We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Find Your “Tingle” & Live Wild with Justina Blakeney
Episode Date: February 20, 2025387. Find Your “Tingle” & Live Wild with Justina Blakeney Multidisciplinary artist and designer – Justina Blakeney – joins Glennon, Abby, and Amanda to discuss living close to one's true se...lf and Justina’s insights on self-expression and creativity. Discover: -How to know whether you’re having a spiritual awakening or a midlife crisis -The beauty of being an outsider -What to do when you get to the goal and say, “Now what?” -How to balance creativity and discipline More on Justina: Justina Blakeney is a multidisciplinary artist, designer, and New York Times Bestselling Author. She is the Founder and Chief Creative Officer of the home décor brand, Jungalow® and the author of several design books including Jungalow; Decorate Wild! and The New Bohemians book series. Justina lives in Los Angeles with her husband, Jason, their kiddo, Ida, her kitties, Juju and Nova, and 52 houseplants. 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)
With the Fizz loyalty program, you get rewarded just for having a mobile plan.
You know, for texting and stuff.
And if you're not getting rewards like extra data and dollars off with your mobile plan,
you're not with Fizz.
Switch today. Conditions apply. Details at fizz.ca.
Today is the day, pod squad, that I have been waiting for lo so many, lo so many years. I know.
Years.
Because one of my favorite humans is here.
Yes.
And I don't even think she knows that she's one of my favorite humans.
It might get a little embarrassing for you, Justina.
Okay.
First, I'm going to read your bio. That's what's happening now.
And then I'll tell you the things.
Justina Blakeney is a multidisciplinary artist, designer,
and New York Times bestselling author.
She is the founder and chief creative officer
of the home decor brand, Junglo.
So good if all of my hopes and dreams and untamedness came together in one brand.
It's Junglo and the author of several design books, including Junglo Decorate Wild and the New Bohemians book series.
Justina lives in Los Angeles with her husband Jason, their kiddo Ida, her kitties, Juju and Nova,
and 52 houseplants because of course.
All right, so real quick, Justina,
I just, since I first met you,
I think we've only been in rooms together a few times.
I just, I feel like you are someone to me that feels like you live very close to your wild.
Like, meaning, not wild, like I think what sometimes people think of that as like necessarily loud or, no.
Just, I mean wild, like your truest self.
You seem like a human being who lives very from the inside out and not from the outside in.
I can feel it in how you create and how you speak and how you dress and how you parent
and you're always that. What I want for everyone listening is just to be more of who they are.
And so what I try to remind myself when I'm around you is not that I
need to be more like Justina, but that I need to be more me. But I don't know if you remember this,
we sat in a room together at a like a really cool thing we do with a bunch of other women
and we're supposed to go around at the end and all say what our brave goal is for the future.
After this get
together and everybody was saying things like for their companies or whatever. And I said,
my goal is that I'm going to call Justina and ask her to be friends with me. I of course
did not do that, but here we are. Hi.
Can I tell a brief little quick story about Justina and I's first real meeting?
Yeah.
Do you remember this, Justina?
Yes, I do.
Okay.
So we were doing this exercise of, I don't know, it was like an opening up.
There's many women there.
This is the first time we've met all of each other. And we had to go to a stranger
and stare into said stranger's eyes. And thank God, Justina was my partner for this.
And it was right after COVID. And I hadn't been in front of anyone's face at all anyway, it was pretty wild.
And you and I, we have a closeness now
because of this eye staring contest that we got into.
And I just wanna say it was super awkward and weird.
And then now knowing you, it's like,
oh my God, that's hilarious.
So I just wanna say that because I think that it's perfect.
Justina, tell the Pod Squad,
how do you like to talk about yourself?
How do you introduce yourself?
Who are you?
Hi, Pod Squad.
I like to describe myself as an artist.
I like to describe myself as Justina.
I don't know, This is a weird one. I think that when I think
about what I try and exude, it's self-expression is really important to me. And something somebody
said to me recently is ringing in my ears. She said, it's good to be known, it feels good to be known.
And that really resonated with me because I feel like that's what my life is, that's
what my art is.
It's like trying to share my knowing and be known, and it feels good.
It feels good to be in the presence of it, whether it's through
your art or through your brand or through your being in a room. It feels really good.
Thank you so much. So I have a lot of things I want to talk to you about.
The first one is belonging. Okay. Because I was talking to my kid recently and they were asking me, your little one's I think 13, right?
Almost 12, yeah.
Almost 12, okay.
So they get to this point, Justina,
where they start asking you questions
about your decisions you've made
and it's a really good time.
And one of my kids asked me about why we moved so much.
This is like we moved like 13 times in their childhood.
It was one of those things where I kept thinking,
I'm just like one move away to finding belonging.
