We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Don’t Tell Glennon to Love Her Body
Episode Date: April 20, 2023Why Glennon respects “body positivity” – but it doesn’t work for her. What if every single thing we’ve learned about who we are is wrong? What if we ARE our Bodies? What if instead of ...trying to love our bodies, we could experience being alive on this planet… as bodies? If talk about eating disorders and mental illness helps: Listen today. If it triggers: Skip today. CW: eating disorders If you have an eating disorder, you may find the National Alliance for Eating Disorders a helpful resource: https://www.allianceforeatingdisorders.com/ 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)
Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things. So you might want to go back and listen to the
last episode because I gave a overview of what recovery feels like to me and what a
difficult miracle it is.
A difficult miracle.
Yeah.
A difficult miracle.
And today I want to talk about not the first three parts which we talked about last time,
which were kind of the invitation that you get to recovery and the acceptance of the
invitation or the denial and the withdraw that comes after you take away the thing you couldn't live without.
And then today I actually want to talk about this part that is this beautiful
amazing part that happens after the withdrawal time. You know what? I think that
might be too neat to say that. I don't think it happens after the withdrawal. I
think it's like kind of melded all together. It's a new knowing of yourself. It's a leveling up. It's a way of life that feels
freer and better and deeper than what you were living before. I have found it without fail every
time I've entered any sort of recovery. If you stick through the withdrawal period, if you do that
work, you usually end up with a different version of yourself
that you wouldn't go back to the other one that you wouldn't trade. And again, we're talking about
recovery in the sense that you can think about it in the traditional way of drugs or booze or
eating disorders, but we're also in the wider sense of moving out
of something that you could not live without.
So whether that's a relationship that you were in,
whether that's a career or a job,
but whether it was an immediate family
that you grew up in, that you could no longer
maintain the same level of relationship.
It's any of those principles apply.
Yeah, or even the personality characteristic.
Like, I see that all the time.
Like, I'm gonna try not to be so closed off with people.
We'll let him go of some sort of blockage
between you and life.
So, all right, here's the story.
This'll get weird because recovery's weird,
it's weird for everybody.
Weird shit happens. So I, I'm about six months in, right?
Five months.
Restriction recovery.
Five six.
So I have not been restricting food, which means that every time I think I should not eat
that thing. I eat the thing. That's the only thing I can't do is listen to that voice that tells me to not eat something.
Any other thing but hunger is not allowed to be the boss of me.
There are no dangerous foods.
There are no forbidden foods.
You're not living in that world.
Yeah.
No.
Which might not sound wild to people listening, but it's wild to me.
I have been so structured and disciplined,
disciplined, me equaling. I have been overriding my bodily instincts, my entire life around food.
With your brain, like early on, we'd go to dinner and I would look and I'm like, oh, what is my taste buds want to taste? And you would have to say
out loud like, okay, my brain is telling me I should get the salad, but I'm going to get
the grilled cheese. The grilled cheese of the burger or something. And she would have to make
herself do that. It was like a forcing of the override of the brain. Yeah. And I always always get the cheapest thing to.
Yeah, cheapest and most caloric. So what I will tell you is that I don't
want to get into numbers, but I have gained like over a tenth of my body weight
in this last six months, which is also judging for the last 20 years, I've probably known my weight
up to like a pound or a half pound. Okay, and I could, I would, I would have told you that I could
feel the difference between a half pound. So gaining 10% or more of my body weight is significant to me.
percent or more of my body weight is significant to me. In the beginning of this growth period,
I would say change. Yeah, but I mean, I'm meant literally. I know, but like I feel like language is important here. And the way that you're saying growth period, it can mean both things.
It means positive to me.
I'm using growth as a positive.
Okay. Okay.
I just don't want it to be a sarcastic.
No. Yeah.
Literal growth.
Okay.
Like I have had times where,
you know, I can't wear a thing in my closet anymore.
Actually, most of my things from the waist up still fit.
In the beginning, I just got rid of a few like tight jeans
and now no pants, zero pins.
