Every day I write down, this is my goal for the day, this is what I want to achieve.
And I just have to be able to have peace when
I don't get there. But I don't ever want to stop writing down that goal. I don't ever want to stop
pursuing greatness. I just want to balance that with acceptance of what ultimately happens.
I think that's so interesting because so many people in the world probably believe that
that's so interesting because so many people in the world probably believe that spirituality and
this desire for greatness can't be put together, right, like that they're mutually exclusive. But I think what you're saying is that there's more nuance to that in that not just like your recovery, but you can be a multitude of things.
You can have a path spiritual or not and also want to chase this kind of excellence and greatness
that you get to define every single day. I think that that's really interesting.
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 want to 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. we spend all of our life on the sidelines of the soccer. And the parents are unaffing, believable,
Kristen, like you may have experienced some of this
in your life's time.
But like we actually started bringing blow pops
to sideline and just shoving them in parents' mouths
when they started screaming, just like going down the sideline.
Just we would call it start sucking to stop sucking.
Like just put the lollipop in your mouth and it will remind you to shut up.
It's amazing to see parents lose themselves.
I do it too.
Do you have any advice for how to parent children who are pursuing greatness without having
them feel like their worth depends on it or their relationship or their connection with
their parents depends on it? Anything you wish would have happened or do you ever think about that?
Yeah, I can only give parenting advice from the perspective of the child, obviously.
But I think it was somewhere along the line. I felt like I was forgotten about. And at one point it was, Kristen wants this, so we want this.
And then I think that I was cut out of the equation.
It was like, we want this.
And it wasn't until my mom got sick that she and I were able to overcome that struggle in our relationship. And I have a memory
years before my mom was sick, where I was working in my spirituality, on my meditation practice,
working with a few people, and the being of this journey that I was on was surrender.
And I helped you identify what it was that you wanted the most,
and then you had to let go of it.
And this was, I was already on the national team,
so I was an adult, and I remember in a hotel,
in the national team, getting on my hands
in these every morning and saying,
I surrender the need for my mother's approval.
Oh.
And because like, as a full-prone adult, and saying, I surrender the need for my mother's approval.
And because like as a full-brown adult,
oh yes.
Still needing to know that, like, still needing to feel
that it was for her, that I was playing for her.
And I almost lost my own love of the game because of that.
And, you know, through that time, I
shared that experience with my mother. And it was like,
we both had this aha moment where one day I was like, all my Anthony's and I got up and I was like,
what if I'm wrong? What if she hasn't forgotten about me? What if she actually already loves me
and accepts me? What if she actually thinks I'm amazing? And I am the one who's like miscalibrated.
And I'm projecting all my own fears on her. And I'm saying one who's like miscalibrated. And I'm projecting all my own fears
on her. And I'm saying, you know, she forgot about me. She has these goals for soccer. But what if
that's me? And it just like hit me that my mom already accepted me. And it kind of hit her
that I didn't need some of these things that she thought I needed. And we both were able to move on from that.
So it's really round about where I'm getting advice.
But I think the key to it is acceptance and showing all people that you care whether they're
your parent or your child or your friend or your lover that you accept them for who they
are and meeting people as full people,
not just, you know, as career people, because ultimately that's, you know,
what was my deepest need was to be accepted by my, my mother.
And I thought that that meant for so many years, like, I had to be a great player.
I had to be on the national team. I had to do these things.
But it really has nothing to do with that.
It has to do with, you know, who's at your core, what you're striving for, and what
that means to the other person who it means to the world.
Tell us.
You've done your career differently.
You do things differently.
In Fad Squad, you just have to watch
a The Soccer Game and just,
if you just watch her on the field, it's just different.
Things are, it's just, I don't know.
She just like floats and flits about
and then somehow the ball gets in the ball.
Okay, so you just have to watch her.
But it's different.
And another thing that's different is,
I watched how you did grief differently when you
lost your mother, who you love so, so very much.
You actually signed with Angel City and then took a mental health break, right?