Like I know I'm gonna find it
and I'm gonna feel comfortable in my own skin
and feel connected and it just never happened.
I've heard you talk about belonging when you were little,
feeling like you didn't fit in anywhere simply.
But you said something that blew my mind in an
interview once you said, the message from your parents though, even though you didn't
fit in, was that that meant you could be anything, anywhere.
Can you talk to us about the role that belonging has played, like this desire, feeling like
maybe you don't fit in anywhere easily. Does
that where the desire to be known comes from? Like, how does this all play out in your life
and where do you belong?
So, yeah, I grew up in a very multicultural, very big, boisterous, loud, raucous family.
And we grew up in Berkeley. So there was this spirit of kind of individualism in
the sense that, you know, everyone was sort of allowed to be themselves more in Berkeley,
I think, than in a lot of places in the world where it's sort of celebrated. But I think
growing up multiracial and I'm Jewish and I was raised Jewish, I always felt a little bit, a little bit like an outsider in different
places. And we traveled a lot. And what I noticed when we started traveling was that
my sister and brother and I, we could go places and so many different places in the world,
people thought that we were from there, because they just didn't know. They couldn't tell and were
sort of ambiguous in that way. And I think that's one of the reasons why I have a good
ear for languages. I sort of started picking up different languages and really being able
to kind of just figure out how to blend in into different places so that I could feel
like I belonged. And that was almost like a hack for me to sort of feel a belonging in different circles.
And I think that what that orientation did for me as I was growing up was it started to make me
feel comfortable not fitting in and being okay with standing out more, and having just a general comfort with people staring at me,
or feeling like I didn't totally know what was going on,
or didn't belong in that way.
I think there's always the balance of the ricochet between,
oh, I feel like I fit in here and I feel like I belong,
and oh my gosh, I feel like a total outsider, and I feel like I belong and oh my gosh, I feel like a total outsider.
And I feel like there was a lot of ping ponging
between feeling both of those things.
But I feel like my parents made a pretty concerted effort
not to put any kind of identity onto us
as we were growing up.
And so in part that hindered some of my feelings
of belonging in the sense
that you know I didn't necessarily grow up feeling like oh this is what I am but
on the other side of it it allowed me the freedom to be on a journey to figure
out what that meant for myself. It's so interesting because I was one of my kids
I was talking to about this and it's like this feeling that a lot of us have
that I don't belong anywhere ends up offering us
this freedom to belong everywhere that,
because like, I wonder if you feel belonging right away
because you fit in somewhere,
then isn't that in itself kind of a default inclusivity
or exclusivity?
That must feel really good to feel like you have a belonging in one group.
But doesn't that necessarily mean that you don't belong anywhere else?
It reminds me of the Maya Angelou quote that I sent to my kid after this conversation, where she said, you are only free when you realize you belong no place.
You belong every place, no place at all.
The price is high, the reward is great, and more and more I belong to myself.
I'm very proud of that.
I am very concerned about how I look at Maya.
I like Maya very much.
That reminds me of you.
Oh my gosh.
Thank you.
I'm really honored.
I keep on looking at Amanda on the Zoom screen and I'm just giving
you such a big hug and it's so beautiful to see you. Just haven't said hi yet.
It's really wonderful. And I want the pod squad to remember that you are the queen who directed
us to do everything for the good of the realm.
Okay, does everyone remember that episode 230
that just blew my mind for a solid trimester
where that self sovereignty that you have,
and I've wanted to talk to you about it ever since,
but in that lunch, I was just thinking about it
the whole time, but not asking you about it.
So this is the story where they didn't have any dairy options at a lunch we were at. And I was just thinking about it the whole time, but not asking you about it.
So this is the story where they didn't have any dairy options at a lunch we were at.
And I got very nervous about it because that meant you couldn't eat anything.
And so I was feeling very apologetic on behalf of the situation.
And you said, no sorry's, self sovereignty.
And then you just waved your arms open and said, it's for the good
of the realm. That's what I do. When it's good for me, it's good for the realm. So I
know I'm not feeling deprived. I'm making a choice. Can you teach us how to that? We
so often take a punishing approach or deprivation approach to entering what is good for us instead of a,
you know, this is of my own dignity and sovereignty that I'm doing this thing. Like how the hell did you get there?
I've been thinking a lot about this over the past few years
because I feel like in the ether we are talking a lot about self-love and self-care
and something that really hit me hard that
I don't feel like is as much part of the conversation is self-respect.
And it's an angle on self-love that I think about a lot because you can love in so many
different ways and sometimes loving can look a little bit too much like smothering or loving can look too much, a little too much like spoiling or indulging.
And I think sometimes for me, I can get into a place where that's true for myself as well.