And so I have had moments
where you know I'm carrying the laundry basket of the like new set of jeans that don't
fit anymore out. And I feel like I am stepping into bigger version of myself literally, but
also figuratively. It feels like all this shit is too small for me from now on. These pants, these old ideas about myself, these ways of being in relationship, these narratives I have,
it's all fucking too small. Just get it out, get it out, get it out. But
it was also very what I would call excruciating for me, especially in the beginning.
And let me give you an example of that.
So Abby would wake up in the morning
and she would go, how did you sleep?
And I would have not slept.
And the reason why I had not slept
is because I would be up all night feeling.
Pods, water, probably won't believe this,
but it is actually what happened to me. Feeling
my body grow. I would describe it as an oozing. It felt like I was like an alien oozing outside
of my boundaries. Like if I were made up of gel, it was all oozing out of like the casement. So when I would say, how did you sleep?
How would you respond?
I would say I slept oozing.
I would, I was oozing all night.
OK.
So that's how it went.
When I tell you it was like being an alien, like, I don't know.
It was wild.
Here's what I want to explain to everyone
about eating disorder recovery,
which by the way I think is actually on a larger level,
I wouldn't be talking about this
if I thought it was just about eating disorders.
I think it's a place to everyone who has a body.
One of the reasons why I have not been able to stand
eating disorder recovery or
Any talk about how people get a better body and mentor whatever is because
I'm not
Worried so much about the shape of my body or the size of my body as much as I just hate I fucking hate having a body
the size of my body. As much as I just hate, I fucking hate having a body.
I do not like, my problem is having a body.
I've told Abby this so many times.
If I, when I die and go to wherever's next,
I fully expect to be seated with a bunch
of the otherworldly beings or whatever
and whatever heaven is and have them say to me,
oh honey, you did your best.
That was your first incarnation as a body.
For sure.
We got a first timer.
Yes.
Like she was flailing about so much.
She kept talking about how much I hate having a body and everyone else was
normal with it.
But we were up here going, it's okay, honey.
It was just your first time as a body.
Like before you were a tree and then you were a frog and then you were the air.
And now you're like this human and this human body and it's very uncomfortable for you.
But take some getting used to. Yeah. Then it will all make sense. And then I'm going
to look at everybody and say, I told you, I told you that was my first time as a body.
Okay. So the thing that is my major struggle with recovery for body stuff is how it's presented
because eating disorder recovery assumes that your problem is your body image.
That your problem is you just don't think you're skinny enough or you don't think that
your thighs are cute enough or you don't think that whatever.
So eating disorder treatment or how we all talk about it in the general culture is like,
it's like girl power, body positivity.
It's like people telling you over and over again to have a relationship with your body.
Just love your body.
Love your body.
If I had a dime for every single person who told me to love your body, here's my problem
with loving your body.
Love your body, Glennon, just love your body.
What I hear you saying to me, you know, I cannot understand things if they're not linguistically
correct.
My brain just stops.
I need to understand things.
If the words you're saying to me don't make sense, I cannot integrate
them into my life, into my knowing, into my being, into my wisdom. So if you tell me to love
my body, all right, here are some other beings that I have a relationship with that I love.
I love my wife. I have relationship with my wife. I love my wife. I love my dogs. I have
relationship with my dogs. Love my dogs. Love my children. Love my wife. I love my wife. I love my dogs have relationships with my dogs love my dogs Love my children love my sister. These are all beings that I have relationships with that I love
Okay, positive dog image
Positive
Image positive right. Yes love them. Here is the thing that all of those beings have in common
They are not me
Okay, The relationship is me. I'm the subject.
The object is the other being, my wife, my dog, etc. There are two parts, two parts in
a relationship, the person who is doing the loving and the being that is being loved, subject,
object. And so that right there is the, it's the very framing of the solution is
the problem because loving my body presupposes that my body is not me. It is other than me.
It is the object.
If I am loving my body, if I am having a relationship with my body, I am already objectifying
my body.
I am the subject, my body is the object.
So just stay with me here.
So I have a cat.
Okay.