Yeah, for good.
I didn't even know why at the time.
I was just like, that's the coolest thing I've ever heard.
But can you tell us why
and what you did during that time? Yeah. So a big part of it was the emotional journey that I went on
with my mom on. She was healthy one day and then like deeply sick the next and had about three months where she was very sick and then she passed.
And in those three months, I feel like we lived 30 years
in terms of our relationship and our conversations
and a big part of it was like acceptance of each other
and the fear that we both had,
that the other person didn't love us
or didn't respect us or didn't accept us.
We went through that and my mom cared so much about me and about Parker.
She just loved it and she was so invested.
And actually I was with the national team in Spain in January of 2019 and I scored in that game in Spain in January of 2019.
And I scored in that game in Spain.
And I got back on the flight the next day and flew home.
And my mom had brain bleed when I was on the flight.
And I actually never saw her again.
And as soon as I walked into the hospital room
where my family was, my dad said,
the last exchange I had with your mom was showing her your
goal and she was so happy.
So like that kind of gives you a sense of like how deeply tied my whole family to my
career that it meant so much to my dad that that was his last interaction with my mom.
So that was January 2019 and I had missed a lot of camps with my mom was sick and it was
a world cup
year.
So I took a little bit of time and I just went straight back into it and we were preparing
for a world cup.
We had our pack when we lost it.
There was just so much happening and I'm a very emotional person.
I'm very dramatic.
So I process things like in big ways, in big moments. But I'm generally
not sad. I'm generally not like mopey or tired. I just like have these outbursts of emotion.
And then like I bounce back. And so that's kind of how I was dealing with my grief. Like
it was like these big dramatic moments. And then I'd like get back to practice and get back to life. And that went
through the World Cup and all the way honestly for years. It went on like through COVID, it went on
through the Olympics and I started to think, why did my grieving experience look so different
to think, why did my grieving experience look so different from my sisters or from other people's?
And there's this weird comparison that happens, which isn't fair, but kind of can't help
I do it.
And I was like, this doesn't feel right.
I've reflected on it.
And I was like, I never took a break.
I never processed.
I never stopped.
And I didn't feel like it was killing me,
but I felt like I was missing something.
So I'm sort of like next step,
some sort of clarity,
and almost like a growth in my relationship with my mom
that I've saw in front of me.
And, wow.
We, well obviously the period of playing soccer
through COVID was really hard and difficult.
And the Olympics was really special and difficult.
And it was like all this pressure was like,
just like mounting on me.
And,
and I've always kind of done it my own way.
I've always been on the national team in my own way.
And I remember when I had this revelation that I was like, I've done kind of done it my own way. I've always been on the national team in my own way. And I remember when I had this revelation
that I've done this consistently since 2012,
it is now 2021 and I need some perspective.
And I need time to grieve.
And my relationship with my mom is so tied to soccer,
I need to not have soccer to understand
where that leaves me and my mom.
And yeah, you're probably catching on to this.
I feel like my relationship with my mom is ongoing
and it's something that I have to do cultivate now.
So it was like, I need to have my relationship with my mom
without soccer for this period of time.
In that same moment where I was like, I'm going to take four months off.
I also had this feeling of competitiveness that I was like, I can do this.
I can show good way.
I can help release some of this pressure that I'm sure other athletes are feeling and
I will come back and I will be better and it will be a good thing for the world to show
that you can do this.
That was last fall and I then spent four months
traveling and living my best life.
I became a pilgrim and I went on El Camino de Santiago
and I just walked everywhere.
I traveled all these places and I really worked on
my relationship with my mother, my relationship with myself, my identity without soccer, and where all those pieces fit.
And I think I had this fear because I had such a toxic relationship with soccer for so
long that I would never want to come back.
And I never felt like that.
The whole time, I was like, this is this moment,
and there will be another moment.
And now it's like an interesting thing to reflect on
because obviously I came back for a few months
and then had my first major injury.
