We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - FIGHTING WELL: Is your conflict style making or breaking your relationships?

Episode Date: June 22, 2021

In this episode, in which Abby joins Glennon and Amanda, discover:  1. How Glennon and Abby realized that each of their recurring Five Fights (about money, food, etc.) are all actually about the ...exact same thing—and how it all goes back to their childhoods.   2. The guardrails Abby and Glennon built to protect each other when they fight.   3. How to handle a relationship in which one partner runs from conflict (Team Abby), and the other rushes toward conflict (Team Glennon). 4. The one red flag that Amanda insists is a relationship-ender. TW // eating disorders To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 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 description starting at 12.99 per month. Hi everybody, Glennon here. Thank you so much for joining me again for We Can Do Hard Things. I'm thrilled to tell you that today's episode is about fighting.
Starting point is 00:00:53 What I mean by that is this. I think that every lover is a fighter. Because when we're trying to love each other well, what we're really trying to do is know each other deeply, right? What we really want is to be known deeply and to deeply know the other. And to know each other deeply, there always has to be some stretching, some extra trying, some conflict, right? So today we're talking about conflict with obviously sister and also with Abby.
Starting point is 00:01:33 Abby is the person I love the most. So also the person I fight with the most. And what we learned during COVID was that really most of our conflicts are the same five fights over and over and over and that they always have to do with once again Love and control So let's jump right in to five fights Well, hello, everybody. I am here with my two favorite people, my sister Amanda and my wife Abby. Say hello. Hello, Glennon. Thank you for being excited to be here. Hello. And the reason that three of us are here today is because we wanted to speak about something hard, which is this.
Starting point is 00:02:31 This is a hard thing in the center of Abbey and I's relationship, which let's just say that babe, our relationship has been discussed in many beautiful ways and people rightly. Yes. has been discussed in many beautiful ways and people rightly. Assume and know that we have a beautiful love story, right? So gorgeous. Yes. Yes. And we are deeply in love with each other. And we also drive each other bad shit crazy. Sometimes would you agree with that?
Starting point is 00:03:00 That is also very true. Yes, human beings. Yes. Yes. One of the things, right. And one of the things that we noticed during COVID, this time where we had, oh, so much togetherness. Oh, so much family time. Which taught us that an interesting thing was that it felt a little bit like our days and our arguments were like groundhog day. Like we were having the same freaking fights over
Starting point is 00:03:36 and over and over again. Did you feel that that was true? Yes. and you just never kept learning the lesson that I was hoping you were gonna learn. And babe, vice versa. Vice versa. I know you can't steal my joke though, come on. No, it's good, really good. So we actually started talking to a couple other couples and they also felt like they were having
Starting point is 00:04:02 the same fights over and over again. So we thought maybe this is a universal thing that couples have the same fights over and over again. So today, the hard thing that we are bringing to you is our five fights, right? And the fight that we have again and again. So buckle up folks, you're going to find there are team Abby fans and team Glendon fans. And I just want to say, I just want to say right off the bat that I don't want people to think that I am not aware that most people are on your side. I understand it. I understand that you're more lovable, but truly I
Starting point is 00:04:48 I understand that you're more lovable, but truly, you are my favorite kind of person, babe. But as it goes, I am who I am. And so these are the fights that we get into again. What are they? Tell me which ones you're bringing to the table. Okay. I'm going to tell you the five I'm bringing. And just as a disclaimer, we discussed this last night. Okay.
Starting point is 00:05:04 So as to not actually get into a fight today. Exactly. Exactly. And you agreed that these are ours, and there was really no surprise because it's obvious. Number one is food. All things are on food. Okay. Number two has to do with talking.
Starting point is 00:05:22 You will get into that. Okay. Number three is money. Number four is absent-mindedness. Yep. Okay. Wild guess about who's absent-mindedness it is. And then our fifth fight is that we fight
Starting point is 00:05:40 about how we're fighting. Okay. So there's like the issue. And then we start fighting about how we're fighting. Okay? The response. So there's like the issue, and then we start fighting about how we're fighting, and then we can't remember what we even started fighting about. We're not gonna be able to talk at length about all of these things, because there are five things. So let's try to succinctly, I wanna know how you would
Starting point is 00:06:02 define our food issue, because it's a lot of things. How would you describe it in a general way? I the way I grew up and my relationship with food is different than the way you grew up in your relationship with food. And in a lot of ways, we are at odds with each other. Almost all the time I have food scarcity issues. I used to overeat, actually don't anymore. I need to stop saying it like that. You have restriction issues from your whole world of food.
Starting point is 00:06:44 And so I think that because of that, we both were probably at the beginning super attracted to this thing. Like, oh, she has this freedom with food. And the more that you got to know me, you understood that I was under the same kind of, in the same cage that you were in just in the opposite way. So we'll be ordering food and I over order.
Starting point is 00:07:06 And that's triggering for you and some of your food stuff that you've dealt with throughout your life. And so this is a kind of a has been. I actually think that we, Adam Grant, kind of helped us recently with this. Well, let's because he was on your side. So I know that. Don't you feel like it's a little bit better?
Starting point is 00:07:26 Well, his point was, okay, we described the situation where Abby will walk into our house and we ordered pizza, right? We're going to order pizza. And there will be four of us, or five of us, and Abby will walk in with five pizzas, right? Do you feel like that's maybe that's a little bit of an exaggeration? Maybe it's four pizzas for five people or something. Okay.
Starting point is 00:07:48 This is extremely triggering to me because number one, I was raised never to waste anything. Wasting was like sacrilegious, right? And then two, because I have had such issues with restriction growing up in my whole life, it scares me to have that much food around. It's the only way that I can explain it. It freaks me out. But it makes Abby feel safe to have more food, to have enough, to make, she'd rather throw it away
Starting point is 00:08:20 and have felt like there was enough to feel safe. And Adam said, well isn't it great that that Abby can have safety and all it costs you guys is like a few extra bucks. Isn't that lovely? And so yeah go ahead sister do you? Well, Rallyb, I think extremely relevant here is the fact that Abby was the youngest of seven children growing up. So in order to understand the scarcity issues and the being left with the leftovers that were not enough for her, I just think it's important that part of the equation feels important. Yes. And also we can disregard Adam Grant's theory here for just a second. I think it's a good theory, but I also think, you know, I we have kind of come to terms with like some of these fights like who it matters more to, right? And because you have dealt with much worse circumstantial stuff around food that
Starting point is 00:09:27 70% 80% of the time I defer to making sure that you feel safe and comfortable, but quite frankly The way we've landed is if we ever order pizzas I just and I over order Sometimes lately you've been ordering which has been wonderful I do have some anxiety, but when I do order and I order an extra pizza, I just promise you that we'll eat it for leftovers. That does help. That helps me. But there's another food issue that we have decided matters more to you and that I just have to arrange
Starting point is 00:10:02 myself. And that is your complete and utter refusal to share. Yeah, that's that that that's not a not that's like a I'm calling marriage on that. Right. So like if you get a milkshake, right? And I and I don't choose not to and you don't get one. But like I really just want to sip of a milkshake. No, I want. Then get your, your damn, your own damn milkshake. You can do that.