So one of the things that I've been thinking a lot about and that helps me get out of that
sort of deprivation feeling, you know, if I'm trying to be more
conscious about what I'm putting in my mouth or how much I move my body or how much time
I spend in front of a screen or any of these things is this idea of self-respect and this
idea of what is good for me is good for the realm and that that looks different from indulging at every moment.
What that might mean sometimes is restraint and just finding that in between place in that.
And temperance is something I've been thinking a lot about lately because I can get into a state
of overwhelm or I can get into a state of go, go, go, go, go, and everything's, you know, and so I have to like pull myself back and breathe and practice temperance and remind myself self sovereignty,
not just for my good, for the good of the realm, the higher purpose. So it's just these
little, these little reminders, these mini mantras and things that, that helped me and
bring me back when I'm not feeling grounded,
or when I feel myself starting to go into,
yeah, I'm feeling like, oh, I'm so deprived.
Like I can't have that dessert
because I'm not eating dairy.
Instead of that, it's like, oh, actually,
this is an opportunity to practice self sovereignty.
It's just a way of making myself feel respected by myself
that I think is really important.
Oh God, cause the flip of that, what we usually,
I'll speak for myself.
What I usually do is go straight to shame.
When I'm in my bed and I need to go to bed, I'm exhausted.
And I know that's for the good of myself and the realm.
If I just fucking go to sleep,
instead of scrolling for the next hour on stuff
I literally don't care about.
I don't care about it.
I don't know why I'm doing it.
And then I heap the shame.
Like, why, what's wrong with you?
What's like, why would you do that?
You should just go to sleep.
The flip side of that is like self-respect.
It's like, baby, your time is so important.
You are such a sweet thing and I care about you and I want you to go to sleep.
I want you to feel good tomorrow and this isn't feeding you.
You're too good for this.
It's a very different way of approaching it.
Absolutely.
And it's an encouraging voice.
It's a kind voice, you know, but it's a voice that'll kind of whoop your ass a little bit
in the sense of like, yeah, girl, what are you doing?
You know?
And it presupposes importance.
That's what I love about it.
You can self love and all that.
The feeling is different.
It's like you, you have a realm.
Yeah.
Every single person that is listening,
you have a realm.
You have people in your home.
You have people outside of your home.
You have people you're going to walk by on the street today.
You have people in your office.
And every bit of your energy affects everybody, your realm.
So like when Justina is talking about honoring herself
and her decisions for the good of the realm,
it reminds me of the way that you treat like a queen,
like a bunch of people, we gotta keep her together
because every decision she makes affects the realm.
It's important.
Your life is important.
This is so interesting to me thinking about the self-respect piece
because I've never attached it to self-love.
I've never thought of whether or not
I have self-respect for myself.
And I think that, at least for me,
I could be really tough on myself.
I have kind of a very critical voice.
I think probably a lot of us do. And thinking about this self-respect piece, it's like, oh,
if I think through that lens of needing to have respect for myself, automatically that voice,
it softens a little. It's a lot less critical. It's going to hold me accountable,
voice softens a little, it's a lot less critical. It's going to hold me accountable, but it's not meanie voice. You know what I'm saying? And so how did you come to this idea? Cause
I've never thought of this.
And what does your inner voice sound like?
Oh yeah. I like that question.
Not that we're going to copy it directly, but we're definitely gonna copy it. I am. I'm sure of it. It would be too difficult, I think, for me to trace back exactly where this idea of self-respect came from.
I've been doing a lot of, I don't know, whether, you know, my husband...
We're unsure if it's a spiritual awakening or a midlife crisis, but it's something between those two things.
Yes. Very close on the food chain.
Tell us about that. Tell us about that.
Tell us about that.
But whatever's been going on,
I've been thinking about a lot of stuff.
And my inner voices, I think, you know,
I have many as I think we all do.
But I think overall, she's pretty dope.
Oh. I think she is pretty loving and kind and respectful to me and others. And I think that she has high expectations. And that is sometimes where I think other
voices come in and have to sometimes tell her like, it's okay to relax, it's okay to rest,
and it's okay to disappoint people.
But overall, I do think that my inner voices,
the chorus is a beautiful one.
Wow. Music
College holds a mythic place in American culture.
It's often considered the best four years of your life,
and hailed as a beacon of integrity and excellence.
But beyond the polished campus tours,
there are stories you won't find in
the admissions pamphlets.
The higher-ups are concerned about one thing, and that is avoiding scandal.
It's no wonder that college campuses capture the nation's attention, especially in moments
of upheaval.
I'm Margot Gray. Each week on the Campus Files podcast, we bring you a new story.
It was the biggest academic scandal in the history of college sports and probably in the history of
academia. On Campus Files, we cover everything from rigged admissions to the drama of Greek life.
A chancellor having a pornographic double life is an extremely rare case.