And so there's this feeling of,
this probably never would have happened
if I hadn't taken form of self.
Like I can just say that.
I don't have level of regret.
I'm not that type of person,
but I just think that's the fact.
But the question is like, did I gain more anyway?
Did that help prepare me for this, for this next journey?
And I think in so many ways, the way I grew,
like I imagined myself so often just taking stuff
after stuff on El Camino with nothing
to burden me, but just taking the next step
and the simplicity of that and the profound effect it had in its most basic form
of living, just letting your foot kiss the ground.
That's all you had to do.
I feel like it's shaped like everything
that I am from this point forward
and it prepared me for so much.
But it came with a big risk of my place on the national team,
my ability to compete at the highest level, a little bit of fear. Maybe I never even like this
sport and I just get it for somebody else. What if that was the... What if I realized I hate it?
That's like worst. That's why most people don't stop their lives, Christian. That's why most of us
don't stop our lives because we're afraid of... That my biggest fear. Was that like I would realize I hated it. I never want to go
back. And then the universe is so beautiful giving you and I know that maybe you're not here yet.
But as soon as I heard you got injured, I thought, oh, this is going to be interesting to see
how she processes this. It's like the universe is a little joke.
Like, ooh, let's see how you handle this little bit.
Like I'm going to, I'm going to show you, give you an opportunity to even question
it even a little bit more.
Like because what the fuck did you not learn on the El Camino?
But you said it wasn't a long enough hike.
Listen, we've had shows straight on.
We'll hook you up.
You just need
a longer hike.
I mean, that's exactly exactly how I reacted. I was like, I had this plan. I was going to
leave soccer and then I was going to come back and show everyone.
Of course.
And then it just got blown up in my face. And I was like, no, I already did the hard part.
And now the hard parts ahead of me. So it is, it's the twisted nature of life.
["The
hard part of the
hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the
hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the
hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the
hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the
hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the
hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the
hard part of the
hard part of the
hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of
the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the hard part of the the hard part of the talk to us about what you mean when you say my ongoing relationship with my mother. My
whole heart just like jumped when you said that. Can you just tell us what you mean and how
that shows up in your life and what you're doing and what that relationship is?
Yeah.
Yes. So when my mom passed, I got really good advice from her family friends. And he said to me, reflecting
on his own experience of losing his mother, that the moment that she died, she was with
him forever. And while he was alive, you have to go physically see people. But when someone's
no longer alive, you never have to travel to see them. They're always there. That articulation is exactly what my experience has been.
It's hard when relationships are really hard
when people are alive, and you have to do these things
to make sure you feel like you're prioritizing them,
making them feel loved, all these things.
And I was like, it was just completely gone.
Like I never had to get on the flight.
I never had to make a phone call.
My mom was just always with me.
And because of this journey that she and I went on,
I felt like I learned what I'll call Stacy,
to point out my mom since Stacy,
was Stacy 2.0, which was like a mother
that didn't care about me as an athlete.
She just cared about me as a human.
And that's who I met.
And that's the person I get to continue
to cultivate a relationship with.
So sometimes when things are going wrong or hard
and I feel like, oh, I've failed
and I've let these people down, I'm like, no, no.
Like, and I can even look up to this guy
and I'm like, my mom is here and she doesn't care about this.
That was like something I learned that was wrong.
And I've now unlearned it.
I have this relationship with my mom that's growing
because I can still revert to those old pathways
where I'm like, I missed the goal.
My mom must be disappointed.
And now I'm trying to cultivate this new pathway
that is, you know, when you're on your present
and when you're transcendental,
which I think is what happens in a way when you pass, there is no like limited human nature.
And so I get to experience this relationship with my mom where I know 1,000% she's proud
of me that she accepts me and I get to live my life with that freedom.
And I get to talk to her in a way that I often couldn't
when she was alive because I had fear,
fear of my flaws, fear of her flaws,
and now the fear's gone, because she sees me.
At my worst, there's no hiding from her.