Starting point is 00:10:33 You have every moment and I give you the option. I sometimes order two just to be safe that I get everything in my milkshake cup. Yeah, I hear you. I mean, I understand that the world is divided on this and that there are- No, there is no division. No, there is the right way. That's how I operate in this way.
Starting point is 00:10:55 And then there is your way, which is completely wrong. Right, yeah. Okay, so that's helpful. So sister, could you weigh in here? What do you think is correct here? Because I just think that, first of all, truthfully, I mean, what's underneath all of this? Because one of the things we figured out is with our fights, there's always something that's really
Starting point is 00:11:15 deeper underneath. So this is really not about milkshakes and whatever. This is the idea that because I'm a person with recovery with eating disorder issues, I just want a taste of something, but I don't allow myself to have a whole thing. It goes back to the restriction stuff. So that is an experience with food that feels safe to me, that I can have a sip and taste it, but I can't allow myself the whole thing. I actually don't even want the whole thing. But then I also understand just wanting to keep your own damn milkshake.
Starting point is 00:11:52 What do you think, Sister? Which one of us are you in your relationship? It's funny because I have, I'm more you from the standpoint, obviously, of the way we grew up and what I is my core kind of negative self-diolog that manifests this way, but I think that it's interesting to think of it from a safety perspective for both of you because you don't feel safe with that much food in your house because you know all of the days of binging of it. It's like an invitation to relapse.
Starting point is 00:12:38 But it makes sense that Abby doesn't feel safe knowing that you won't cross a boundary and take her stuff. Like she doesn't, she doesn't have the safety of boundary around her food. Probably like she didn't for, you know, if there was one thing of ice cream in her freezer and she had six siblings who she never knew if it was gonna be there when she wanted to have it.
Starting point is 00:13:01 So that's a lack of safety too. I do think food is so, I just think a lot of these things break down into this key thing of your two, you actually are two separate people. Unfortunately, I hate to be the one to announce it to you on a podcast. Are you sure?
Starting point is 00:13:24 Do you feel that that's right, babe? I feel like I'm 100% sure. Okay, I want to be the same. I want to be a mesh. Oh, no. I mean, we need an actual therapist on here. All right. But you are so, I just feel like, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:13:40 I feel like the food in the house is a harder one. But I also think it could even be something like you just have to have a boundary around her food that she orders. Like you cannot cross that. That feels like, since you know that about her, you know. I know. And I think that we have done that. And what I, what I think is interesting, and what I think we'll find out about all of these five fights is it's just fascinating that Abby's ability to be free and indulge is for sure one of the things that I found most attractive about her. And I think one of the things she found most attractive
Starting point is 00:14:18 about me was my ability to be disciplined, right? And so it's like the thing that you want from each other is always the thing that you end up resenting about resenting, right? But it's also beautiful. It's beautiful. Like what she has taught me to have joy and freedom and for food to be a celebratory experience too. So it's just the Venn diagram of where that overlaps. I'm Jonathan M. Hevar. I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
Starting point is 00:15:05 But I grew up working class. 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 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.
Starting point is 00:15:44 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. Our next one is talking. This one is endlessly fascinating to me. Okay.
Starting point is 00:16:08 Oh, gosh, yes. Because this issue of talking is about oversharing. Okay. And I feel like people listening would probably think that since I'm the writer, since I'm the memoirist, that it would be that I'm the oversharer and that is the opposite of our situation. Mm-hmm. Right?
Starting point is 00:16:30 One of our most frequent arguments is that Abby has said something or shared something that makes me, how would you describe it, Pam? Yeah, so like I said, not that this is an excuse, it's just evidence that I grew up in this big family. I actually just recently went back and saw them for the first time since COVID started. And I was in the room and I remember having this thought
Starting point is 00:17:00 that I was so grateful that Glennon, you weren't with me for like the first time, because it was so loud and it was so intense. And there was 15 people in this room and there were all talking at the exact same time. And nobody was listening and nothing was getting heard and nothing was really getting said. And like this was the anti-communication. And what ended up happening was I started to over share something. And I came home and I told you about this experience and you were upset with me that I shared this information.
Starting point is 00:17:38 And what I realized is being from a big family where nothing is really said, like the more gossipy or the more you can share with people gets a little bit more traction. So there's a more attention that's put on you and being in a big, loud space is like almost a trigger for me. So long story short, I'm a loud talker, which is annoying. I understand.
Starting point is 00:18:06 I'm an interruptor, which is very annoying. I now understand. And this oversharing bit has complicated your trust in me to be able to share stuff with me, knowing that I won't share it with the freaking postal worker outside. Like, I see somebody, I'm like, oh, I can't wait to talk to them. And I am an extrovert, but there's a part of me this like immaturity inside of me
Starting point is 00:18:33 that I do want to work on. That can't be, can't wait to be the one to share it. That makes any sense. So is it the substance? Is it like, because I didn't know this about you too. Is it, is it, there's something that you, Glennon would have thought was just between you two
Starting point is 00:18:53 and Abby shares it with someone else? It can be something that's just between us. It could be something that's I think considered to be gossipy and not our business and something that, and I feel like since Abby is who she is when she talks people listen to her and like it I It's like the food thing. I am super disciplined
Starting point is 00:19:17 About the things that I say in a way that I feel and I think through how it's gonna make them feel, and then feel, and then feel, and then feel, to the point where on a spectrum, it could be either. Exactly. It could be considered almost like manipulative, I think, or like overly controlling, or Abbey calls it's exhausting, which she're like, I was only saying. Yeah, but then on the other spectrum is just saying whatever, whenever, and not thinking about how that person's gonna feel or that person's gonna feel or the repercussions.