Listen to and follow Campus Files, an Odyssey Original podcast, available now on the free
Odyssey app and wherever you get your podcasts.
I've listened to you a lot talk about a time in your life when you were ignoring all the
messages.
We're in a collective midlife crisis.
So a lot of the things we've been talking about
are how our lives and our bodies are always speaking to us
about what we want and we need.
And then because of a lot of things, we ignore that.
And then we wonder why we're fucked.
So talk to us about how meditation brought you back
in touch with yourself and what that looks like now.
And also, could you tell us how you knew, how you could tell that you were stuck?
Yeah. I remember a conversation I had with a dear friend a few years ago. I said, and you know,
this is sort of right after COVID and right after we went through and lived in a
whole big house renovation and I was just not in a good place and working a lot.
And I told her, I said, I don't have any free time, but if I did, I'm not even sure what
I would do in it.
I remember telling her that.
I was just like, I don't know what I do for fun anymore at this stage in my life.
I'm just not sure. If I were to go away by myself for a weekend to Palm Springs or something, I don't know what I do for fun anymore at this stage in my life. I'm just not sure.
If I were to go away by myself for a weekend to Palm Springs or something, I don't know
what I would do.
That thought really scared me because I've always felt really clear about my passions
and my purpose.
I just felt really unsure and really run ragged.
And I wasn't feeling good in my body and I'd been dealing with years and years of like
a nervous tummy and I just wasn't in a good place.
And I knew I wasn't in a good place, but I mean, I'm going to get real with the pod squad.
I think y'all can handle it. And I knew I wasn't in a good place, but I mean, I'm going to get real with the pod squad.
I think y'all can handle it.
But, you know, I'd had diarrhea for like five years straight and just sort of ignored it
and just was like, Oh yeah, well, you know, this is how my tummy is, you know, and I never
really did anything about it or paid any attention to it.
And one day I was on the throne and my tummy was just feeling so bad and I just
heard this voice coming from inside and it was just like, you are not listening. You
are not listening. She kept saying that over and over again, you're not listening. And she said,
I've been telling you everything you need to know for so long and you're not listening.
And that was a real turning point for me. I was like, okay, okay, I'm going to start listening now. And I did.
And so that was really the beginning of my meditation practice, which I was very resistant
to. I'm an Aries. I have like, go, go, go energy, all of that. So the idea of like sitting
in quiet stillness, I was like, can I at least like sing, you know, chat? You know, I really
like wanted to be active in some way.
Can I read a book while I meditate at least?
Can I listen to an audio book while I meditate?
My therapist recommended I take a class and that was really helpful. I don't think I really
would have been able to get into it the way that I was able to get into it without the class.
So I took a meditation class and started meditating
and literally just started with five minutes a day.
And I was in somatic therapy.
I was just starting with like very, very small sensations,
just like feeling what I feel in my feet
and feeling the tingle or the rush
or whatever.
I'm just starting to pay more attention to the sensations, get out of my head and into
my body more.
And did meditation for about a year before I really started to feel like the messages
that my body was sending me were just getting a lot
clearer. And I started to like heal my digestive issues and just went through a whole process
of like really listening. It was like, oh, you know, at first it was like I couldn't
hear anything. You know, I just felt bad. That's all I could hear was just like, I just
don't feel good. But slowly, slowly over time,
it just started to become so much more clear.
Like, oh, I'm thirsty.
I need water.
I need to stretch.
I need to go on a hike.
I need to move my body.
I need to dance.
I need to sing.
I need to make love.
I need to have a deep conversation
with somebody I care about.
It just started to become more and more clear.
And now, like three years in, I am so much healthier and so much happier and so much
more clear on the things that were hurting my body, the things I can't eat like dairy. And really just that mindfulness piece, which, you know, before
going on this journey, you hear people talking about mindfulness, mindfulness, mindfulness,
and it's like, yeah, yeah, yeah. And meditation, meditation. You're like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But actually practicing it, you're like, oh yeah. Game changer. It's so interesting because it's like, we know if there's a game changer.
It's so interesting because it's like we know if there's a person in our life that we want to get to know better, that we want to hear from. We have to spend quiet time with that person, right?
If I want to get to know you better, I can't be like, all right, so you talk and I'm just
going to like be on my phone and then I'm going to go on it. We're going to take a trip and we're going to do some errands and we're going
to whatever. Like we know that knowing someone is about sitting with them and
listening and giving our full attention. And so it of course makes sense that in
order to do that with ourselves, it would take that. It would take a stillness and
a full presence to be able to listen and know ourselves better.
Has it in these three years that introspection, I think it's called introspection or something
where you can actually feel things in-
Interception.
Interception.
I learned it in my recovery.
Yeah.
Interception.
My therapist is always saying I need more of it.
That's all I know.