I don't really, this is a forever. People are allergic to my house. I have a cat. Okay. I don't really, this is a
for every people allergic to my house. I have a cat. Okay. Have a cat.
I have a relationship with my cat. I love my cat. I can feed my cat. I can
discipline my cat. I can pet my cat. What I cannot do in this situation
ever is have the experience of being a cat. I can love the shit out of my cat.
I can have a relationship with it, but in that framing by definition, I am not catting. I am not
being a cat. I am not inside the cat being a cat, having the experience of being a cat, looking out
the cat's eyes.
Catting.
The cat is the object.
I am the subject we are separate beings.
So when we say love your body or have a relationship with your body, we are also saying
you and your body are separate beings.
And if we are separate beings, if I am a separate
being from my body, if my body is the object, then not me, then I'm supposed to be in
relationship with them, who or what is the eye? Do you see what I'm saying there? If I'm
supposed to love my body, my body is the object, what's the eye? So for example, I'm going
into couples therapy with my body.
We're all supposed to be loving our body better.
Clearly we're two different beings, so I'm going into couples therapy with my body.
And we're going to sit down on the couch and my body's on the right, who's what's on the left.
I guess my mind, right?
Right. 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, why 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.
I have so many questions. This is fascinating. Okay, go. I hear exactly what you're saying,
but just one little thing so I'm tracking with you. Yes. So would you be able to say, I love myself?
Is it just about the body or do you have an understanding of self when you picture
self?
And then secondly, and we need to get deeper into this because I am tracking with you.
But like if you were in therapy with yourself,
could it be like, you were rubbing your leg,
you were putting moisturizer on, you were laying down.
Well, is there a way to become one?
Like, how do you, how do you become my body and spirit?
Well, I think we have to figure it out.
How do you know, here's my question,
how do you know your mind body and spirit?
I don't fucking know that.
Some did just said that.
Eventually, we want to get to one.
But I think we have to work through this process that I'm taking us through first.
When we are saying, love your body.
Here's what we don't have.
We don't have a lot of mind positivity programs.
We don't have a lot of love your mind.
Have a relationship with your mind,
pro mind, mind positivity. We don't have, she has a mind image problem. We don't have that
because we believe we are our minds. Because we don't objectify our minds like we objectify
our bodies. Interesting. We need to love our bodies and have body image things because we believe the bodies are like our purses.
They're like an object that we carry around.
And where did we get this idea?
We go way back.
This is philosophy.
This is philosophy shit.
Like Plato said we're body, mind, spirits.
The up, the up, the cart the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the God, that the highest being was the mind. And that philosophy
has trickled into and permeated every single minute of our lives. So now we believe we are minds
that have bodies, that we should go into relationship with, that we should therapist. We used to think
we should tame, we should beat into submission, and now we're like, oh, but
now we'll love it. Now we'll love it. Now we won't tame it, we'll honor it, but it's
still just a thing that's hanging. We're like, minds in like meat suits.
What's fascinating is that where that all started, even the motivation to try to figure
out which one is more real, which one is us, the mind
or the body, which is this theory of dualism where there's two.
It was all about both.
Like the cards hold work on that was about the existence of God and the immortality of
the soul.
They needed to ask these questions because there's a material world where everything at the end of the
day desecrates.
When you die, your body decays and goes away.
We can see that in the material world.
And so if that were true, then there was no possibility of immortality.
So that's why they came up with this idea that we are not actually that body that goes
away into case.
That is not us.
What we are is this mind, which is transcendent.
The body is the prison house for the spirit,
but the spirit, the conscious thought,
all of that, that is the place where we can live endlessly.
So when this body decays, the mind does not.
That transcends.
And so all of that was a justification of not
being able to live and to tolerate the possibility of our mortality, the possibility that it
always was right.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
That's why it's all tied into religion. Still the flesh, the flesh, like just the flesh
is just this terrible thing. We have to overcome the mind
as who we are scripture. Like, that's how we we touch God through the mind, right? I am my mind.
I have a body is what every bit of body image of body positivity of all of that presupposes.