Starting point is 00:19:55 What I have a question about that then, is it related to the substance of the information? As in, you feel that the dispersal of that information could have a damaging effect on someone. Or is it, it is that, as opposed to the fact that Abby shared that reflects negative light nearly on me, because I'm not a person who would share that. It's because it's gonna come back to somebody
Starting point is 00:20:21 and hurt someone, especially somebody in our immediate family, like watch out, like if I've said something that exposes our children or Glenin in any way or you sister, she has a complete allergic reaction to that rightfully so I'm not defending myself here. And that's when I'm like, oh yeah, I've gone and done it again, like there we go. So it's interesting, it's like, the idea when I'm like, oh yeah, I've gone and done it again. Like, there we go. So it's interesting. It's like, the idea when you're, I think when you're in a big family, you speak to exist. Abby has said to me many times, I feel like if I don't talk,
Starting point is 00:20:55 I don't exist. Right. So it's like getting a word in edge wise. And that's where the interrupting comes in or, and, and and and we had issues in the beginning of our relationship which you know one of the reasons I felt so madly in love with you is the way you are with people and in a room and your presence is so huge and your being is so huge and I am much more in a social situation I'm much more quiet and much more introverted right? So we used to have issues where we would go somewhere and We'd come home and Abby would be like wasn't that amazing? And I would be like, but you didn't notice that I didn't say one word the whole time we were there Yeah, you didn't even notice I didn't speak a word.
Starting point is 00:21:45 I didn't, that's not the life that I lived before I met you. People were just ingratiated. And is that a word? Yes. Yeah, they were ingratiated in what I was saying. And the selfish Abby, the former pro athlete Abby, when I was in it, like people, it's embarrassing to think about those early days.
Starting point is 00:22:06 And I remember feeling like, oh, she's trying to change me. She's trying to change my personality, but the truth is, especially something like this, that's so important, being heard and listening, finding some semblance of a middle, because I didn't wanna make you feel like you were completely disappeared in a room next to me. Like I wanted you to have your own space and take up your own space. Yeah, and I think it's just,
Starting point is 00:22:35 I've talked to so many friends, you have that dynamic. There's like one big personality, and there's one maybe that is a little bit quieter. And so it's that both people want to be seen. And so it's sometimes falls a little bit more on the bigger personality to leave deliberate and intentional space for the other person who isn't gonna just jump in.
Starting point is 00:23:01 Yeah, that's hard for me. I would remember I would have to like... She... Pister. She goes like, sometimes when when we're sitting I will see her because she does it like when we're sitting with the kids and she's trying to actively let them talk and not interrupt she holds her lips together like a duck she literally closes her lips like this. I have to do it otherwise it I can also go to an extreme right I? I mean, both with the food and the talking, if you also don't want this dynamic to be such that Abbi is,
Starting point is 00:23:34 am I doing it right? Am I allowed to, am I being policed in the space? Am I talking too much so that you're not at ease? Because then you can try to please someone to death and not be at ease in yourself. And that's awful. Yeah. The good news about that, and I think we got to go on to the money, but the good news about that sister is that these two specific topics are topics I really want to be more mature and understand more.
Starting point is 00:24:08 So though it might look like on the surface that like, oh, Glenin has a little bit of a need for more control in certain circumstances, like in these areas, these are some of the things that I feel the most embarrassment and shame around my own personality, maybe not shame, but just I feel embarrassed like when I'm interrupting people and I feel like this imm and shame around my own personality, maybe not shame, but just I feel embarrassed when I'm interrupting people and I feel like this immaturity rise in me
Starting point is 00:24:29 that I need to say something otherwise. Like I wanna work on those things, right? And of course I would end up choosing a partner like Lenin who could help me work through that stuff. And same, I mean, I feel embarrassed about my hyper vigilance in every room, right? Like, is that person getting it? Like, I love about you that you are free and open and not, you know, they call people
Starting point is 00:24:57 high self monitors or low self monitors. So a high self monitor is someone who's constantly like worried about how this just, you know, sometimes changing, but always monitoring how they speak, what they speak, what, and I think that is anxiety producing for other people too. I think one of the reasons people love you so much is that you are just yourself all the time. And so it's like all of these things are things that we both are mirroring for each other that we're both working on. Right? And either one of us is like, do it my way. Like I don't know the last thing I want is for Abby to be me. Jesus. No. And we've not a work. We've had to work through like dealing with that instant denial
Starting point is 00:25:49 to work through like dealing with that instant denial or argumentative or just dismissal. Like no, like because of course I make fun of the fact that like no, I don't want you to touch any of my milkshake and I actually truly deeply don't want you to. But if you did, if you did, like it wouldn't ruin our life. We joke in much about this. But we have to understand that this has been a process and something that we have worked through. I feel like we've made great progress. We talk about money now, though. Okay, so money, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:26:22 I do feel like we've gotten a little bit better with money. I would say that the overall gist of the money issue is that I'm sure the people who are listening will be shocked to hear that I am more anxious and concerned and conservative about money. And I have a general feeling of scarcity when it comes to money, right? And you have a general feeling of abundance and everything will be fine and it will all work out. And we can spend money on things like how would you define our money issues?
Starting point is 00:27:06 I would put it in those terms. I would go so far as to say, when we first met, part of probably what has developed, part of a reason why you've created the money thought around our family is because when I first met you, I was very frivolous with money. I spent it too much. I was going through a horrible time of my life.
Starting point is 00:27:36 And it was like the only thing I could do that wasn't drinking that made me feel a little bit better. Yeah. And I think over the last four years, five years, I've learned quite a bit about myself and the shortcomings of some of this abundance thought, because it's just a maturity, right? So what I've actually been doing over the last couple of years, which has, I think, helped with your anxiety and your scarcity, the last couple of years, which has, I think, helped with your anxiety and your scarcity, is I've just totally dove into learning about money
Starting point is 00:28:10 and learning about investing and learning about, which has brought more control and maturity in the decisions that I make around money. So you don't have to be the one in our relationship to protect it. I know. Have you noticed that I've been buying things lately? You buy more stuff than I buy. I know, because I used to be so scared to buy anything, because I felt like, well, all
Starting point is 00:28:34 the wastefulness has to be on that side, and I have to be so overly controlling and careful so that I don't have to get invites with her about the spending. But now, it feels like since you are being careful, I'm finding myself having a little bit of like, I don't know, I'm gonna buy that shirt. So it's kind of fun and I'm really grateful to you for that. Thank you very much. And I did hear this thing recently that said, I also have been trying to live with less fear around money and
Starting point is 00:29:08 taking on a little more of your belief that I don't know. I just heard somebody say recently that the reason why we get so nervous in our money stories is because one of us always feels like we're breaking our parents' rules about money. And my parents, my parents are both very hardworking public school teachers and we always had enough that we never had extra, right? And so money was to be very, very careful with. And any waste was shameful. And so whenever I feel like we're spending, I think I secretly feel like I'm breaking my parents' rule. Interesting. But our parents' rules weren't usually right.