When you're a kid, you try to hide everything from your mom,
there's no hiding anymore.
And that's the relationship that I cultivate.
And it's a daily thing, a conversation with my mom and a understanding of each other.
Oh my gosh, it's like, it's like, I know, I'm like crying over here because so many people
I know, especially in the LGBTQ space struggle in many ways
or have struggled with their parents
and the approval of their parents.
And I'm just so afraid, I've been so afraid of like,
when my parents die, that there will be like,
all this stuff that's undone.
And like what you've just done is like,
make me feel so much less afraid of that
because of your experience. Like that is such a life giving. No more human nature, that's so good. No
more fear, no more all of that gone and just pure love. Took my breath away. And also, I just want to say this.
When you stepped away from the game,
much like Simone Biles did from the Olympics,
the Pod Squad might not know how revolutionary that is in sport
to say no, my mental health is going
to take priority over this team, over this country,
over this medal, or whatever it is.
And I think you and Simone show that it's possible
to step away and come back.
I just remember feeling like so jealous.
Whoa, they get to take care of themselves, like fully.
And like that was, I mean, it was always an option.
I just never took it.
And I just think that it's another way you've shown your courage
to take that relentless pursuit for me,
your relentless pursuit of your own personal greatness.
That's what it was.
It's just so rare.
So, Kristen, you've already solved death for us.
So, could we just get, I want to move on to the other one.
I just feel like we have like 21 minutes,
we can solve a couple other things because if we can solve death
The rest has to be easy right?
I mean for real death is always been a problem. I'm like till now
I know I'm like sweating how much that was profound so I want to talk to you about suffering because I have heard and read
You say that you do not choose to suffer, right?
That you are an unlearning suffering.
And what I want to say about that is that that is blasphemy in this country,
okay, that it is the religious way, the capitalistic way, the parenting way,
the romantic love way, the sports way, the American way, that the more
you suffer, the more you earn.
No pain.
Or the more you write, right?
No guts, no glory, no pain, no gain.
When we talked about this, Abby said, no, I fully believed when I was playing, if I suffer
the most, I will be the best.
So you think that there's another way.
You said there is a general consensus in sports
that you just suffer, you push through it and keep going and that's what makes you tough.
But I believe in my heart that there's another way.
Can you tell us what's the other way?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Great.
My own philosophy.
It's amazing.
You know anything.
I'm like, oh, sure, I can tell you about this.
You can't. Just do the flavor. I know nothing about anything. But. No, oh, sure, I can tell you about this. I just just say where I know nothing about anything. But no, you fix
death. So you do know something.
But I think there's a fine line between discipline and suffering.
And I do think that suffering is a part of life. So with
acceptance, the suffering isn't actually
suffering. I think it's discipline. So that's where it's a little bit tricky. So when I think about
sport, the consensus of, you know, you have to run to your sick, you have to give up so much,
that's like an endless suffering. And when I think of myself on the field and I like put myself like on the field emotionally,
there's this unpleasant thing that happens to many athletes when they're not in
close state where you're playing, but you're also like watching a movie of yourself playing
and it's a highlight reel of all your mistakes.
And it's very distracting from the actual playing. And I think there's
a lot of decisions that you can make on and off the field as a human as an athlete so that
your whole life is more aligned in a way that's blissful. And I actively work towards a flow state where playing soccer would be the most blissful
and joyous thing that I ever did.
And I believe that if I loved it, if I'm laughing, if I'm smiling, that's when I met my best.
And there's this belief that like you want it so bad and that's what motivates you
But what if that's not what motivates you like the trophy with what if it's like something much bigger than that that you're working towards
Because what happens and I mean everybody knows this like you win the trophy you get the medal and you feel empty inside And so it's like this big like laughing your face moment where you're like I work so hard to get here
And I'm still not where I want to be and so And so it's like this big like laughing your face moment where you're like, I work so hard to get here.
And I'm still not where I want to be. Um, and so the letting go of that like fixed goal is like the letting go of the suffering.