The thing where she's like, feel your toes turns into, I can feel I'm hungry or I can
feel like I need to talk with someone.
Are you at the point now where you can feel answers to things?
Like you can feel like you have to make a lot of decisions in your business.
A lot of partnerships, a lot of, do I open this door?
Do I close that door?
You have a huge business.
Has that translated to that where you can feel like, yes to this, no to this, or do you get signs in your body?
Yes. That's awesome. So much. It's actually that work has made running my business,
actually I'll say it this way, possible for me right now.
Wow.
Because it was starting to not be possible for me the way that I was operating previously.
Things come to me much stronger now.
I was doing a lot of burying, I guess, of just everything.
And the last few years have been about allowing the feelings of all kinds and all stripes.
And there's a destabilization that happens when that process begins.
And I still feel like I'm at the beginnings of that.
So sometimes it's a little destabilizing because I'm like, oh gosh, these highs are really
high and these lows are really fucking low.
And also no one is used to any of these.
So buckle up sisters.
Yeah.
For sure.
For sure.
But I think that, yeah, the decisions definitely,
just everything has become more clear for me.
And Amanda, you've talked about this before,
but I think about life force a lot.
Vitality and life force.
And that's something that I can actually feel in my body. life force, a lot, vitality and life force.
And that's something that I can actually feel in my body very clearly, you know, my aliveness.
And I can feel when it's being drained from me
and I can feel when it's being added to.
And that is the measure by which I'm currently evaluating all my business decisions. Is it
giving life or is it taking it away? And that might be with people who are sitting across
from me and I'm having an initial conversation with them and I gauge my vitality at the end
of that conversation. It might be with, yeah, a design project that
something's about it or sound compelling, other things, maybe not so much. And I just try and
gauge like, is this giving me life? Am I excited about it? Can I not stop thinking about it? And
you feel that gurgling and it's the. Yes. And so tuning into that has been enormously helpful for me.
And so, you know, I've been making a lot of changes in my life and in my business in the
past little bit.
And it's really incredible.
Once you start being financed by Life Force.
Life Force is what, when I think of you, I think of vitality. I think of life force.
I think that, I don't know how to explain any of this, but I'm going to try. I think
that through this last year of recovery for myself, I have learned that much of my anorexia,
control, rigidity was about suppressing life force.
Like you can see it.
You can see why am I so attracted to jungle?
I look at your writing, your clothes,
your Instagram account, and I'm like, what?
And it's real.
It's like, there's something about white lady culture
that I was raised in and like lived in
that is about rig in and like lived in that is about
rigidity and no color and no, it's about control.
I mean, my mom has looked at my closet and been like, we call it jail colors.
It's just 30 different shades of things that you'd be given in jail.
Okay.
So you're painting now.
You know, I love your paintings. Interestingly enough, I was recently
listening to an interview with you years ago and you said, I do home design, but lately when I go
to museums and look at art, I feel tingly. So tell us about that. So you felt the tingly,
is the tingly the life force? Is that what you're
going towards? And is following the tingly how you do all of your next creative decisions?
Because you're oozing creativity.
Thank you. Yeah, I am just trying to follow the tingly. Aren't we all just trying to follow
the tingly?
But you can't know the tingly.
A lot of us are not. A lot of us are not. A lot of us didn't believe tingle existed.
But we're starting to believe.
We need more tingle, y'all.
Yeah, we do.
It's so easy to get caught up in everything else, right?
Everything else.
But I think that when you feel that tingle,
it's like for the good of the realm to follow the tingle.
That's right. That's so good.
Yeah, I actually have this like wacky woo-woo theory that if everybody in the world was
following their tingle to their most tingliest tingle, that the world would be perfect.
That that's what is missing from the world,
is that people aren't allowed to just be who they are
and follow all of their hearts
and just express that for themselves.
You know, it's everyone feels so scared, scared to follow
the tingles or the tingles are so buried underneath that they don't even know how to begin. Yeah.
What's tingling now? I want to know what's the next tingly thing. And then also the home
design business is unbelievable. And then you're like, no, now I want to also paint. Mm-hmm.
How do you keep, because your painting is incredible
and there's like shows now and it's everywhere.
How do you keep that?
Something to me about the tingly is that it's intrinsically motivated.
And like for me, the second things start to be judged from the outside.
I can't maintain it. Like, I can't... One of the
lucks... It's a very lucky to me, and I'm not even saying this as a joke, I seriously believe it,
that no one likes my paintings. I'm not saying that, like, it's true, it's not good, but that
helps me because I love it. I actually love them and I love doing it and I'm at no risk
of it becoming so successful that it loses its magic. How do you maintain the intrinsic
motivation when now people are looking at it and consuming it. Do you know what I mean? I think you're wrong, Glennon, about your paintings.
And I haven't even seen them.
