We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Five Criticism Survival Strategies (Best Of)
Episode Date: April 26, 2025In this bonus episode, Glennon shares her “Sort Your Mail” rules for dealing with the inevitable criticisms you will receive from daring to say anything, do anything, or be anything. Learn to sort... your mail so you can keep showing up! 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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Okay, flights on Air Canada. How about Prague?
Ooh, Paris. Those gardens.
Gardens. Um, Amsterdam. Tulip Festival.
I see your festival and raise you a carnival in Venice.
Or Bermuda has carnaval.
Ooh, colorful.
You want colorful. Thailand. Lantern Festival. Boom.
Book it. Um, how did we get to Thailand from Prague?
Oh, right. Prague.
Oh, boy.
Choose from a world of destinations, if you can.
Air Canada. Nice travels.
[♪ Music playing.
Ooh, well, welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things.
I feel so delighted.
You do?
Yeah, I just feel delighted.
I've had more coffee than usual,
but also I love this place.
I love talking to you too.
I love what we talk about and I love who we talk to.
We just love our community.
So today we're going to continue a conversation.
We started with episode 136, Carefrontation,
and received a lot of feedback on about,
do-do-do, criticism and how to deal with it.
Is that a question mark?
No, it's an exclamation mark point.
Well, it kind of is a question mark because the whole word,
it's curious, the word.
Is that word accurately
describe what we're talking about? Is it feedback? Does it even count as feedback if it's from
strangers? Because presumably you have to direct something to someone for it to be a feedback.
Yes, exactly. It's a feed out if it's public. Right. So, and I love that. It's a a feed to. It's a feed out if it's public. Right.
So, and I love that framing.
It's a force feed.
Yes.
I love that framing.
It's a, yes.
I love that framing because I think today what we're going to do is figure out what actually
is criticism that we should consider and what is actually just misogyny
being vomited into the air
that is not personal to us.
What actually is necessary
for us to consider to become bigger and better
and deeper and more beautiful and truer,
and what needs to be filtered out
so that we can take in what matters.
And I actually avoid talking about public criticism.
I don't think I've ever talked about it in a big way,
mostly because number one,
I feel like whatever I focus on just gets bigger
and that part of this life has been confusing,
scary, murky to me and unhelpful.
And so- You mean like Twitter or people like writing you letters that have problems with you?
No. I don't actually mean that.
I think that I have had big luck in terms of the community of people who interact with me directly.
Unbelievable, actually.
Like the level of respect and care and kindness.
I mean, people write about our social media feeds
about how unbelievably kind they are, right?
I'm actually so amazed at it.
It's incredible.
And it was a painstaking process of building that slowly
over time and like creating a real culture.
But no, I just kind of mean the talking about me out there.
And what I hear and read in comment sections,
here on the internet, away from communities that I curate.
And the other reason why I avoid it
is because it feels so specific,
like to be a kind of a public person out there, but not-
Right, like not a universally understood thing.
Like, don't y'all hate it when you pick up a People magazine
and people are talking shit about you?
Like, not exactly hashtag relatable to folks like me.
And I don't like that.
Whenever I listen to like famous people talk
about their plight in the world,
it just feels boring to me
because it doesn't feel universal.
However, in thinking about this more,
I think I may be doing our communities a disservice
by not talking about it a little bit more.
Because what I know is that when the world talks about women,
it's not just about that woman.
It's a way of policing all women,
because women read that shit and we think,
oh, thank God that's not me.
Or like, even if it's subconscious, they think,
well, that's why I don't put myself out there,
because I don't want that to happen to me.
It's like the burning of the witch
that everybody has to come to the town square to watch.
It's the public witch burning that is not just about that woman.
It's like, so, are you watching this? Stay in line.
Right?
Right. It's a chilling effect on women standing up and having a voice in any way, because we do know that
they're much more likely to be subject to attacks.
It's open season.
Like a woman steps up and says something about anything that's important, and then it isn't
what she says.
It's open season. Her looks, her family, her level of crazy, her hair,
her whatever is subject to attack. And that's what I want to get into because
one thing that I can do to make it helpful is that I have found over the last 15 years
that there is kind of a system you can use to make misogynistic criticism less chilling.
There is a way of seeing it clearly
that makes what feels very personal at the moment
become completely impersonal.
It's not personal.
None of this is personal.
I'm gonna tell you how I do that.
Like the sorting system, I do that.
And then the other reason that I think it's important
is because when I talk to my friends
who are not in as public positions as me
about the kind of criticism I get,
they absolutely relate to it.
It's the same form in their offices or PTA meetings or it's the same.
It's a little bit different exposure, but the same types. Exactly. So here's, and you
know this strategy sister, because we've been doing it for so long, but when something goes
out into the world or I'm stupid enough to like log in to an article that someone's written about me, which I don't do very often
anymore. I used to do all the time, but now I'll do it like
once every five years because I don't know why. There's an
onslaught of feed out.