And it's like working towards acceptance and bliss. And there's this quote. I think it's Buddha says like someday you'll tilt your head back and look at the sky and you'll just laugh because everything is exactly how it should be.
And it's this idea that like life is perfect. We just
are missing it. We've put all these
barriers and expectations and unhealthy routines between us and the perfection,
but the perfection is still there. And I think sport is a way that actually breaks down those barriers because
you know, no matter what relationship you have with sport, there's always moments that
great athletes, people who run humans, they find that bliss, they find that
transcendence, they find that flow and it kind of helps you dip into it. I can
imagine dancers, like all different
type of people, artists, these like creative forces, like help you find that. And my hope
is that there's like the more times you find that space, that flow, that ease, that joy,
then the closer it gets to you, you can keep finding it more and more. And the more I find
it, the better I'll fight for sure.
So if you want to just do it to get to the next life,
like you probably like miss the mark,
but like it becomes something that you can train.
And that's when I, when I walked on El Camino de Santiago,
it was like I was able to find that state of presence
every day, you know, for a week. And then when I left, it was then
my job to find that plate in a regular life. Like when I have other things to do, when it's
not that simple, when I go back on the field, like, how can I access that state of joy and
slow? That's not seeing my life as without suffering, but I do believe in this reality
that canning this, that's what.
It's so far different than the average pro athletes way, where it's numbers, heart rates,
you know, repetitions, how many sprints you can do, how many calories you're expending,
like all of that stuff feels so counter-cultural what you're trying to create
for yourself.
Are you trying to like show this way to the people around you on your teams?
That's right.
Are you a spirit-spice evangelist or do you keep your spirit-spice to yourself?
Maybe a little half, because I think I'm still on my way.
I still have so much to learn to get to understand before I feel like satisfied with it.
I guess maybe you never feel satisfied. It's like a giant catch 22.
But I think the people that are closest to me, they know it because they know my hurt and my journey
and how I had to let go of that to get here. So in that world, there's like no other option than for me to like go deep
into my sense of spirituality. But what you said, I think it's so important because it's still about
numbers and sprints. It's still there, but like there's this way to do it that is intertwined with acceptance and like a very simple example is like running. You're gonna run so hard, you know, whatever it is, box box, your mile, and it's gonna physically like hurt.
It's gonna burn your muscles are gonna burn. You're gonna get sick. And that's something you have to do whether or not you want to be a spirit spice or not.
Like it's just part of the job, but you can actually have your brain focus on certain
things, like certain parts of your body.
So sometimes when I'm doing hard cardio, that's unpleasant, I do a body scan.
So I'm running and I'm like, okay, what does my toe feel like?
And I'll scan each part of my body and just that simple shift
of awareness away from like whatever part of my body is
really hurting.
It makes it so that it doesn't hurt.
It's like literally like a magic trick.
I try to tell people that you can just focus on something else,
stay in tune with that.
And you can still do the suffering,
but for me now it's disciplined.
Like now it's the discipline of doing the work and it's the discipline of doing the training of your brain so that your life is like in the direction that you want it to be.
I like that.
I'm going to try it.
I'm going to scan.
Little body scan, mid exercise.
I used to just count for some reason.
When I was in the depths of it, I just count out loud so that I couldn't think about it.
So maybe, it's just something.
Mm-hmm.
Kristen, you helped lead the charge
for racial and gender justice in the NWSL.
So I just think it's super important
until sometimes when we talk about spirituality
or any of this,
people tend to think either or. If you're talking about the spiritual world, you are not
boots on the ground involved in justice work, which is just couldn't be less true here.
Once again, this is an end both situation for Christians. So you said the revolution is not about
what you say or post.
Instagram and TikTok are gonna be,
they're gonna have problems with that, Christian.
It is about the inner work you do today
and every day to fuel a lifetime of activism,
the work starts within.
How does racial justice start within?
This thought has come up so many times while we're talking.