That is the problem for me is the framing. What I think this shift
is for me is that I am no longer interested in loving my cat. I am no longer interested
in loving my body. I am only interested in bodying. What if, okay, what if, DeCarte, what if all that was wrong?
What if every single thing that we have learned about who we are is wrong?
What if it's not, I think, there for you.
What if it's like, I feel, I see, I vibrate, I hug, I eat, I rest, I orgasm, I smell,
I touch, there for you.
What if I do not have to learn to love my body because my body is not separate from me. It is me.
So what if the only thing I have to learn how to love is having the experience of living out through this body?
I don't want to love my body. I just want to body. I want to be. I want to
look out from in here and experience it. I don't want to have a body anymore. I want to have an experience of being a body.
You want to be alive. Be alive. I mean, it's the difference between being alive and dead. Mm-hmm. There has to be a difference.
Yes.
And so if the experience of being alive
is a truly unique experience,
then you want to fully inhabit that experience
by being and not self-objectifying anymore.
I think I've been trying to get at this for freaking decades,
but I hadn't lived it yet.
I was still intellectualizing it.
Okay, listen to this shit that I wrote a while back
because if all of this is sounded crazy, this won't.
Your body is not your masterpiece.
Your life is.
It is suggested to us a million times a day that our bodies are
projects. They aren't. Our lives, our spirituality, our love is, our relationships,
our work is stop spending all day, obsessing, cursing, perfecting your body.
Like it's all you've got to offer the world. Your body is not your art. It's your
paintbrush. Whether your paintbrush is a tall paintbrush or a thin paintbrush or a
stocky paintbrush or scratched up paintbrush is completely irrelevant.
What is relevant is that you have a paintbrush
which can be used to transfer your insides onto the canvas of your life where
others can see it and be inspired and comforted by it.
Your body is not your offering. It's just a really amazing instrument which you the canvas of your life where others can see it and be inspired and comforted by it.
Your body is not your offering.
It's just a really amazing instrument which you can use to create your offering each day.
Don't curse your paintbrush.
Don't sit in the corner wishing you had a different paintbrush.
You're wasting time.
You've got the one you've got. Here's the thing, like I just don't want to go to any more classes where everybody is
learning to fucking love their paintbrushes.
I just want to paint.
So I believe that this is what we're trying to say when we talk about embodiment, that what I am learning
in my life right now is that it wasn't just like MTV and magazines and porn that objectified
my body.
That it was the very Western philosophy and religion
that everything is based on,
that everything we've ever been taught
is objectifying of the body.
That considering our minds are real selves
and our bodies not our real selves
is objectifying just as it is.
And why do I think that my mind that honestly has done some incredible things, but led me
a stray many, many times, has more wisdom in it than my hands.
My hands are how I love and touch and how I've connected with every single thing that
I've ever loved or done or made art or my feet or my belly or my
thighs. So to me, embodiment is like, you know how like if you go get a certain test at the
hospital, they make you drink this shit and it like lights up contrast. Okay, it's called contrast
and it like lights up something inside you. Yeah, you drink this stuff and then you're
other take an MRI or Cascane
and it lights up the part in you
that they're trying to get a picture of.
Okay. If I drink a liveness embodiment contrast,
a bottle of it, anytime over the last 46 years,
I would have drank the aliveness, awareness, contrast, and they would have
put me in a little tunnel. And the only thing that would have lit up would be the top
half of my brain. That is the only place I have been alive. What embodiment for me now is, if I drank a bottle of aliveness, contrast, I would be lit
up with the exact same level of brightness from the top of my head to the bottom of my
toes.
I am no longer thinking with just my mind. When I go for walks,
when my mind, it tends to be the loudest part of me. So when it keeps going, I remind myself,
let's think in our toes now, let's think in our feet, let's rub our fingers, let's think in our
hands, let's think in our belly. And I don't think I'm like more my body than my mind than
my spirit. I think it might, for at least this moment for me, that it might all be horseshit,
that I am just like this one thing, that this one being and when I remember to scan all
of myself, like I'm a house and in the attic, is just as beautiful and wonderful as all the other places.