Starting point is 00:29:58 One of the things that has happened frequently with us is I used to say, well, we can afford it. Yeah. That used to drive me nuts. And that would drive you bonkers. And I understand, I was listening to this book the other day, what I have to say to you is, based on our financial blueprint, and based on our long-term goals, I think this falls in line with us still reaching our goals at the time we want to reach our goals. So I just have to find a new phrase that that is true and it rings true.
Starting point is 00:30:32 It just doesn't sound like, oh, I don't want to deal with this conversation right now. We can afford it and I want to be done with it. It's like, it's like, it's pointed directly. It's intentional. Yeah. Yes. Because I feel okay saving yay giving yay spending intentionally yay wasting Bill So I just have to know that it's been thought through And it's a decision and not just like an impulse or something Yeah, I mean it's so fascinating to me because I think all of these things they're like about food and taking up space and talking and money, but they're really what you think about it there about
Starting point is 00:31:12 feelings of security feelings of trust Feeling the way you what you view as an indulgence or not and whether you're what you view as an indulgence or not, and whether you're worthy of it, safe around it. I mean, they're all wrapped up in these core beliefs about like, am I gonna be okay? And if you do this, is your, are you worthy of trust?
Starting point is 00:31:39 Is your judgment good enough? Is it gonna be like, am I gonna be secure? Am I gonna have what I need is all of my you know, if I, if and also what does it mean in the backdrop of my day to day life? Like letting you work your ass off. So you're always working. So it's like if you are so regimented about all your time is working and then you see see a purchase that you see as frivolous. Do you receive that as you have no respect for how hard I work?
Starting point is 00:32:11 I do a little bit. I used to. I know, but yeah. Not even one. Right, like I also work too. Yes. And I like to spend my money and you could spend your money.
Starting point is 00:32:23 Like that's an important thing to say out loud. I'll have to wish that. And I'm not saying that it is a correct assessment. I'm saying that does the gut reaction, that it immediately comes to that place because it's like a deep core. And the deep, the depth of like some of it being childhood trauma. I mean, I will never get past the part where I'm,
Starting point is 00:32:49 this is where I can't get past where I'm like, okay, I know that it doesn't make me any sense for me to have a sip of your milkshake, but it's childhood trauma for me. So even though it doesn't make any sense, can I just please have a sip of your freaking milkshake? Even though it's not a good, even though it should be a boundary and then come to me on the other side. Well come to me with that.
Starting point is 00:33:11 But if you said that, honey, to me every single time I would give you a sip of that damn milkshake, but you don't say that, you say no things and you go in there secretly into the freaking refrigerator, take a sip. I know you, I literally, I know where you've walked. I know what you're doing. You're trying to do it secretly. That's also childhood trauma because Glennon and I used to sneak food because we weren't allowed to have it. So, but what I'm saying is that like it's, you also have to recognize Abby's childhood trauma around me being secure enough to have it. And there's a third way, there's always a third way. It doesn't mean please indulge my trauma,
Starting point is 00:33:47 or you indulge my trauma. There is this third way that, Glenin, you really could allow yourself to get the milkshake, have the sip you want, and throw the rest of that shit in the trash. I know. And that's what I think we're working towards. Okay.
Starting point is 00:34:03 What I have to, what I will say about that, I am not yet at a place, even though I'm working my ass off, and I will someday be there, where I trust myself with a whole milkshake. I've never taken three Sips of milkshake and throw it away. It brings back all my old binging stuff, whatever. So I'd rather just pass it up. But what we come back to is this like immovable object
Starting point is 00:34:26 and impenetrable object and immovable force. It's like whose childhood trauma do we back to each day? That's literally all we're trying to figure out. Right? Totally. Okay, so we actually, you all we are at 30 minutes. I don't know, should we save the other? Oh, you want to not save, you just want to not get
Starting point is 00:34:46 the one that you suck at. I see you, Abby. I see you. Okay, so we did for talking money. Guess we won't get to absent mindedness. Okay, so we'll go to absent mindedness. Okay, and then I think what we'll do is we'll save the fifth fight for another time
Starting point is 00:34:59 because it's all about how we respond to each other's fights. I don't know how to describe this one. I have no, this next one. I'm calling it my absent-mindedness. I don't know how they have how you would describe it, but it's just this thing I've had since I was a kid where I am not paying attention to anything that's going on in the physical world. And so I'm constantly losing things. I'm constantly breaking things. I'm, can you just, can you just try to describe it? Yeah, I mean, I think that you are a unique human being because the thing that makes you so unbelievable,
Starting point is 00:35:45 The thing that makes you so unbelievable, a genius, an artist at what you do, is your ability to think through really difficult problems and make them sound simple to the rest of us. And that takes a process and it has its toll. There's like, there's a cost to it. And some of those costs are leaving a full cup of coffee inside the washing machine inside of it. Yeah, nobody knows how that happened.
Starting point is 00:36:12 And I'm, we can't, it hasn't been proven that it was. I'm just saying. Hold on, let me just get through a few of these. Also, the, the fact that you still will not stop using my razor, no matter how many times I've asked you not stop using my razor, no matter how many times I've asked you to stop using my razor. That's so hard.
Starting point is 00:36:30 And so now I just have to change, I have to change her razor heads for her because the thing is she looks down and she sees two razors. She literally can't remember which one is hers. No matter how many times she's written my name, we've had tutorials, she's given me pneumonic devices. Okay, so you know, so you literally can't tell.
Starting point is 00:36:51 It's not that you're like, I see this is Abby's and I'm using it. You're just like, oh, damn it. I can't remember. I'm literally standing in the shower, staring at two razors, going shit. Well, I do think you figure it out because you always always use mine. Why do you always always use mine? Because when you're in the shower, this is a massive aggressive shit at this.