I believe that the thing you can do to help the world
is to help yourself and to cultivate peace and energy
because I believe in that energy exchange.
That's my spirituality.
And so in order to help others be well,
you must be well yourself.
And that's where the two things get tied.
And I think there is a place for anger and frustration and all the things that calm
I think with activism and fighting against status quo structures. But I think there's also a place for like a break
and a place for cultivating your own sense
of being grounded so that you can go again and fight again.
And I think that they're actually really intertwined.
And when I think of my identity as a black woman,
I think so many of my, so much of my understanding about race came from this place of fear and a place
of anger and a little bit of confusion and insecurity that comes from, you know, fear and anger.
And I think that that's when it goes back to inner work. Like, me understanding my identity,
my family, my history, how I came to be, what is my purpose? There's a lot of guilt, I think,
that goes into activism. It's like I'm not doing enough. I'm not contributing.
I should be doing this, look what that person's doing.
And that's like balanced by knowing yourself,
being grounded, knowing your truth,
knowing I can't all get solved in one day,
and just being accepting of taking that next step.
For me, that's looked like, you know,
re-narr players' associations so that we could take some power back from the federation and fight for
equality. And it's looked like having to have really hard conversations with reporters about
coaches that were treating people unfairly. And that takes a strength that can only come from being well and being me and being you.
And I just think that that balance is important.
And I think, you know, it's actually crazy to think that people think just despiteing and spirituality are at all,
because for me they're exactly the same.
And it's like your belief in a greater good
is like, how you get through the work,
it's how you do the work, it way that works is your spirituality.
Can you tell me what you mean?
Yes.
So I think every person that you interact with, you just have an energy exchange.
I think people who are really good at it,
like you don't even have to be in the room with them
and you feel the presence.
And there's just like a, so simple,
like a warmth that you feel,
like something that makes you at ease.
And I think that that's like an idealistic version
of like the best form of the human.
It's the human that lives their head back
and lasts because everything's perfect.
But I think that that's something that we all
are working towards.
Like ultimately, like what I wanna do on this Earth
is just like, leave it a little happier,
leave it a little safer, and you can think really macro,
and you're like, okay, then I have to change this policy.
But it's like you can also just just make someone feel safe in a moment.
And that's the energy exchange.
And I think that we are a collective where I believe in like one this.
I believe that like my well-being is tied to your well-being.
And so the more well that I am, the more well that you are.
And in that humanity, like we can all move in the same direction. If we're in
that interchange of energy, I think that that's special. And it's also like very motivating
for me because when I have an interaction with someone, especially when I'm being my
introverted self, I feel like, oh, I want to protect me or I want to keep this for me.
Like, this is my boundary. And those are things that are important, but there's something that's just so life-giving to me,
to just know that a smile or just warmth,
it contagious, and it can lift somebody,
and that person can then spread it on
and in that way, simple moments can have massive impact.
Yeah, the idea of change the world,
but the world is often just the world
that's within your fingertips, like just the world around you. So beautiful. If we are
suffering and we're like, all right, I'm just going to do a body scan, okay? And then
it won't be suffering, it'll be awareness. But my question is, how do you know when you're in a situation
that's the wrong kind of heart?
Like, you shouldn't be just body skinning.
You should be body leaving.
How do you know?
Have you ever been in a situation where the answer was not
acceptance, the answer was end this.
Because people are always asking us about that.
I think it's one of the best questions.
How do you know when to dig deep
and how do you know when to quit digging?
Wow, I love that question.
I'm puzzling over it.
And I'm thinking of environments that I've been in
that we're not safe or good.
And I'm like the type of person who are like, I have really high standards.
So I like speak about like spiritual acceptance, but I have a really high standard for things.
I don't put up with a lot.
I came from a tough family, so I never feel like if something is like triggering or unsafe. I never attached that to the same place
where I'm like trying to understand myself better. You know, those are two separate
things. But if I think like an unsafe software environment where things are
going wrong, we've all seen an end-of-the-fault. It's happening in all phases of our
career. I do think that I have to accept it to fix it.