But it's a little loud up there.
I don't wanna stay up there for too long.
I just wanna visit it, get some work done,
and then come back down to like the arms
and the stomach and the toes.
I am alive as alive in all of those places
as I am in my mind.
This might be the most clarifying thing
that you've ever explained to me about me trying to manage
our otherness.
As somebody who's never struggled with eating disorder,
it feels daunting to understand. And this is for those listening could be one
of the most helpful things to help walk somebody through a part of their life, no matter what
you're recovering from.
Well, you are someone who's lived, who's been alive in all of your parts.
Yeah.
Your whole life.
And the things that we know are true about me in the world.
I'm amazingly clumsy.
I fall down a lot.
I've run into things more than other people.
All of these things are making sense to me
because I have not learned to live.
I don't have a lot of agency in this body
because I have not lived here.
Mm-hmm.
What I hear you saying is, there is a spectrum, the intimacy with which and the internalization
and adoption of which we experience our bodies.
And on one extreme is this view that Plato had, that Christianity had,
that basically the body is a source of endless trouble for us. It is the ziars are evil. We only
escape the wickedness of the body when we die. Okay, that's on one side of the spectrum. On the other side of the
spectrum is love your body, be sweet to your body, pamper your body, and what I hear you
saying is those are two polarized views of the body, but they are based on the exact
same presupposition, which is that your body is something to reject or embrace
as opposed to your body is you and you are she.
And so even if you are being positive,
you are still alienated from yourself on that spectrum.
I think what you're saying is important
in terms of,
it annoys me when people are always saying
your body's good.
What do you mean?
That's just like saying my body's bad.
I think that a lot of people are circling around this
in terms of like body neutrality.
What does that even mean?
I am experiencing life out through this body.
Like it's a neutral experience.
Right, it is adopting your body.
To go back to our last podcast,
it is responsibility for yourself.
You are this thing.
And so you are either alienated from it
or you are in it and of it.
There aren't a lot of options there.
And so if the opposite of your body is wicked and you only escape it and of it. There aren't a lot of options there. And so if the opposite of your
body is wicked and you only escape it in death, the only reasonable corollary of that is you are
either in and not escaping your body in life to be living. So I think what's interesting and not
to get too philosophical about it, but like the whole thing is very philosophical.
Yeah, exactly.
She said apropos of nothing, but the whole idea that Aristotle had, which is that your body and your mind are inextricable.
Yes.
He used this analogy of wax imprint, where your mind and your body is the wax and the imprint that they cannot be separated.
So this soul is inherently part of the body. And so it's very cool to take that all on because
then you're not divorcing yourself from any of yourself. And you're actually completely widening
actually completely widening your opportunities to live when you're like, wait, so this toe is me.
I feel it.
Just as much as this thought is me.
I feel it.
I just want to get a little bit concrete because this is what's been really awesome for me. I have found ways to make this concrete in my life.
First of all, what I believe the oozing was the liquid going into my body, the contrast going into my body.
The contrast.
The contrast going into my body.
What I now believe I was up all night experiencing
was embodiment for the first time.
Was like, wait, I have thighs.
I'm being thighs right now.
I'm calves.
I'm arms.
I seriously believe that what those up all night
oozing things were was my awareness, sinking,
becoming alive throughout all these different parts of my body. If we are not going to
objectify our bodies, if we do not want to be objectified, meaning, I just want to be the subject of my life.
I just want to be in here looking out. I just want to be concerned with how my life. I just want to be in here looking out.
I just want to be concerned with how I'm feeling, not how I'm looking.
I want to be concerned with what I want more than being wanted.
I want to be alive in here experiencing life looking out.
This means I have found all of these parts in my life where I am self-objectifying.
Why suddenly could I not speak on stages during my recovery?
Now I understand why.
Because when I am preparing to speak on a stage,
I'm thinking about, what am I gonna wear?
What am I gonna say? What are they gonna think when they're looking at me? I'm gonna be on a stage. I'm thinking about, what am I gonna wear? What am I gonna say?