Okay.
Force feed.
Force feed. Right, right, right.
Or just like, you know, in the ether, right?
And at first, the things that are said feel so horrifically horrible because they are
about me.
But what I figured out is if you are a woman and you put anything out into the world, let's
imagine, okay, you know I love a metaphor. Let's do this. You're
a woman who leaves your home to put something out into the world, whether it's like a work
in an office or a piece of art or an opinion or whatever it is. You've gone and put that
piece of work into the mailbox. Put the flag up, go back to your home. When you come back to that mailbox,
you're gonna have some feed out, okay, from the world.
Just pages and letters and envelopes of feedback,
feed out, whatever it is.
You're not gonna take that feedback into your house yet.
It doesn't all belong in your house.
First, you're gonna to sort the feedback,
and here's what you're going to find.
I think there's probably four categories, maybe five now
for me, five categories of feedback for me.
The first will be about my looks.
Something about how I look.
I'm too ugly to do this work.
I'm too pretty to do this work. I'm too pretty to do this work.
I have too much Botox. I do not have enough Botox. I wear way too much makeup. I don't have enough makeup.
My hair is too gray and I should dye it. If I were a good feminist, I would not dye it.
I am too skinny to be talking about bodies. I'm wrinkly. My clothes are ridiculous.
It's something about the way that I appear.
By the way, as an aside,
when we're talking about feedback,
let's just not ever talk about other people's bodies at all.
Yep.
Like we have a rule in our family
that's like mind your own body.
Don't talk about other people's bodies.
That's been hard for me because I come from a sports world
and I'm like, oh my gosh, you look great.
It's part of like the whole culture.
It's so hard.
I know I'm learning.
It's hurtful and scary to hear about your looks from strangers.
It is also completely and totally irrelevant and ridiculous.
It's junk mail.
If you have that stack of mail in your hand, feed out from the world.
Anything that has to do with your looks goes in the trash.
Or recycling if you're responsible.
Okay, so anything about your appearance, junk mail. You're not taking it inside.
The second category, because the culture knows that women are supposed to be valued for how we
look, how we present, and our relationships. It will be about my relationships.
Can I pause one second on the first category? Yes, yes.
About looks. It's super hard to view that as not personal because we think if I didn't look like
this, I wouldn't get this feedback. But if you could instead think about it as an indicia of
Instead, think about it as an indicia of that is where people go when people see a woman that is powerful or creative or is shaking the status quo in any way, whether it's an
idea at a meeting or whatever, and they go through a checklist.
This is the checklist.
And the last thing that they can get to is her looks.
If you look at Justice Sotomayor when she was at the confirmation hearings,
the media reports that were about her looks. If you look at when Hillary Clinton ran for office,
it is the criticism equivalent of slapstick comedy. Exactly. If you can't get something at
a higher level, you go there. And so although it feels deeply personal, it from a structural
although it feels deeply personal, it from a structural gender policing standpoint,
it is universally accepted that that is the last nuclear
option to get at a woman who is trying to change things.
It's also the low hanging fruit.
It's from the least creative people.
It's from the people who can't think any further than that.
Oh, that's good.
Because if you could think of something else, you would.
It's not something that is worth your time to consider.
And the other thing is you can't win. If you're trying to
respond to criticism in a way that's making you better, it's almost like,
how is this going to make me better? You're not going to win that one.
It's irrelevant.
Yeah.
It's totally irrelevant. But they also know that they can
get to women because women are supposed to value who we are in relation to other people
with relationships. So the second category of criticism that I is in the ether for me
is I'm a terrible wife. How could Abby ever be with me? I'm so, way too much. Why did
she marry me? I'm a terrible mom. Can you imagine
talking about these things with your kids? What a terrible mom she is. I'd rather die
than be her kid.
Oh my God.
You know, Craig, thank God he left. I'm giving you specific examples for me, but the like
general one would be, well, I wouldn't want to be her person. I wouldn't want to be her mom.
This relationship. So, check. Right. This is the next category of junk mail. Because
I feel like it's very basic, but important to remember that the only people we should
be taking feedback about our relationships are the people with whom we are in relationship.
That's right. Very basic, but like junk mail.
Nothing about our relationships comes in the house.
So the corporate version of this would be the very engaged, prolific corporate attorney
who is killing it at their job and people present under the guise of concern.
Wow, you know, I mean, I know she's doing such a great job, but she has a nanny at home
all the time.
She hardly ever sees it.
When does she see her kids?
Feigned as concern.
Feigned as concern.
Like, oh, I just, yeah.
I'm just worried.
I'm just worried.
No, you're not worried, Kathy.
You're not worried.
Okay.