I don't have to accept it to live with it,
but I accept it to fix it because when you're volatile
or when you're overly emotional,
then that's not the best place to make progress.
And so in order to have the conversations,
the hard conversations, and do the work,
I have to be able to have processed the
bad parts of it. But I do think this to some degree that comes naturally to me. I
make boundaries and stick to that. Give it as an example of like boundary setting
because that's a big topic of this conversation.
And in my marriage, I'm still learning.
Yeah, what are some of your boundaries?
In friendship or in relationships with other people,
how do you teach people how to treat you?
I have, I mean, the most severe example,
it's like I'll have a relationship where
I will only interact with this person while the
sun's up.
Because the sun goes down and it's a scary situation and a relationship that I've been
dealing with my whole life where I have felt unsafe and it wasn't until two years ago
and it worked with a therapist that this idea came about,
like I don't have to put myself in that situation, even though it's a person that I love dearly,
and I have to see, and I feel guilty when I don't,
and all of those things.
But I think that it's been a revolutionary boundary
for me, because it's like, I love that.
I can still love this person within the way that I can.
And my boundary doesn't mean that I don't love them.
It actually allows me to love them.
Yes.
Because I was only to see this person at night.
I would not love this person.
Yes.
Boundaries are good for relationships.
Yes.
That's beautiful.
I love that only during sun hours. I love it. I want to talk
about the 2015 ticker tape parade because I read something that you wrote about that that was so
beautiful. It really feels like the way that you describe it that you experiencing that first
ticker tape parade led to the equal pace settlement. Because you say that you stood there and you looked at the people celebrating you.
And how many people were in those streets, because they cared that you won.
And then you compared that to how you were being treated and paid.
And it didn't align.
And you had an awakening.
Yeah. wow.
No, that I mean, you just said it exactly how I experienced it. I think in 2015,
I had no idea what the magnitude of that tournament would be. And when you're in a World
Tamer Chef Abby, you know, better than me. You're in isolation, you're in a bubble, and you're like, head down, like just trying to get through to the next game.
And then you come out of this experience, and that in itself would be a whole podcast.
It's like really mentally hard, but you come out and you like open your eyes, and you're like, oh, yeah.
Something else, other than my world, Cupix is, but what happened was we opened our eyes and our lives had changed.
And we like went into the tournament, is like somewhat well-known people.
And we came out as like these beacons of hope for people.
And that was a complete surprise for me.
You know, I didn't know that that was gonna happen.
I had no idea.
And I think people who had played
another World Championship probably knew
what I was like, what the heck, how did this happen?
I didn't even know anyone who was watching,
you know, like other than you say in the fan.
And then we had that Secretary of State parade,
which was like the perfect picturesque setting
of like so many people crying and cheering.
And it's like the absolute best part of sport
coupled with the hope of equality and like those two things coming together and it was like
a moment I was like a reckoning where I was like well we're extremely valuable in this moment
from like a complete business.
That's, of course, the reason that it was impactful to me totally separate, but I was like,
Hey, a lot of people want something from us right now.
Like, we have a huge value in our market.
Why aren't we being compensated that way?
And I think that's what started this re-upping up our players' associations,
to take back power because it was this knowledge of our own value.
And I think that's what the world does is they try to hide your value from you
so that you don't know.
And in this moment, there was no hiding it because there was thousands of people throwing tiny pieces of paper at us.
And that was enough to know that we deserve better.
Oh my God, it's so good.
It makes me remember, I actually talked to Glenn
and a lot about this in terms of post-retirement guilt
and the consciousness that we have now
and seeing you all come to settlement with you as soccer,
I just remember feeling like I didn't do enough.
Like I just accepted such mediocre standards for so long.
And I've had to actually do a lot of personal work
in accepting that part.
And because I do think that there's a role we all play
on this spectrum, this continuum of justice.
But I can't help but look back and go, oh, I just took such minimal. I mean, we have this
conversation all the time about business. She's like, Abby, like, you are worth more than this.