Starting point is 00:37:12 Yes. Because when you're in the shower, showering and shaving, you don't clean that shit off of the freaking razor. You don't clean your hair off. So when you look down to the two razors, you look at the head that looks the cleanest and you choose that one. That one is always mine. So I go in there and I look at my razor and
Starting point is 00:37:31 it has hair all over it. And I look at the other one and it has hair all over it. I'm like, oh, she chose my, my clean razor because it was clean. Who wants to use it already, razor? Nobody. I just want to tell you that I love you so much. And I can see that you're giving me too much credit. That's not a process I would ever go through. I would never pick something up. You've seen my toothbrush. Do you think I've ever picked something up
Starting point is 00:37:55 and been like, this is too dirty to use? Never. I am disgusting. You are not using it. I would never pick up my razor and say, I would use a razor that didn't work for 20 years. I would never think this thing doesn't work so I should change it. I've actually come, I've actually figured out I have to hide the razor in the shower. That's smart. I've been hiding it from you. And it's not easy because there's like, you know, only three places that could be behind the freaking shampoo bottles.
Starting point is 00:38:28 So what do you attribute this to? Because I've always said, you know, this is something that's happened throughout my life. I run into things. I mean, this isn't, I have a lot of bruises because I actually run into doors. I will be driving and I find myself going somewhere I'm not going. I am living in our kids call it mom's underwater, right? I am living so much inside my head that I'm not paying attention to the outside world, which so in our family we say mom can do hard things, but she can't do easy things. Yeah, I think that you, I think that sometimes what's happening inside of your own head is more interesting than anything. A lot of people would feel offense to that, but
Starting point is 00:39:14 I actually know how smart you are. So I don't necessarily disagree with you all the time. I just have had to figure out how to manage around it because during the book writing process or even the creation of this podcast like you go into a different realm, like you have a different realm that you you you live in in some ways. And so that's why you leave stuff in certain places and I find them. That's why the cabinet drawers can never get shut. You know, things of this nature, when it comes to the children, you don't really forget anything when it comes to them, which is really interesting. So that's interesting. So she is selectively prioritizing what she will pay attention to, which is not. And so her ability to do that does that field disrespectful to you, Abby, because you're like, well, you've chosen to come out of your world for this thing.
Starting point is 00:40:12 You just don't choose to come out of your world to leave my razor alone or to not put gum on the console of my view. So, I decided to marry Glenin. I already decided to marry Glenin. I decided to marry her after having learned this about her. And I think that part of what makes her so special is she actually needs it. She needs to feel like somebody else is going to take care of
Starting point is 00:40:44 stuff when she has to go into this different world or realm or in her head or whatever. And there is going to be a cost that I pay. But that's part of why I was put on this earth, I think. I do. I think that there is a unique kind of person that can handle that. And I was built for it. So it's going to annoy the hell out of me forever.
Starting point is 00:41:09 I know that also. But I think over time I'll stop caring as much. I'll give her a good dent inside. Yeah, a little bit. Well, what you just said Abby, that you knew this about Glennip for you married her, that it's part of what makes her uniquely heard that she needs it.
Starting point is 00:41:30 I wonder if Glenin, you could think through the food, the talking, the money, and try to know through that framework. Like you knew this about Abby. Did you already order your team, Abby? Sure. And you're just not wearing out today. I am not. I am being totally objective here. I am, I really am. Like there are things.
Starting point is 00:41:54 Yes. That Abby acknowledges and celebrates as part of you that are annoying as hell. I'm not saying it isn't annoying. The things that are true about Abby. I'm just saying that it's interesting to think about those things less from the perspective of what Abby just shared about you. Yes. But I think that I have more of a personality that accepts people. Do you think for who they are a little bit more than tries to witchy them and control
Starting point is 00:42:24 them a little. Like, no, and I mean that that's bad. I mean, that that is 100% true. Yeah. That one of the most exceptional things about Abby is her supernatural ability to love people exactly as they are and without condition. I have never seen it before. I don't believe I'll ever see it again,
Starting point is 00:42:47 the way that she has it. And it is something that I, it is something that I would not want to change about her. Yes, and it's why we work. Yes, her unwillingness to change, she unwillingness to change me. It's not something you would change about her. I find acceptable.
Starting point is 00:43:04 And with that, we will break, and we will come back with some hard questions. I love you both so much. Just the way you are. Don't be mad at me because this was really therapeutic. It was wonderful. It was wonderful. I love you so much. Love you too.
Starting point is 00:43:19 Love you too. Okay, we are back with questions from various Pod Squad members for Glenin and Abby. And the first one is from Jacqueline. Hey Glennon, I am just finishing up myself more year in college and I've been in about a four-year relationship with my girlfriend. We fight sometimes, but I fight more than others. I'm the one who fights and sometimes my fighting can be really unkind and Anchor is just like one of those feelings that I my fighting can be really unkind. And anger is just like one of those feelings that I don't know what to do with. So I guess my question is how do you and Abby fight? Because Abby reminds me a lot of my partner. And what do you do when maybe you're about to say something that you really don't want to say or you know that you're going to explode or one of the other ones gonna explode. I really relate to you going in. I've read your book and it really changed my life.
Starting point is 00:44:29 I recommended to all of my friends. Okay, I love you. Thank you for my sins. Okay, so Pod Squad, if you could see Abby right now, what you would see is that that entire time that Jacqueline was talking. Abby had her hands over her mouth and was freaking out. And babe, I'm gonna guess the reason. Okay, you'll have to tell me if I'm right. I'm guessing that you actually think that Jacqueline is me, that like I recorded that question and pretended to be Jacqueline, because it sounds like maybe Jacqueline has some,
Starting point is 00:45:02 in her insurities. Some similarities, such as a few. Yeah, I love Jacqueline, by the way. Jacqueline, I love you. I am you, first of all, second of all. So babe, we get to talk about not only our five fights, but how we fight, because you and I actually fight about how we fight. Yeah, I mean, for sure is the most lesbian thing ever.
Starting point is 00:45:26 First of all, Jacqueline, thank you for the question. I think, you know, it just feels, I feel warm when I hear other people talk about some issues that we have, that's for sure. Yeah, totally. So let's talk about conflict first because we've figured out just recently actually that we have different ideas about conflict in the first place. That we both have different beliefs about conflict that makes it tricky right to start.