Well, there you go.
That's why.
No, no.
But it's you.
It's an extension of you.
And so they're beautiful.
And so people who love you are going to find them beautiful.
And I truly believe that.
That's exactly right.
They are beautiful.
And I think that when we talk about art, we're talking about perceived value and we're talking
about such different tastes across the whole world.
And for me, if my art makes one person feel good about themselves or one person finds it beautiful, that's a bonus
because I'm doing it for myself anyway and it feels beautiful to me and it's a joy to watch
myself love my paintings more the more I paint and it's not about, it's no longer mine once I put the art in the gallery, right?
It's for everyone and for myself.
And I hope people can experience my work and make, you know, it can make people feel something.
But it's also okay if people don't like my work. You know?
It doesn't have to be good for everyone. I don't like everyone else's work.
That's a good point. Faces.
This is a passion of yours and a lot of your design and your art and all of your treasures
that you collect.
I want to like roll around in your house is what I want to do.
You guys have to come over.
Oh, God.
What is it?
I mean, it could be anything.
So why faces?
What are they doing for you, for your life force?
Or why?
There's a, I don't know element to this for sure.
But I want to say something about self-expression
and expressions on the faces and about how what
that means when you read someone's expression and you feel it and it touches you.
And so for me, drawing, painting, illustrating faces creates an immediate connection. You know, like on magazine covers, they always try to have the models on the covers looking at the camera,
because when you look at the magazine cover, she's looking back at you.
And there is something very powerful about that gaze and about that connection point.
And so for me, trying to capture that in my art is just something very compelling and I really like hearing people talk about, oh, it looks like she's feeling
this or thinking this and you know, it's yours. It's so personal to you. That is what it is
for you. And so I think that's part of it, but there's still the I don't know element
to it too. How do you balance creativity and discipline? I think sometimes when you
see people who are wildly creative, you just think of them as just, you know, throwing it all to the
wind all the time and living in the moment and what, but here you are doing all of that and running
a business. You started blogging. I did too. We started like doing whatever the hell it is we're
doing at a similar time and we both did it in the same too. We started like doing whatever the hell it is we're doing at a similar time.
And we both did it in the same way. We were both bloggers.
And I heard you say that you started and had a rule for yourself
that you were going to do it five days a week.
We had a certain amount.
I started the same way and had one rule for myself.
That was that I was going to write for an hour in the morning and then press post no matter what.
And it was my way of beating my own self doubt
and not letting perfectionism keep me
from expressing myself, because I knew it would.
I knew I would screw myself because I would look it over
and think it sucked and not do it.
And so how does discipline play a role in your life now?
And how do you avoid becoming too rigid or too wild?
I'm not at risk of becoming too rigid.
I definitely lean in the other direction of the too wild.
I think that with my creative work, I don't feel I have to be disciplined. If
anything, I might have to be disciplined to get other things done when I'm in the flow
of being creative. So, you know, mom stuff or work stuff or all that, sometimes I'm like,
okay, and I'm toggling back and forth because I'm trying to stay in my creative flow. So
I don't feel like I need a lot of discipline around that. I need discipline more around
the other things to do things that I maybe have avoidance around. And routines help me
a lot with that and getting into just more regular flow, which is something I'm really
working hard at. I need that routine to help me with the discipline of the stuff that I
may have more avoidance around than things like painting where I'm kind of squeezing it in wherever I can.
And then you'll know. You'll know if you're craving it because you'll be in touch with your body enough
to feel the craving of that thing. So then you'll be able to create that in the moment,
as opposed to living from some outward discipline or outward set of guidelines or rules for your
day, right? Like you can tap in. And what kind of rituals do you keep?
So I have a pretty solid morning ritual that includes my meditation. It includes the morning
pages from the artist's way, but I oftentimes do my own thing with my journal and my pages. I actually have been doing Elizabeth Gilbert's
Dear Love prompt that I heard here on this podcast and it's been really powerful for
me. Dear Love, what would you have me know? Dear Love, what would you have me do? And
that's been really beautiful. So yeah, I spend about an hour in the morning doing my meditation
and my journal and my writing. Sometimes I draw in
my journals too. And I also pull Oracle cards and then I have some favorite Oracle decks
and have my tea on my patio and listen to the birds sing. So besides that though, I
don't really have any.
That's good.
Besides that, no original or whatever else. That's the only one then.
You listen to our stuff episode, which I'm just trying to imagine you of all people listening
to our stuff episode, because that's amazing.
And I feel like you imbue this sacredness on things that really has me rethinking everything
and that self-respect thing,
like respecting what I love and stuff.
I love a lot of my things that are inexplicable
to a lot of people, like a lot of stuff I got from Goodwill.
And I'm imbuing the same respect to it
that I feel like you're having with your beautiful things.