What are they gonna think when they're looking at me?
I'm gonna be on a stage.
They're all gonna be looking at me.
I am suddenly out of the experience of life
and thinking of myself as an object.
Hmm.
Why can I not be on social media right now?
I don't think this is forever.
This is just this part of my recovery.
I am so practicing living from the inside out,
being the subject.
I'm so practicing just being in my life,
looking, tasting, breathing, living.
When I take a picture to go on social media,
that's the moment that I can express that's clearest,
that I'm living outside of my subjectivity
and switching to objectivity.
Wait a minute, wait a minute.
Now what is this picture of me?
This literal object.
I am now out of the moment of living, of subjectivity, and I'm switching to objectivity.
Now I'm putting this image out.
I'm not saying it's good or bad.
I'm just saying it is for certain objectification.
It's not me anymore. I'm over here.
And I'm not laughing anymore.
I'm not eating anymore.
I'm not celebrating anymore.
I am objectifying myself to put this picture of celebrating or laughing or eating out for
the need to comment time.
That's really interesting.
Right.
It's like putting your consciousness in the world or the people out there looking back at you.
You're making yourself an object, really.
And so many of us are doing that on social media.
I mean, I do that sitting in the living room,
watching you do something, and I get my camera out,
and I take a video, or I take a picture of you,
because I don't wanna forget this moment,
but I'm looking at you through this screen.
I'm not actually experiencing you.
I'm taking this picture to experience this moment at a later date with not even having
really experienced the moment in real life.
And I think that that maybe is what you're objectifying me in that moment. I think this
is one of the reasons why my kids, when they were little, are like, stop taking pictures
of us. I think that they sensed a objectification.
Yeah.
You're taking a picture of me to put it out
that you're making me into an object.
Tarenting is all that I feel like.
There was a moment recently where I was invited
to go to this thing that I actually really,
it's a good thing.
It's an event.
It's a thing that I didn't even have to speak at it.
But what I realized is I can't go to that thing
because I'm immediately thinking about
what am I supposed to wear to that thing? because it's kind of a thing where you get photographed and it's not a bad thing. It's just
Objectifying in itself because what's important was who was there and in support of this thing. So then you have to decide how am I going to objectify myself to be seen at this thing, which means that I have to get out of the clothes that I feel comfortable in and that I have to stop living to plan the
image of myself that I'm going to send to that thing?
I think what you're highlighting here is really important for in the process of any kind
of recovery that you need to be very, very tender with yourself in those little micro things that six months from now, a year from now, you
will be so practiced in what works for you and what doesn't, what feels good and what doesn't.
But you just won't be at first.
Paying attention to those little things that put you off balance, whether you're trying
to do things that actually learn what feels right by not doing anything that doesn't feel right.
Even if it seems absurd, even if it seems crazy, even if no one understands it.
But those little micro things that seem perfectly reasonable for everyone else.
But right now, you need so much to stay in touch with a part of you that feels an integrity,
that feels like you're trying to train yourself to feel that thing and continue to go after
that thing that you have to avoid those things that take you off track, even if other folks
don't understand.
Yes.
And I would also argue that what folks learn in recovery is special things that are usually affecting everyone.
I think it would be a real miss here to think that it's just because of my recovery journey that social media is not healthy for me. We are all
fucked with social media. Okay. Our teenagers, our kids, I don't even have it. But like,
sister, the, the self-objectification of social media, it's this is not just a little weird
thing that is because of my eating disorder. This is like something that's killing us.
And I'm trying to take the judgment away from it and be like,
it's because of the shift we do.
It's because we stop living.
It's because we stop living and start creating these objects of ourselves and
put it out there.
And the tragedy in that is just that we're not embodied anymore.
When people keep asking me, am I writing now?
And I'm like, it's just the podcast is what I love.
I think it's because writing is self-objectification.
I think it's because I think about these conversations.
I get excited about original thoughts
about these conversations. I come into these conversations. I get excited about original thoughts about these conversations.