Starting point is 00:46:01 Yeah, it's not a purpose of conflict to serve in. When we the server like what is conflict in general in each of our lives right right so we figured out that I am very very conflict I'm a fan of conflict your pro your pro conflict I always feel like what we're trying to do down here is understand each other better and get to the root of things. And I have always understood conflict to be the vehicle one uses to get to the root of things. And I believe that conflict is the end of us
Starting point is 00:46:39 as we once knew it. Right, I think we just figured out that you think of conflict as constructive and I think of conflict as destructive. Yes, right. And so we have considered the fact that maybe this is what we were taught in our families of origin. Right? I would say that my family of origin was very... of origin, right? I would say that my family of origin was very... We had a lot of conflict, like high, high intense... All the time. Oh, I mean... How would you describe it? Cellular? Yes, Okay, great. Cellular. So Abby, how would you describe your families approach to conflict? Avoidant.
Starting point is 00:47:30 With living with nine or 11 people in one house, one conflict can ruin it for the rest of the bunch. So it was celebrated to brush conflict under the rug. And so that's how I learned to view with it. And that is actually one of my greatest strengths and also one of my greatest weaknesses because I am very much a conflict avoidor. Because I don't want to ruffle the feathers. I don't want to mess up the, I don't want to, I don't want to rough off the feathers. I don't want to mess up the, the juju of the energy of the,
Starting point is 00:48:06 the family. And that's so interesting for us because in the beginning of our relationship, we'd get into a conflict and I would feel like, Oh, this is good. And you would retreat and feel like, Oh, this is bad. Right. But I have a question about that because if the, it's like peace Peace keeping versus peace making because gladden you can't you are very very comfortable with external conflict and vocalizing
Starting point is 00:48:37 conflict to resolution you are very very uncomfortable with internal conflict So when you have an internal conflict, you vocalize it, you work it out, that part feels good to you. But Abby, when you, when a, when conflict, inevitably there must be some, like when something isn't going right and you avoid the outward conflict, are you experiencing an inner conflict in them? I definitely experience it as uncomfortable on the inside, but I don't necessarily show it on the outside. So I don't express the need to be in conflict as much as I'm feeling the need to be in conflict.
Starting point is 00:49:19 So my body is going through conflict. I'm actually probably my body's suffering, and I'm not getting that conflict out. So what I have learned through being married to Glenin for four years, beautiful four years, and being with you for five is that actually saying what's going on in your insides and getting them out is the only way to living a piece, a piece-ish life. way to living a piece, a piece-ish life. Peaceful-ish, peaceful-ish, peaceful-ish. Like that.
Starting point is 00:49:50 Can you tell the folks how we fight, like, what's our number one, like, way of operating? Okay. So when we finally get to the point where we're like, okay, we can trust conflict, right? Conflict is how we get to know each other better, how we show each other our insides, all, you know, progress. It took me a few years to get this comfortable with conflict. By the way, it was a slow slog. Well, to be fair, just just just I mean, I just don't I want to
Starting point is 00:50:21 push against this idea that there's some people come to with conflict and some people that aren't. Abby, the type of conflict you're comfortable with is inner conflict. The type of conflict, Glenin is comfortable with is outward conflict. She's uncomfortable with inward. You've gotten to the place where you're comfortable enough with inward. More comfortable than outward. So it's just that's interesting. Everyone has some kind of conflict.
Starting point is 00:50:42 Well, it's, yeah, it's the idea of there's a price to pay. It's choosing what price you're going to play, right? So it's like, but I also do believe that as women, we are trained to look at a situation, look at a room, be it a table, be in a relationship, and count the cost of saying the thing. Count the cost of expressing ourselves. Count the cost of saying what we need.
Starting point is 00:51:07 And that will cause too much drama, chaos, or other people's discomfort or whatever, and so we don't want to pay it. But what we haven't considered is that there is a price to pay for not saying the thing, for not expressing the thing. And that price is never being known, thing for not expressing the thing and that price is never being known and that price is slowly dying. It's so the the the idea is that there's a price to pay either way which price. Well and I think that the way yeah the way that we choose and the way that we have worked through this is that we promise each other not to go after each other's weaknesses and knowing that I go straight to shame, there is the price that unfortunately, like a toll that you pay every time that we get into some sort of conflict. And the toll, yeah, let's talk about that. The toll is you have to make me feel safe. Unfortunately,
Starting point is 00:51:56 I'm sorry, babe, that you do. You have to make me feel safe that you will not leave, like, leave me before we head into any kind of conflict. And it's annoying. I bet that that has to be so frustrating for you. But that unfortunately is the price of entry to this kind of conflict to make me feel like we can do this on even terms on some level. Does that make sense? Yes, it was like putting safety. like it's like when you go to the
Starting point is 00:52:26 bowling alley and you have to put those like, well, I do, you know, how the bumpers, when we go bowling, you get me the bumpers. Have you ever been bowling? Yes, we remember when we went with the kids and I got the bumpers. Oh, okay. Yeah. Yeah. So, so the bumpersers of those first conflicts, the first couple years, is we figured out that I would have to say to you, we need to talk about something, but please understand that I'm never going anywhere. Like I wanna talk about this hard thing,
Starting point is 00:52:56 but please breathe and know that we're gonna make it through it and know there's nobody's leaving, right? Nobody's going anywhere. And that was, but it's gotten safer lately. Like we don't necessarily need those bumpers because you know I'm not going anywhere. You've allowed me to jump to my prefrontal cortex. Like I've been operating in my reptilian brain.
Starting point is 00:53:21 And you've given me time so that I have the space to go from reptilian brain to the thinking brain and rationalize, oh, she isn't going to leave me. But before, early in our relationship, I didn't know that. So I was like only operating with like these past experiences. So now I feel comfortable getting into a conflict with you and knowing you aren't going to leave me without you having to necessarily pay that same kind of toll because my brain has rewired itself, like truly, like that's kind of like it's magic, like your brain is malleable in that way. What's the price that I have to pay? Okay, so if people have the bumpers, right? So we say, okay, we're gonna enter into conflict,
Starting point is 00:54:07 but everybody gets their bumpers. So you and I have this theory that the second we go into conflict, that each of us has like this bulletproof jacket, and we use this phrase, the bulletproof jacket in our family all the time from many different, well, I'll talk about it many times on this podcast, I'm sure, but it basically means that
Starting point is 00:54:32 when we go into conflict, we feel vulnerable, right? Because the reason we've got there is probably because we're hurt or we're sad or we're fearful, right? That's why we've gotten into the conflict. But hurt, sad, fear, those are very soft, vulnerable emotions. And so heading into conflict, we all throw on a bulletin jacket.