So can you talk to us about stuff and what it does for us
and surrounding yourself with it
and just tell us your theories?
Yeah.
So as an artist and a collector
and someone who likes to surround myself with beauty,
I love stuff and I love beautiful stuff
and I love finding treasures. It's a
real joy for me. It's the tingle, you know, finding something really beautiful that speaks
to you and calls to you. For me, it is akin to going to a museum or going to visit somebody's
art studio or something like that and taking something from that experience and bringing it home for me makes my home be the
story of my life. And I love that feeling. And I love experiencing that, not just with
myself, but with others. Like I was recently at the Frida Kahlo Museum in Mexico City,
where it's her home. And just walking through Frida Kahlo's home and seeing where she cooked and seeing
all the beautiful pots and pans and just imagining her life and the care that she took to choose
out all these things and what they say about her and looking at her books and looking at
her paints and her paint brushes and her wheelchair in front of her easel and the bed with the
mirror. You know, it's just like, just seeing her home as an extension of who she is
and being to understand so much more about her and her life
and the beauty that she brought to the world through that experience was so meaningful to me.
And I think it also just clicked for me. One of the reasons why I enjoy
having a home beat and extension of myself in that way, it's that same thing. It feels good to be
known. I just want to express myself. I want people to be able to experience it and feel it.
And if it makes me feel good, I'm curious to know if it makes you feel good too. And
it might not. I don't know. That's okay. But it's about finding the resonances. So I go
through different phases of loving different things and cycling different things through
my home. And I have different sculptures or different art pieces and I'll look at them
and we'll have a little conversation. It'll make me smile.
I think about when I found it, who I bought it from, what they told me about the item.
So for me, it's very similar to reading a book or something like that where it's just
stories.
It's beautiful stories.
You describe it as like music for your eyes around your house.
It's like you have music on in the house and that makes you feel a certain way.
And what your eyes fall on makes you feel a certain way.
And the importance of beauty and how personal that is.
It's very personal.
I totally understand people who are like, I need minimalism.
Like I just have a lot of noise in my head and I need it to be visually quiet.
It's not that I don't get that.
I totally do.
It's just not what resonates with me and it's not what sort of ignites my imagination.
What are you struggling with lately?
What do you wrestle with these days?
What are you working on?
I'm struggling with something like I feel the tingle for a certain thing, for painting
or for music, but my whole life is set up for other things and where and when and how sometimes do I allow myself to just follow the tingle
and how and when and where sometimes do I do the thing that sometimes feels like the
responsible thing or the thing that's maybe better for more people. And I think that's
just probably something that is never going to be 100% clear.
But I'm trying to find tools to help me with it. And I think that I'm also just candidly
struggling with just keeping my body healthy. I went through this two year gung ho, all in, eating super clean, exercising a lot like I was in it. And my
head's just not in it the same way that it was five or six months ago. I'm journaling
and I'm like, my head's not in it. What should I do about that? And I think it's because
I'm pretty good at kind of goal setting and like reaching that goal.
But when I get to the goal, I have this like now what kind of feeling and with where I
was at with my health, where I was trying to reach certain goals like with my cholesterol
and get my cholesterol down and do all this stuff.
And I like hit the numbers I wanted to hit and all that.
And I'm like, oh shit, now I gotta keep it here forever.
That does not feel tingly, just a forever job with no reward.
The keep it here forever job is not super tingly.
It's terrible.
So I'm struggling with that.
I'm struggling with that, honestly.
That's been something that's been appearing in my journal a lot lately and I haven't figured
it out.
The figuring out of it probably just means that getting more comfortable with never figuring
it out, but here we are.
God, I relate to that.
It's different energy, man.
It's like, give me a challenge. All
right. You tell me I'm fucked. You tell me I'm anorexic. You tell me I've got
trauma. You, I'm on the journey. I recently said to my therapist, all right,
what am I gonna work on now? And she said, I don't think you should work on
anything else. Just relax. And I was like, okay, well, I'm going
to get another fucking therapist then. What do you mean?
What do you mean?
So now I'm just supposed to maintain being a healthy human being. What does that mean?
Maintenance energy is very different than challenge energy.
Maintenance energy. That's exactly right. I struggle with maintenance energy.
And so, yeah, I really think that's a big part of my work right now,
is that not sprinting thing.
And it's just like, it's okay to walk.
You know, it's actually great to walk.
And it's the same kind of energy with, you know, my health,
and it's the same kind of energy in business,
which we recently closed down our online shop, which was a big move for us in the business.
But it was about many things.
But for me, one of the main things was about harnessing a slower rhythm for myself because
slowing down just helps me to listen more.
It's really hard to feel the tingles when you're moving really quickly
and just trying to get more comfortable
in that maintenance energy.