Third category. So this one's tricky,
but it's personality. Oh.
It's a big category, but you'll know when you see it. For me, it's like, she's so controlling.
She's crazy. She's too much. There's lots of like, she's too much. She's too much.
She's too much.
She's too much.
She's a lot.
She's a lot.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So these things could be true, could be not.
Most of those things I discuss anyway about my own damn self, but here's what is important
to remember. When you look at these categories, looks,
relationship, personality, none of these categories
have to do with my work.
What I've done is I've gone to put my work in the mailbox
to send it out.
And what the whole world has done because I'm a woman,
is ignore what I put in the mailbox and look at me.
And I've said this before in the pod,
I'm gonna say it again, it's very important to me
for every woman who's putting work out in the world
to hear this, when a man puts work out into the
world, the world looks at the work and says, is this work worthy? And when a woman puts
work out into the world, the world looks at the woman and says, is she even worthy of putting
this work out? They don't even look at the work. Why is she talking? Not what has she said, but why are we letting her talk?
Who is she to think that we,
to have the audacity to believe that we should listen to her?
Yep.
Why does she feel so entitled to be able to say what she is saying?
Right. Exactly.
It's not about what she's saying, it's the entitlement.
One of the things I think about all the time is Right. Exactly. It's not about what she's saying. It's the entitlement.
One of the things I think about all the time is when we look at the feedback for our work,
whether we're in an office, whether we're an artist, whoever we are, the first question
we have to ask ourselves when we're considering whether we're going to take this criticism in and think about it is, is it even about my work?
Is it about my work?
And the second one is, is it gendered?
Because when I talk to my male counterparts in this, they are stunned by these categories,
stunned by them.
They don't get this kind of feedback.
They don't have to sort their mail 89% down to the teeny, it's that their feedback is about their work. So it's like another added job that women have to do. Along with all the other ones is to sort the mail. Here's what I want to talk about with this fourth category, because the fourth category would be stuff that's actually about our work.
that's actually about our work. Well, because there is stuff that we do need to look at
about ourselves, about our work, to make us better, for sure.
Absolutely. I think we have to be smart enough
to sort the first 80% of it out.
And we have to be strong and wise enough to take that 20%
and bring it in and let it change us and make us better. However, here's the trick with that 20% and bring it in and let it change us and make us better.
However, here's the trick with that 20% is that even when it's about your work, it can
still be gendered.
For example, early on, I was working with a company and I asked a question about my
work being disseminated to the world.
A very specific business question. question about my work being disseminated to the world.
A very specific business question.
And I got a call back from the president of that company
who said to me, so I wanted to get back to you.
I know that you're a control freak.
So I need to answer your question.
And I felt so like, wait, because I
asked a question about my own business,
and I'm a control freak.
If I were a man, there is no way in hell
this response would have been framed that way.
You experienced this, sister, right?
Gendered feedback.
What's the feedback that you get in terms of your work
that you feel like is gendered?
Well, I think this was a shock to me
because I think it's really interesting
how much it happens between and among women.
Yes.
To, that was a woman by the way,
that was a woman who called me.
In my experience, it has come back to me
in terms of when I ask, you know,
straightforward questions, accountability questions,
what I view as non-confrontational questions,
or just pushing, which is literally my job, is to advance things by pushing
them through, I will get feedback from a colleague of the person that I'm trying
to get the answers from that, you know, you two just don't, you don't really, you
don't work great together. You two, you just kind of don't really, you don't work great together.
You two, you just kind of don't click.
And it's the idea that I am some sort of way
that is untenable because I'm asking those things
and is often, most often with women.
And so-
Is it because you don't do the equivalent
of a million smiley faces after your text
in your communication?
Like you're not bubbly enough?
Cause I see a lot of that.
People expect women to be a certain way with each other.
And when you're direct and clear,
that is viewed as aggressive.
Right.
Well, I think that when men get fired up, they're viewed as passionate and unrelenting
and devoted and driven.
Yes.
And when women get fired up, they are seen as out of control and petulant and...
Difficult to work with.
Difficult.
Difficult to work with, right.
I think it's intensity.
When a woman is intense,
the world is not comfortable with it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
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I also think just speak about the business approach to this.
It is a calculated move for whomever you're doing business with, sister,
the boss that says, you know, I don't think I'm just really, I don't think
I can't work with her. Like there's something about her.
They're saying all this stuff to a woman on purpose and that woman is tasked with the
job of taming sister.
And then that woman becomes more tamed in the process because she's learning, oh shit,
I can't be like that.
Well, and this is why it's so important to talk to each other.
I have a dear friend who works on a team.
She's complete badass.
One of the members of her team called their higher up
out for something that was, who was a man,
who was completely out of line on something.
Nobody else knew that the other team member
had called the person out.