Starting point is 00:54:55 That is some sort of emotion or approach or way of being that makes us feel less vulnerable. So mine is always anger and rightness. Anger and rightness, yours is shame. So early in our relationship, what the bulletproof jacket does is it makes it absolutely impossible to even talk about the thing you were talking about before. Because now you're dealing with each other's representatives. You're not even talking about the problem. So mine would be, it would drive you nuts. I would turn into a lawyer, like dissecting
Starting point is 00:55:34 every single word you said, making you, making you feel wrong, making you feel afraid. I remember you figuring that out, a while in and saying, babe, if you want to do this, you'll, you'll always win. You're, that's great. You want to have a word, you have, you're better at words than me. You will win this game every time. The game, right, right. And so that's when I figured out that that was my bulletproof jacket, and we'll get to why we have these. Yours was shame. So what would you go to every time we got into
Starting point is 00:56:11 any kind of conflict? I would go to rage. You would go to shut down. She's leaving. Right. And that I'm terrible. I'm awful. You're going to leave me. And that would I'm terrible, I'm awful, you're gonna leave me. And that would frustrate me to no end because that- Then I become the victim and you have to take care of me. Yeah. So then I don't even get to have my feelings anymore because I'm pulling you out of the beautiful position.
Starting point is 00:56:38 I mean, it's a fact that you're not like, you gotta give me a little credit because it's, it is. And a little credit because it's... And the reason why is it's beautiful because what we figured out is that, and I want you listening to really think about this, is that we put on our bulletproof jacket in conflict to I think cover whatever is our deepest shame
Starting point is 00:57:04 belief about ourselves. Okay? The reason that I always argue about rightness is because my deepest shame belief, because of my childhood and because of how I grew up and because of all of my various diagnoses, is I am crazy. I am over-emotional, I am too much. I am illogical. I am... nobody is going to be able to take me for long. So I start listing all the reasons I'm right because I want to prove to you that actually it's logical
Starting point is 00:57:40 how I feel. And then what do you think like you're shame? That's why the tagline in untamed is I'm not crazy. I'm a goddamn cheetah because I am constantly my whole life trying to undo that shame belief that I my 10 year old self decided when she was sitting in therapy sessions for the first all the formative years of my life that I will have to spend my life pretending that I'm not crazy. Right. Right. And what's your growing up in the family that I grew up in. Having so many people needing the attention of your parent, right? And there's too much need for too little attention. And then being this gay kid, all right, this young gay kid inside the Catholic church, fearing literal hell, right?
Starting point is 00:58:39 Choosing myself over hell, dealing with the kind of internalized homophobia that still lives inside of me today, sadly. I feel like I'm an abomination and I am bad. When we enter into the conflict and you say, I'm never going to leave you, I love you. And then we get into the conflict. That's helping my brain rewire itself. That's helping me work through some of this trauma. And so we just, we've promised ourselves never to use the very thing that is our biggest weakness or our biggest vulnerability against each other in conflict. Right. And so your... That's, I think, what fighting fair is. Exactly. Yeah. And I think that your your tendency to shoot into anger, right? Like I want to talk a little bit about that because
Starting point is 00:59:34 you know, why do you think anger is your go-to? Well, I mean, I think that growing up, I learned that love is loud, that love is like, you know, that conflict is the way you do things, that I had an extremely loving family and I also there was a lot of anger. So I'm sure that because what you say that I also like do you think that I well here's what I would say I you it makes me angry how little you get it. Okay. Like it pisses me right off. Okay, so you're... It feels like I feel like maybe you probably, Jacqueline's partner,
Starting point is 01:00:35 but we're late. Like you, it feels to me like you are very uncomfortable with anger. I'm too comfortable with anger, right? That's my go-to. And it feels to me like you are a verse to anger that you don't, like sometimes I just want to be like, are you feeling this? Because I sometimes feel like I have to feel it all. And here's what I secretly think.
Starting point is 01:00:56 I think you feel like you have to stay steady for me because I'm fired up. But what happens when you get fired up? What happens to me? Oh, you go super calm. Yeah. I'm fired up. But what happens when you get fired up? What happens to you? Oh, you go super calm. Yeah. Yeah, because I'm like, oh, I get to be the calm one now.
Starting point is 01:01:11 Yeah, yeah, totally. So like when I do get angry, I don't have a difficult time feeling anger. I have a very difficult time showing anger. So it's happening inside. I'm angry. But one of the things that I've learned throughout my life is this in a marital relationship.
Starting point is 01:01:40 It has never or in a relationship period, it has never benefited me to respond out of anger, not one time. Well, what do you think about, we have talked before about the anger also being this, I don't know what this is, okay, but whenever, when we get into conflict, you have an amazing ability to remind us to always be on the same team. Oh gosh. I tend to, I don't know why this is, I tend to, the second we get into conflict,
Starting point is 01:02:18 be like, okay, we're opposing teams. I need to win, I'm bababa, and you are always reminding me, wait, but aren't we on the same team? You go right into individual sport athlete mode. You're like, I'm fighting for my life. I'm the only one over here. This is do or die. And I'm fighting to the death. And I'm like, oh, like back up a second, like no matter what happens, like we are, we're on the same team, right? I think we're missing part of it on conflict because it doesn't apply to you too,
Starting point is 01:02:53 but I think we should talk about it because one piece of conflict, Glennon, you said one of the reasons that that Abby doesn't bring conflict up is because of a historical lack of trust that it will be received in a correct and gracious way. But I think there's a whole other basket of folks that it also has this issue of trust that it is worth your time and effort because anything in your relationship will ever change.
Starting point is 01:03:30 Yeah, that's good. The ambivalence. Because it's this whole, I mean, it's this whole idea and it relates so much to conflict for me because part of it, I am a very high conflict person. Anger is my mother tongue, just like you, Glennon, there is the comfort of the default emotion that makes you feel safest. And when you're desiring to be understood above anything else, being able to make your case, to make your case so that the other person will understand you is I get that completely. And so I bring a lot of quote unquote conflict, but there's but conflict with the goal of resolution. I mean conflict resolution is in fact one
Starting point is 01:04:23 of the greatest things that you can accomplish in your life and in your relationship. So for me, when I view people as not bringing conflict up, I think it is a, I think it's being unfaithful to the relationship. I think it's, it's an abdication of your role in the relationship and you are actually hoisting on the other person, the responsibility to resolve your conflict. The responsibility to speak those things out loud because people go their whole lives, never voicing any conflict, not because there isn't conflict, but because they're either too lazy to do it, they don't have their trust in
Starting point is 01:05:06 their partner to receive it, or they're just like, you know what, I tried that for seven years, and not a damn thing changed. And I'm done. And that's when you get in this scary places in your relationship. When you, when you, seriously, when I catch myself and not bringing up conflict, I am like, that's scary. Red flag. And it's a big, because it's a slowly dying. It's apathy. It's a slowly dying. It's apathy.