And maybe we should find a sexier word than maintenance
because that might help.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'll work on that.
You can work on that too.
Because you like the word, putting them together.
If it makes you feel any better,
I am a former Olympian,
although you're allowed to say Olympian forever.
I've done all the things physically
that a person could do in the soccer world
and never not one day in my life
have I ever wanted to go work out.
Never not once.
And so I say this to you as hopefully like some relief
and I don't even know if we're talking about working out
but the eating well and like, you know,
the working out like all that to me it's maintenance energy.
And I have no answer for you,
but like just to know that like you have somebody also
that struggles with maintenance energy
and that person was an extraordinary athlete.
And that's the mindset that I had my whole athletic career.
So no fix here, but just straight up with you,
with you hardcore on this path.
I think we need to add a tingle.
I think we need to add a tingle to this. I think we're going to have to figure out some, I know you already did the gymnastics,
so that can't be the thing, but what could be like a cool workout thing that gives you
the tingles?
Like maybe we're going to do some acrobatics.
Maybe we're going to do some pole stuff.
People like the pole stuff.
I know that was 10 years ago, but maybe we're going to learn how to cook something really
good.
Maybe someone's going to come and teach you how to cook.
Then you're learning something.
It's a goal something.
I just feel like it's not going to, you're not a maintenance person.
Look at you.
That face wasn't made for maintenance.
That face was made for something else.
What gives you the tingle now?
And like what dreams do you have
still lingering? Like do you still have manifestations of yourself that you
can imagine but haven't happened? What do you still envision? Yeah, so I'm really excited
about two things. The first is that I'm working on a book right now with my mom.
Nope.
Who's a developmental psychologist.
This woman was raised by two psychologists.
That's why she likes herself and her voice is so nice.
God damn it.
Yeah.
So very excited.
It's about halfway done, but it's called Grow.
And my mom's doing the lion's share of the writing, but it's about moving through difficult
transitions and it's going to come with a card deck because I do my Oracle card practice
and it's been so instrumental for me.
So that project and working on it with my mom, and I'm doing all the paintings and the illustrations for the cards and the book and just collaborating with her on the
concept. And so that's been just such a beautiful soulful project where it's kind of encapsulating
a lot of these different activities and things that I've been doing for the past few years
to kind of get myself unstuck and then layering on her 40, 50 years of experience as a psychologist.
And so that's an extremely exciting and fun and different project for me.
So that's beautiful.
And then the other thing that I'm really excited about, I'm starting song club because I love
to sing.
And I always thought I was going to be a singer.
That was my thing. to be a singer. That was my thing.
I'm a singer.
And I haven't been doing that in the world for many years,
just sort of by myself at home with my little family.
And we all play different instruments
and like to make music together.
But I've been doing different book clubs
for the past couple of years
and getting so much out of the book clubs
and love them so much.
So I decided to start a song club.
So meeting with a handful of friends and family this weekend to just sing together.
Oh, yes.
So that is something that I've been
working on and saying I was going to do for a long time. So finally doing it.
And so I'll report back.
Or if you guys wanna come.
We have a kid who's a singer.
We have a kid who's a singer and in her high school,
she started a club called Chords and Conversations.
And they just sing and talk about albums and music.
Beautiful.
I think it's so incredibly healing
to sing in community. And I used to sing in all kinds of choirs and I feel like it's instant
harmony. It's instant harmony and it's embodied. It's so beautiful and I can sing by myself
all I want, but I can't get the harmonies by myself. So I'm really excited about that.
You are a beautiful song.
I love that we're ending on harmony
because I have been thinking about how all of your
philosophies about how to create a beautiful space,
like texture and focal point and rhythm. It's like how you make a beautiful space like texture and focal point and rhythm. It's like how you make a beautiful space
and how you make a beautiful life and harmony is part of all of that. And so it's just,
I think there's a lot of parallels of what you're doing and it's not just about spaces. It's about
making your life express who you are and having harmony in it.
And I think that's, thank you.
Cause your work is really, really special.
Thank you so much.
The feeling is very mutual with you guys.
So yeah, it's so beautiful.
We love you Pod Squad.
Go check out Justina.
You probably already know her,
but if you haven't just trust me,
and she just makes you come to life a little more.
We love you.
We'll see you next time.
If this podcast means something to you, it would mean so much to us.
If you'd be willing to take 30 seconds to do these three things first, can you
please follow or subscribe
to We Can Do Hard Things?
Following the pod helps you
because you'll never miss an episode
and it helps us because 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 created and hosted
by Glennon Doyle, Abby Wambach, and Amanda Doyle
in partnership with Odyssey.
Our executive producer is Jenna Wise-Burman,
and the show is produced by Lauren Lograsso,
Alison Schott, Dina Kleiner, and Bill Schultz.