Then dude calls all the other members of the team
other than her and says, I'm worried about her mental.
Like she's just seems a little overwhelmed
and a little overworked.
And I think we might need to pull this back from her.
I'm just really worried about her.
Okay. Everybody else is like, oh my God.
I guess we are, she is, she does handle a lot.
She must be stressed.
Like maybe we should pull this back from her.
Nobody knows until she calls and says,
I just had this crazy issue with this dude.
And then they put together that she had had the issue
and then dude called the rest of them
to pull back the work under the guise of,
we're just really worried.
We need to make sure.
Oh my God.
It's scary.
It goes back to that episode with Natalie Portman.
If some dude says she's crazy, you say back, what bad thing did you do to her?
Yes.
Yeah.
So you ask yourself, is it gender?
There's another, and I want to actually broach this because we usually don't and most women
don't because it's so dicey, but there's also another category of criticism that comes down to money and
ambition. I've definitely noticed this one recently. It's some version of how
dare she make money off of her work. Okay? And like all I care about is money
and I'm only saying this because this is a version of what all women it comes
down to she's too ambitious. She's too ambitious. She's too ambitious.
There's just no way to win this one.
As a woman, you must ignore this.
Because I was thinking recently, I saw like a brush of comments about
I'm too ambitious and I make money and I don't do anything for the world.
Like I'm just this greedy person.
And I'm reading these comments like,
I want everybody to know that I have this sorting system.
It still like hurts me.
I panic every time.
I read this stuff and I'm like,
my immediate thought is I have to stop.
I have to stop this.
I have to stop this.
I'm out of control.
How could I be letting this happen?
It's the feeling of
I was safe.
And for some reason, I'm like an animal that put myself
in the middle of a savanna with nowhere to hide and I have no protection and I have done
this to myself and why the hell would I not get picked off by a predator?
Like that's how it feels.
And by the way, I think that's how it's meant to feel.
I think it taps into something of us that is primal.
It is not logical.
It is not something that a sorting system can necessarily fix because it strikes to
our fear of being picked off.
That's really interesting.
It's safety.
It's safety.
It's attachment.
It's, I have done something to threaten my safety and connection to human beings and I'm gonna be annihilated
right and not only that
but I
Deserve this I have to do it myself in a position to lose my safety
it's like it grows too close to the Sun yes, it's I I
Should have known that if I had the audacity
to use my voice, if I had the audacity to try to make change,
if I had the audacity to think that I deserve
to be leading that thing, then I deserve
whatever consequences I brought on myself.
Exactly.
Instead of, I have the right to be both safe and heard, to be both loud and safe. We
immediately say, my bad, retreat. Exactly. And that's how it feels to me in the
moment. Like, oh my god, retreat, retreat. I've done that. I've made my family
unsafe. I've made me unsafe. Right? It's not like they didn't warn me. That's what my
whole life was. Every cultural message, every witch burning,
everyone was telling me not to do this.
I did it.
I deserve it.
But then I tell myself, if that's the message,
if that's what they want me to do is stop, just stop.
Go away. Then maybe it's like a huge act of
resistance and beauty and freedom just to not stop. What if I just don't go
away? What I want to say about the whole ambition thing and you're a narcissist,
everybody's a narcissist these days, if you're a woman and you open up your mouth
about your life, you're a narcissist.
So get ready for that one.
But when I read that thing about how I'm just ambitious,
I panicked about like,
I don't do anything for the world for five minutes.
And then I was like, wait,
I did found and I'm the president of Together Rising.
So like I do every single day raise money
for people all over the world.
That's basically what we do with our time. What's that number now?
Together Rising has raised over 45 million dollars for people in need in
our country and all around the globe. Now here's why I tell you that not to
like prove anything for myself. It's to prove to you that you can't win that one.
As a woman I am, don't worry world,
I'm gonna earn my ability to speak
by doing all of this good stuff for the world
because if you're a woman, you cannot do well
unless you're doing good.
Or they will crucify you.
So you have to be doing good, doing good.
No, no, no, don't worry, I'm doing good, I'm doing good.
Well, I'm here to tell you,
it doesn't matter how much good you do.
They will still come after you.
So don't worry about that.
A woman should be able to be out in the world
and using her voice and doing well and being ambitious
without doing all of that do good.
Just imagine you got your like VP of company, Inc.
Or your president of or CEO of LLCZ.
And could you ever imagine being like, president of or CEO of LLCZ.
And could you ever imagine being like,
that guy, I went to college with him. All he wants to do is work hard and succeed and make money.
Can you believe that?
Bastard.
What an actual asshole.
No one ever say that.
It would be said in a, that guy, he has been driven since the day I knew him.
He's been hustling.
He's CEO of that company.
He does so well.
That's right.
We put the bitch in am bitches.
That's what we do.
We've got our hundred percent of our feed out shit.