Starting point is 01:05:34 It's a slowly dying to, and not really, it is an atrophy of the relationship, because you are not, it's an investment to me. I view the willingness to bring conflict to the table to make yourself vulnerable. It shows a faith in your relationship and investment in a relationship a belief that your relationship could be better than it is and if you do not bring conflict to the table you are saying my relationship is never going to get it. It's going to be the same shit every day over and over.
Starting point is 01:06:07 I have the greatest metaphor for any sporty spices out there. It's like, well, here we go. It's like when your coach doesn't say anything to you is when you should worry. When your coach is saying things to you and still coaching you and giving you pointers, that means they're still invested. It's the same thing. Sister, you just like, it is. Just healed something for me.
Starting point is 01:06:28 That was good. That's so good. And I think that's why, honestly, that's why I, it annoys me when people who bring up the thing are seen as like, difficult or whatever. And I'm like, to me, I see it as generosity. I see it as I'm spending my energy on this thing. Like I'm offering myself, I'm offering, to me, it feels. Well, in that this is the kind of cost that you are paying to have good relationships. Glennon, you have wonderful relationships. And I don't. I have a couple of decent relationships,
Starting point is 01:07:08 but you have wonderful relationships with the people in your life because you are paying a price of entry and you're saying hard things and you're you're you're on whether you're afraid or not. I don't know, but you are comfortable with the conflict which leads to a resolution. It's really beautiful. Well, I would say say, oh, sorry, go ahead, sir. Yeah, I would say that you have taught me more about how to, I'm amazing at bringing up a calculator. I'm amazing at bringing up escalator. I'm amazing at bringing the thing. And then I suck.
Starting point is 01:07:48 And then I go into a roly-poly, at Ragey Spice, getting nowhere, I would rather be right than you mind. I would rather be understood than progress, than make progress in the relationship. So I'm good at wall-baby, it's like everything else in our relationship. It's like cleaning the garage. It's like, I'm good at well babe, it's like everything else in our relationship. It's like starting, it's like cleaning the garage. It's like, it's like, I'm great at
Starting point is 01:08:08 starting. You are great at finishing, right? Like, once we get started, you are the one that keeps us kind. You are the one that stays vulnerable. Well, I'm, I mean, remember, I'm just thinking about the last fight we had argument in the car, even like my body language, I shut down. I like turned away. I'll, you know, sigh like it's, and you stay tender and you stay vulnerable and you constantly remind me that I'm not too much and that I'm exactly enough. I remember saying, I'm exhausting. And you saying, no, you are exhaustive. And that was so beautiful to me. It was like, well, you are going to bring up
Starting point is 01:08:57 every damn thing, but it's not exhausting. It's just what we found out with bringing up every damn thing is it's a little bit the rightness, a little bit the control. I just recently figured this out that like when you're repeating, like we've come to the end and we're just like going over the analytics of what we've just talked about, I understood in the most clarity that I've had in a long time, I was like, oh, I'd get this. Okay, so what she's doing right now is we're creating now a new frame of reference, a new starting point. Yes. So she's putting her flag in the stand.
Starting point is 01:09:33 And this is where we begin from now, from here and now. Yes. We have carried the ball. Yes, we have carried the ball down the field. And here's where we will pick it up. I need to see progress. I need to see progress. I need to say this is the okay. So now we have not wasted this last hour. Here, here is the more sure more beautiful mutual understanding. We have agreed upon as of this moment. It's like when you get off a really mind numbing conference call
Starting point is 01:10:03 for work and somebody's super smart and is like, okay, in short, here's what we've come on with and here's our calls to action. And you're like, oh, that person's so smart. That's what I'm trying to do for us babe, but I realize it could be seen as ever so slightly controlling. Okay, I love you.
Starting point is 01:10:20 Let's come back for our next straight thing. Okay, here's our next straight thing for this week. With your pod squad, think about this question when you get into conflict, when you feel afraid or sad or hurt, what is the bulletproof jacket that you pull on to protect yourself? Just what is it? Maybe we don't even worry about solving it. We just think about, you know, I have Abby and I and Craig have three kids and we noticed when they were little little when they'd get afraid, when they'd get in trouble, the oldest one would always be a humor. Okay. Like, I would confront him and he would burst out laughing. And it was so infuriating to like figure out, oh, that's what he does when
Starting point is 01:11:19 he's scared, right? The middle one would go immediately into a shame spiral. I am terrible. I am awful. I am. Right. That was her the youngest one. Absolute. Absolutely. She just shut down. You could see her eyes go glassy. Like she just, I'm not here anymore. I'm not here. It was like a baby who like covers their face and is like maybe if I clover my face, she'll go away. Right? So let's just think this week, what is your bullet proof that you pull on when you're feeling vulnerable? As you go through this week and life gets hard and it will, please remember, we can do hard things. Thank you so much for listening and we will see you back next week.
Starting point is 01:12:06 I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlyle. I chased desire, I made sure I got what's mine And I continue to believe that I'm the one for me and because I'm mine I walk the line because we're adventurers in heartbreak so man a final destination man we've 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
Starting point is 01:13:22 And through the joy and pain That our lives bring We can do a heartache I hid rock bottom, it felt like a brand new star I'm finally fine. Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak so mad A final destination with that We stopped asking directions So places they've never been Come to be loved, we need to be known
Starting point is 01:14:47 We'll finally find our way back home And through the joy and pain That our lives bring We can do hard things This world finished her rose and heart breaks on my mind We might get lost but we're only left Stopped asking directions Some places they've never been And to be loved we need to be long
Starting point is 01:15:48 We'll finally find our way back home And through the joy and pain That our lives breathe We can do hard things. Yeah, we can do hard things. Yeah, we can do hard things. We can do hard things, is produced in partnership with Cadence 13 Studios.
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