I come into these conversations. I have a lived experience with you three. I never listen to them
again. Once it becomes an object, it's over for me. When I'm writing, I write a thing, and it has
life in it, and then I edit it, and then I revise it, and then I perfect it, and then I edit it and then I revise it and then I perfect it and then I put it out as
here I am.
I'm actually still in this body.
But here's this version of me that is perfected and shiny and you guys get to comment on
it forever.
I'm not saying that won't be it forever, but it's certainly a self-objectification.
If somebody asked me a while ago, what's your dream self?
I said, my dream would be like just writing poetry writing writing writing and then burning it all
Why that was so weird to say I
Know why because that's living in complete subjectivity
I'm thinking this shit. I'm writing this shit and then I'm burning it knowing
That I'm not even objectifying myself during it because I'm never gonna going to show it to anybody. I'm never going to let myself become an object.
Hmm.
That's why dancers are the ultimate body.
Yes.
Because it's only while you're doing it,
you need to use your body and your mind
and your spirit to do it, and it's over, it's over.
Why do you think the freaking thing
that's all over the pillows is dance like no one's watching?
Because even dancing. even dancing is like, well, you still have to create a version of it that everyone's
watching and if you're a professional or whatever. But you know, one of the ultimate
embodiment exercises that people do is they get together and they fricking dance, not choreograph,
not like they just move their bodies in like weird ways and that's part of
embodiment or covering. It's a lot, but it's also so unbelievably simple.
The framing doesn't work for me.
Like I am my body.
This is it.
This is me.
I don't want to love my body.
I just want to love with my body.
Yeah. love my body, I just want to love with my body. And I want to live as much as possible in subjectivity. I want to live out from in here. I don't want to live out there looking
at me.
Yeah, there's so many of us who are not having the experience of being human beings.
It's like the part of us that are beings are the inextricably vital part of us that are
bodies.
And it's like we could live a whole life just in our minds and just exploring our minds.
And there's a hell of an adventure to have there, but we're not having that experience
because we are disassociated from our bodies if we think they're not ours.
Yes. And what I would suggest is that that's not our fault, it's our responsibility, but it's
in the philosophy that we've been taught since we were born. It's in the philosophy that we are our minds and discipline in itself is
overriding the body to this higher power, which is the mind. When in fact, every single time
I've gotten to trouble or gone down a path I didn't want to, it was because I was overriding
the wisdom of my body with something that my mind said I should or shouldn't do. And my body actually never leads me around.
So I don't know why I have been putting it in the second seat except for the fact that
my culture told me to.
I'm very interested and this is another conversation that we should be having, but I'd be very
interested in what the disabled community says and feels about this.
And part of it could be, I don't think this is it, but people who struggle with mental
health issues, like that it is a liberating message to hear, right, I am my body. Yeah,
I think there is something there, because I do hear a little bit of more trust, getting
trust in your body and suspicion of your mind. And I wonder if that's just an ongoing pendulum
where we're like trying to be present in both, you know.
Yeah. I'm just not working on my relationship with my body anymore. If anything, I'm my body.
And if we need to go to therapy, we're just going to bring our mind to therapy.
Yeah, your body is yourself. Yeah. All of that was to say,
pod squad, yeah, how's your recovery going? How's recovery going? It's a remembering. It is a remembering of what we talked about in the last podcast of bringing my child self to the table
and letting her remember. It's a remembering of bringing my body back to me is the opposite of dismembering. It's a remembrance.
Pod Squad, we love you. Good luck with that.
See you next time.
Okay.
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 each or all of 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 you'll never miss an episode.
To do this, just go to the We Can Do Hard Things
show page on Apple podcasts, Spotify, Odyssey,
or wherever you listen to podcasts,
and then just tap the plus sign in the upper right-hand corner or click on follow.
This is the most important thing for the pod.
While you're there, if you'd be willing to give us a five-star rating and review
and share an episode you loved with a friend, we would be so grateful.
We appreciate you very much.
We can do hard things, is produced in partnership with
Keemans 13 Studios.