Okay.
We are sitting at the bottom of the driveway.
We are laden.
We are covered with feedback because we are a woman.
But we have gotten rid of everything that looks like our...
That's about our appearance or other women's appearance.
We've gotten rid of everything that's about our relationships
because these are from people with whom we are not in relationship.
We have gotten rid of everything that's about our personality.
Because they don't have to hang out with us actually.
We're not friends with them, they're not friends with us. Like this is not about our personality. This is about our work. So all of that is gone.
We have the little 20%, but we've also weeded out what's gendered in that.
So if it's talking about us being ambitious, if it's talking about us being control freaks,
whatever, we've weeded out. We've got this little 5% left.
Little pile. 5% left. Little pile.
5% left.
It's just a little pile.
Now, friends, do we think we're taking those five letters
into our house?
Because we are not.
We are not done sorting.
Oh.
This is one category that I have developed for myself
just in the last couple of years.
And I think it's been the most important. Well,
the question is, we've got these five letters. Are all of these kind? Are they respectful?
Oh, they have to be kind. Are they respectful? Kind.
Yes. Okay, everybody. This has been life changing for me. I used to listen. If it's about my work, I'll take it no matter how it's said,
no matter how it makes me feel inside,
no matter if it's clear this person hates me.
If it's about my work, I have to take it.
I used to listen to everything people said to me
about my work, however they said it.
No longer, okay?
I am a communicator, that is my work.
And if you don't communicate without snark or malice
to someone you don't even know,
I'm not considering your criticism.
I do not have to take in things people say to me
that are not kind or respectful.
And the reason why is because that kind of criticism
can't be trusted because it's about the person
who's doing the criticism,
it's not about the person who's receiving it because there's some kind of like malice
or snark or hate in it that can't be trusted.
Do you two know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
About that.
Like it reminds me like when we get in arguments and I say it's not what you say.
It's almost how you say it in a way.
Yeah.
It's like you get to have a boundary as an adult. You get to insist upon
decency. If you hate me and I can tell that you hate me from the way you're saying something to me,
I don't have to let that in. Don't think it's about our highest and best. And that I think
is universally applicable to folks who are operating on the internet. It reminds me of what you said
about how that becomes a tug of war where if you put something out in the world and then somebody
else pulls back on it and says in a way with malice of like this is horseshit and this is why,
if you choose to pick up the tug of war and tug back and forth with them, that is the
way you're occupying your time and your energy, is doing that.
Whereas if you let go of the rope, you can now move on and create something else.
So that applies to everyday people from an internet perspective.
It doesn't make sense to waste your time engaging with those people.
But I'm thinking in the context of a corporate environment.
The rules of corporate engagement don't always dictate,
especially if you're in certain corporate climates,
that people behave with kindness and empathy.
And you can also get a little bit into the gendered space
because you must deliver that in a kind way,
can be at some point on
a spectrum with the you didn't use enough exclamation points and smiley faces in a corporate
setting.
Okay.
So maybe kind isn't the right word.
Isn't it necessary to deliver criticism with some level of respect?
Because I want to try to get at what I'm trying to get at here,
like to get deeper.
I do think this applies to friendships,
to corporate America, to everything,
because there is a way of communicating criticism to women
that actually is about the person's internal misogyny.
That's what I mean you can't consider it
because it's about that person.
I think I told you this story recently.
One of our kids was at the sleepover
and all the girls at the sleepover were talking about
how much they hate Olivia Rodrigo.
This and this and this and this
and they can't stand Olivia Rodrigo.
And they get around to our kid and our kid's like,
you know what, I used to feel that way
about Olivia Rodrigo until I figured out that like,
I just was really jealous of her
because it feels like she just became a star so fast
and she is so famous and pretty and talented
and it just made me feel bad.
And so I figured out that like,
I just was jealous kind of, made me feel icky
and that icky made it easier to say I hate her.
I feel like there's a way of offering criticism and there's this undertone or wicked thing in it
that sets off alarm bells in me that is like, this actually is not about my work.
This is not about furthering our work.
This is about this thing that this person has.
They have a problem with me.
And don't you think that happens all the time in corporate America?
I think it does. And I think the thing underlying that, like the question would be, is this
a person or feedback that you could ever make right without abandoning yourself.
Yes.
Because there's certain people that deliver that
as retribution for violating their rules,
how they see the world,
the way they believe you should behave,
that any change that you make is,
besides disappearing, is never going to satisfy them.
So by definition, it doesn't make any sense for you to entertain that.
Because the only way that you're going to appease that person is by saying nothing,
doing nothing and being nothing.
That's right.
So I think that's a category.
Now that said, I think that a lot of women are victims of this kind of,
you didn't say it nicely enough
and therefore I'm gonna discount what you're saying
in the corporate world.