You can actually go back and say, no I could go on talking about this forever,
but I just there was nobody that was more proud and and more happy for you all because it almost
needed like us old folks like us old OGs needed to not be in the team for you to actually get this
accomplished. It like sometimes the old does need to go out for the new to be able to step into a new paradigm and you all did that so well.
But you know, I feel like we all feel that we haven't done enough.
And I think like from the outside world, a settlement was such a massive accomplishment,
but there's so much work to be done.
So the same feeling that you're expressing, like I absolutely still feel it.
But I always talk to people about it is like when you join the US National Team, you're expressing like I absolutely still feel it. The way I always talk to people about it is like when you join the US
national team, you're handed a torch because something happened long
before I was on the team that made that team.
Just a symbol of hope for people and that comes with great responsibility.
But your hand at this torch and you carry it,
it's hard, like it's high, and as far as you can,
and then you hand it off,
and any success we had was built on the work that you did.
And same will be of the next generation.
And I think that that's like kind of a drag on like fighting for
justice and activism in general that it's so riddled with guilt. I wish we
can all be rid of that because like in my own life, I think all the time, like, I'm
not doing enough. But that I know it's right. I'm like, I'm doing what I can.
That's something. But it's so true. And I think it like paralyzes people
and makes them afraid to do anything,
to do what they can because it will still feel like
it's not enough.
When you think that you're not doing enough,
do you think of your mom?
When you're thinking of something that you know is not true,
that you know somebody who loved you without human nature
would not believe, does that help you to have an actual relationship with someone
who is free of all human bullshit so that you can get fixed?
Out of it.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think that's true.
I think that I'll have these thoughts.
And then it's not even that conscious, but it's just like I can even just think like,
mom, and then I'm like, ah, and it's just like this reminder that something's bigger
than like this small thing that I'm feeling,
that you feel it and it feels so big, but it's not the end.
And like now my mom just like represents that for me.
So it kind of like pulls me out
and gives me some perspective.
So thanks, mom, give me a hand.
Okay, Kristen, press with that, we're going to end our next right thing.
I just think I'm thinking already about the beginning of this conversation and about how much we suffering could be saved from if we would communicate more with our people.
Like if you're a parent and you've got a kid, don't assume that they know that you love them just without any of the achievements.
Tell them, tell them, tell them, tell them I'm going to
today. And also let's just do what Kristen does and just do our best to make the world a little bit happier and a little bit safer, even if it's just the people in the room we're in.
Well, let me tell you, my life, post-soccer, has gotten exponentially better. I know that in my heart, I've probably wanted to be more like you
and like work on the full humanity of myself.
I was afraid that it would distract from the soccer,
so I did an opposite, I just did all soccer,
and then now I'm just like fully into my humanity.
The fact that you're so ahead of that game
makes me know that your retirement is going to be filled.
You are not going to believe
how much joy you can experience without this other thing that became so much of who you
are. The thing that you spent most of your time doing. I keep telling all the players
you're still playing. I'm like, just you wait. It gets so much better.
Yeah. The other side. Yeah. The other side. Yeah, the other side.
Christian, you're a dream.
We'll adore you so much.
We will see you with the games.
Love you so much.
Love you.
See you at the game.
See you soon.
Bye, Pat.
Bye.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle.
I walked through a fire I came out. and Brandy Carlyle. And I continue to believe that I'm the one for me.
And because I mine, I walk the line. Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak so mad
A final destination that we 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
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 Yes people are free And it took some time
But I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers in heartbreak
So 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 bring, we can get lost, but we're only in that We've stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be gone
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring.
We can do hard things.
Yeah, we can do hard things.
Yeah, we can do hard things, is produced in partnership with Cadence 13 Studios.
Be sure to rate, review, and follow the show on Apple Podcasts, Odyssey, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Especially, be sure to rate and review the podcast if you really liked it. If you didn't, don't worry about it. It's fine.