And I feel like that is something that I've experienced.
Like you didn't couch it in suite.
If not, no, JK, just joking.
I think, I just think that maybe we should,
as opposed to saying, here's what we need to do,
here's what I need you to do,
this is the information I need by the end of the day.
That that can be seen as she is demanding,
she is unreasonable, she is not kind.
That's direct and respectful to me.
Like if somebody says to me, this is the thing,
this is the thing, this is the thing, the end.
I don't mean sweet.
Okay, I mean that, I mean direct. What I'm saying is when there's this is the thing, this is the thing. The end. That's, I don't mean sweet. Okay. I mean that.
I mean direct.
What I'm saying is when there's snark in it,
when there's like an undertone of something else.
And I do think you're right that it's maybe I'm focusing,
maybe it's more of an internet thing.
Yes, it is.
But to me clear, like as Brene says, clear is kind.
Like give me clear.
We don't want to get into the thing where we're like,
well, I don't like how you said
that to me.
That was mean.
That was mean.
You know, because you can very much get into the content policing where you're like, you're
not being nice.
You're not being sweet to each other.
No, she's just telling you the truth and it feels like shit to you because that truth
hurts you.
Right.
Right.
But there's a way to deliver the truth that is clear, that is without the hate tentacles underneath it.
What I have to do as a sensitive human being,
who also has to be brave enough to be out there and bring in the 5% of criticism, is...
Which I still think is a lot.
Yeah.
I mean, from the internet.
Like, I think the only people that you should even entertain taking criticism from are people
that you know and respect.
Yeah.
Period.
End of story.
Like the internet, it may or may not even be a human being.
I know.
Like I just have a big problem and I know you've built an amazing community, but I was
born into the 2011, 10 years, Twitter
was fairly new and every single soccer game I would play in, I would have the same amount
of love messages that I had hate messages that I didn't pass it when I shot it.
Like always you have to consider who the sources, like who is out there feeding you with some of this feedback or feed out or criticism.
And there's a disconnect between the way we understand the internet too because you were a famous person.
So everybody was tweeting you. You didn't know who they were. You were famous.
But mine's different because I've like slowly built this community of people who actually know and care about each other.
Yeah.
So it's different.
I actually do care.
I know you get upset.
You care.
And I look at my Twitter feed and I have no care in the world.
No, I know.
And you're always baffled by how much I care about you.
And you're like wanting to fall out.
I know.
I know. I know.
If we're trying to draw this parallel to the extent that it's possible between your workplace, Glennon, which is among this community and predominantly on the
internet, versus where a lot of people experience this in the workplace, Glennon, which is among this community and predominantly on the internet,
versus where a lot of people experience this in the workplace.
I think it's some people view all conflict as problematic and mean.
Mm-hmm.
And that is not my experience, nor is it like what the business data says about conflict.
There's two sets of conflicts and there's a difference between a constructive
conflict and destructive conflict. The way destructive conflict is presented,
it actually can bring down the morale of the entire department. It reduces
the success of the business and that is similar to you getting destructive criticism online that you
actually should not take into account, but you do.
And then you want to run away.
It's not just that.
It's also that this people who don't know us, don't know whatever,
come into the comments, say something horrible to me.
And then I'm thinking, here's the witch burning that all my people who were trying to build this community of being bold and brave and being who we are,
are seeing that and it's doing the opposite of what I want to do with this community,
which they're trying to scare them.
They're trying to shut women up.
So that is the bless and block situation.
I don't anymore like struggle with cruelty.
Should I try to win them over?
No.
If someone's cruel to me, in my comments,
just bless and block, bye bye.
And I don't think about you again.
And then there's also this idea of not getting so haughty
that you don't believe that people
that can provide you
feedback have valuable either lived experience or insights that that are in
our blind spots. Businesses and communities are made stronger by
constructive conflict and that's like when you have all these different ideas and worldviews and when you're able
to express them and receive them without being defensive, that's what makes you more aligned
with your goals and your missions.
And I feel like we have that a lot. I do think that oftentimes when we have said something or done something,
we are able to say, oh, I am reading what you're saying and that is a good point that
I had not considered. Yeah. And I appreciate that. And I'm metabolizing that. And we're
going to come back and repair that.
The reason we can do that is because we know how to filter out the 98%.
And so when that 2% comes, the biggest growth periods of my entire life career wise, which
have also been the most painful are when somebody has come to me and said, what you just said
or what you just did is an absolute reflection of your privilege.
And here's why that thing is hurtful.
And get your shit together.
Direct, clear.
I can tell it's somebody that doesn't hate me,
that isn't excited.
That's what it is.
It's excited.
It's reveling in the chance.
It's excited.
You can tell when people have just been waiting for you and they're not sad you messed up,
they're excited you messed up.
That's right.
That's what I'm trying to get at.
That's what I meant by like the tentacles of like excitement.
Like, oh, she's been waiting to take her down and now it's not that.
It's like people who are like, oh, we kind of believe in what you're doing and here's
where you went off.
And like that stuff, you know, sister, that it breaks my heart at first.
It's like there's no worse, more painful criticism than like when you've hurt people who you respect and love.
And that will, I will stop everything.
Yeah.
Criticism is one thing, but when you tell me that you have hurt or damaged or caused harm, that is something that I will take inside with me.
That's the male I will take inside with me.
I will sit with it.
I will let it change me.
I will be in the fetal position for a couple of days, but I will come back.
I will apologize for real.
I will do whatever work I didn't do before that even made that mistake possible and allow it to
change me completely.
And that I think circles us back to that first episode that we did on criticism a while back
where it's the difference between people who can't wait to bring you down versus the people who are willing to
help you stand up better.
Yes.
And those people are making an investment in you and even when it feels like shit and
even when it's hard to take, it would be easier for those folks,
whether you're in relationship with them, whether you're in business with them, or
whether they're in your communities, to just not tell you and then talk shit
about you. So they're helping you stand up by sharing it with you. And it's best
not to be defensive to that. And it's best to just take a deep breath.
Adam Grant talks about like, everybody needs support groups
and everybody needs challenge networks.
And so your support network is people are there for you
no matter what.
And to support you and your challenge network
is people that are gonna tell you the truth
no matter what, even if it's about
something you did wrong, because that is how you get to be more aligned with what you're
trying to do.
I have a question.
Are there any public facing women who have gotten out of their life without like who
have who have won?
No, and ended up on top?
No, you are either to this or you're to that.
There's this line that you're supposed to land
the right place on, but no woman has ever landed
in the right place for the world to be like that.
I remember watching a documentary with Hillary Clinton
where they were like, okay, she's being too abrasive.
She's being too whatever.
And her campaign manager saying,
can you point us towards the woman
who has gotten this right so we can like,
figure out how to, no.
No one has ever gotten it right.
All you're gonna do is keep moving back and forth.
And when you get to the other part,
they're gonna push you back the other way.
You can't win, so you have to stop playing.
You have to stop trying.
It's that Hubbard quote,
the only way to avoid criticism
is to do nothing, be nothing, say
nothing.
If you really are going to orient your life about not being a target of criticism, especially
if you're a woman, that's the only way you're going to do it.
So really be intellectually honest about your goals.
If you're telling yourself you can't handle criticism, you have to tell yourself that
you're willing to accept a life in which you do nothing, say nothing, and be nothing. Yeah. And what's super important
is to remember it's not personal. They can be talking about my pores on my face,
which feels personal. It's not personal. It's so boring. It's the same 25 things
that they say about every woman. It's like the misogynists in the world, which
by the way aren't just outwardly marching misogynists. We all have it in us. Every time we think,
God, it's just something about her.
I think that we are lucky to have the advantage of having seen millions of comments over 10
years, because I actually do. The point at which I really believed and understood that
it was not personal is when I could go to a place and know with certainty
20% of the comments are going to say this, 20% are going to say this, whatever.
I knew exactly what they'd be and they always are.
And that's how you know that it actually has nothing to do with you.
It has to do with this is what we can expect from the world when anyone shows up in any kind of audacious way.
And especially dares to be human at all.
Like there's kind of a message of
you should be ashamed for even speaking
because you haven't got it all figured out.
Right.
God forbid you show up and you're like, no, no, no,
I'm gonna keep doing this even though
I don't have it all figured out.
Because I'm not even trying to hide how fucked up I am.
I'm still going to be saying all this stuff.
No, I remember calling you very early on in this meal.
I just read a thing and they said I'm bulimic
and they said I'm crazy and they said I'm getting divorced.
And you were like,
but aren't all of those things completely true?
Right. So there's also an element of like,
maybe I am all those things and I'm going to keep showing up anyway.
What if I do that?
Be messy, complicated, and afraid.
And show up anyway.
And also when you get that kind of criticism and you go into fear and panic, just know
that that's like a primal thing.
That's your body saying, I am not safe.
I'm about to be picked off from the herd and I should go quiet in order to not be seen
so that I can survive.
Right?
Yeah.
In Maslow's hierarchy of needs, criticism hits not in the self-esteem area, criticism
hits in the way more primal, higher level of important needs, which is safety.
That's where we experience criticism.
Yeah.
You feel like I'm doing something dangerous.
I'm prey and I've somehow for some reason painted myself magenta and I'm no longer camouflaged.
In terms of the context of this specific like illustration and analogy, there's very rare
times in my life where I like let criticism affect me in a negative way.
If you give me something that hurts my feelings, that'll do it.
But I wonder how much of it has to do with
the way we see ourselves in terms of being prey
or predator in the Savannah that you're talking about.
Like, you know, I think that-
That's so interesting.
I think that it could be an interesting conversation
around like, cause I don't feel afraid a lot.
That's so true.
I'm not like a predator, but like, I don't feel like I'm prey That's so true. I'm not like a predator,
but like I don't feel like I'm prey.
Yes.
I'm not getting picked off.
And I think that you might.
I do feel like prey.
I have never once considered
what if I'm the fucking predator?
You're a goddamn cheetah.
I wrote a whole book about being a cheetah.
Is a cheetah a predator?
Yeah.
Yes.
Damn it to hell. I have a question for you, Abby. So I'm wondering if you take that a cheetah. Is a cheetah a predator? Yeah. Yes. Damn it to hell.
I have a question for you, Abby.
So I'm wondering if you take that a step further.
Do you take the criticism as a sign
that you are a more effective predator in the savanna
and that's why they're giving you so much attention
and shit? Yeah. So you feed off of it and shit. Yeah.
I'm like, feed off of it.
Yes.
I'm like, oh, especially because that, I mean, it's a quick calculation.
Like who is this person and are they, are they somebody to be respected in my world?
Who are you to be giving me advice?
I'm always asking that question.
Who, who the fuck are you?
You say that to me.
Yeah.
Like I actually do. I'm like, who made you Who the fuck are you? You say that to me. Yeah, like, I actually do.
I'm like, who made you the judge and jury?
Yeah.
I ask you that.
So this is fascinating because it depends on what role
you think you're in.
And if you, G, are in this specific role
where you see yourself, you belong in this area, then
you do need to be nurturing, empathetic, in communication, open, all of these
things that make you much more vulnerable and quote-unquote need to
fall in line with what these people demand of you. Whereas Abby is like, oh no, my role here
is to take shots and give shots.
Yeah.
And so if I'm taking shots from you, I'm doing it right.
Yeah, I do wonder if some of that is also gendered.
Abby has been raised with lots of male privilege.
She walks into a room and she is responding to like,
a man has arrived. I don't know how to explain it.
I do wonder if some of that's gender,
which gives me a lot more leniency to be like, fuck that. No,
I don't need to listen to that. I respect you over here. I'll take that criticism.
I'm going to listen to that one. That's what we're talking about.
Is like all of these places that we think we find ourselves in.
And I think what we're saying is to the women
or more feminine identifying folks in the world
who might feel less like a predator
and a little bit more like a prey.
These are some ideas that you can have
to try to unwrap yourself from the genderized version
of who you think you should be and how you think you need to respond to unwrap yourself from the genderized version of who you think you should be and how
you think you need to respond to the world as it comes to you, whether it's on social or in your
in your personal life. And then once you get through that, you go back and listen to the
Bozomo St. John episode and figure out how the hell you navigate this planet when you have all
the gendered criticism coming at you and the race criticism coming at you.
If you're a woman of color, then it's like 99.9% of the male is absolute shit.
Or if you're queer.
You just get a PO box.
If you're a black woman, you just get a PO box.
I love this conversation because I truly feel like if we were really honest, there are so many things that we want to do with our
lives or stories we want to tell or ways we want to show up.
And the reason we don't do it is fear of criticism.
It's real.
Because anybody who says, just do it, it'll be fine.
You won't get criticism, Not sure you will get criticism.
And then when people say, I was recently talking to a friend and she said,
I'm just gonna do it.
And then when people say the thing,
I'm just not gonna care.
I'm not gonna care.
And I said to her, okay, just to be very clear,
you are gonna care.
Mm-hmm.
Whenever we say, we're gonna read this thing
and we're just not gonna care.
I don't care.
You will care.
It will hurt. It will hurt. And you can still keep showing up. You will recover.
It's survivable. And so helping each other figure out how to survive criticism might
be one of the most important things that we can do because it gets in the way, fear of
it and not knowing how to deal with it gets in the way of us doing what we were meant to do on this planet. Maybe more than
anything else.
Is the goal to be criticism free?
No, I think the goal is to understand where it all comes from and figure out what is not
personal and what is there to help us and make us better.
So let's just, from here out,
let's just think about what's the 95%
we don't even bring in the house,
we just throw directly into the recycling bin.
And what's the small percent that we are brave enough
to bring inside with us?
And strong enough. Open, sit with it,
and let it make us better.
Yeah.
I think that's what we keep figuring out as we go along and we allow ourselves to care.
We love you pod squad.
We think you're perfect just the way you are.
I love this conversation.
It's so fascinating to me.
And it just takes all these twists and turns, twists and turns.
We love you.
This week.
Remember when things get hard, be messy, complicated, and afraid. And show up. Anyway!
See you next time.
Word. Bah.
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We Can Do Hard Things is created and hosted
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