We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Gillian Anderson: How to Get What You Want (in Bed and in Life)
Episode Date: October 29, 2024Gillian Anderson: How to Get What You Want (in Bed and in Life) Icon Gillian Anderson joins Glennon, Abby, and Amanda to talk about everything from sexual fantasies to why she says “F you” to wel...lness culture. With wit, honesty, and an intoxicating spirit of rebellion, Gillian inspires us to ask for what we want—both in the bedroom and in life. This is a conversation that will make you feel bolder and more connected to your own desires. -How our fantasies reflect the culture we live in; -Why rebelling against societal norms can be so freeing; and -The emotional moments that left Gillian in tears. About Gillian: Gillian Anderson is an award-winning film, television and theater actor, producer and director. Among other honors, she has won two Primetime Emmy Awards, two Golden Globe Awards, three Screen Actors Guild Awards and an Evening Standard Theatre Award. In addition to her acting work, Gillian is also globally recognized as a respected activist and charity campaigner, previously co-authored the Sunday Times bestseller We: A Manifesto for Women Everywhere with Jennifer Nadel, and in 2023 founded the wellness drinks brand G-Spot which encourages women to embrace their unique power. In 2016 Anderson was appointed an honorary OBE (Order of the British Empire) for her services to drama. She lives in London with her three children. 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)
Hi Pod Squad. This is Glennon and Amanda and Abby and you are going to want to listen to
this conversation today because it is with the Gillian Anderson. The icon! Yeah, the icon.
The first thing Jillian did on this interview
was to come on and say to us,
congratulations on your sex.
So you'll have to listen to figure out
what she meant by that.
I've never been congratulated on my sex before,
and I feel finally seen.
Yes, you have.
Okay, so that, why did Jillian congratulate us on our sex?
Jillian also cried during this interview, got very emotional, made us all very emotional.
You're going to want to listen for what made her feel so deeply.
You're also going to hear what our sexual fantasies mean about us, and not just about us, but about our entire culture. Jillian also in this interview helps us figure out why
all of us to some level need to say F you to wellness culture.
God, her rebellion is intoxicating.
I'm like, yes, that is how I used to feel.
Yes. Yes.
That's when I felt things.
That's how I used to feel.
That is how I used to act.
I like it. Before I was beaten down by this's when I felt things. That's how I used to feel. That is how I used to act. I like it.
Before I was beaten down by this world, I too was Gillian Anderson.
And I hope you were too.
This conversation is going to make you freer.
Yeah, that's good.
Enjoy.
Gillian Anderson is an award-winning film, television, and theater actor, producer, and
director.
Among other honors, she has won two Emmys, two Golden Globes, and three SAG awards.
Jillian is also an activist, a charity campaigner, and co-authored the Sunday Times Best Seller,
We, a Manifesto for Women Everywhere. In 2023, Jillian founded the wellness
drinks brand G-Spot, which are just actually completely delicious. Very delicious.
In 2016, she was appointed an honorary OBE,
Order of the British Empire,
for her services to drama.
I know you wanna be an OBE, don't you?
Yes, that looks so cool.
She lives in London with her three children,
and her latest book, Want Sexual Fantasies,
by Anonymous, is available now.
Welcome, Jillian.
Hello!
Wow.
Hello, oh my God. Wow! Oh my god. What a treat. Hi guys! If this interview ended right now, I would still given one of these. Although that's not very helpful because I'm,
hang on, hang on, let me get this right.
Hang on, let me, how do I, how do I?
This old fashioned thing which I am behaving like I'm 150.
Hi!
So cool, I'm so pleased to meet you guys.
So pleased, congratulations on your sex, on your sex.
Congratulations on your sex.
No one has ever congratulated us on our sex before.
I've worked so hard for my sex.
I appreciate it.
It's you.
That's so good.
I don't know where that came from.
I didn't have sex on the brain yet.
So it's very strange that it just popped in there.
Congratulations on your podcast.
Your success. Success. That's usually how it gets in there. Congratulations on your podcast. Your success.
That's the word.
Success, not sex.
That's the word.
Congratulations, man.
I'm very happy for you guys.
Jillian Anderson, congratulations to you for being such an incredible icon for so long.
You are so unbelievably talented and such a trailblazer.
Well, first of all,
are so unbelievably talented and such a trailblazer. Well, first of all, can you just talk to us
about being named in high school
most likely to get arrested and most bizarre?
Because even like on top of all of the iconic,
well, it's not just the characters you play,
it's like what you bring to it, obviously.
It's like this chemistry thing that happens,
which has solidified you as one of the most,
I don't know, revolutionary, inspiring.
But the senior superlative is really what made me understand,
you are not new to this, you're true to this, okay?
So why were you named most likely to get arrested at Most Bizarre? What were
your fellow students thinking and seeing in you? I was always and always have been
a bit of an outsider. Not a bit, I have been an outsider and didn't really make
a lot of friends in high school. My hair was always, not unlike it is right now,
ratty and not curled and straight and combed and pretty.
And then I started wearing oversized thrift clothes,
cinching it with a belt, pointy black boots with buckles.
And I started to shave my head and have a mohawk.
And then my boyfriend, when I was 15, was 21,
but that's another conversation.
And also by then I'd had a lesbian relationship
that they all knew about and teased me about.
And so I was kind of on the outside.
And then true to form on graduation night,
I was actually arrested because I tried to break
into the high school with my then boyfriend
and glue the locks shut.
So, yeah.
God, you're so cool. Okay. So we have been
really immersed in your new book, which the pod squad needs to understand. Well, actually
you describe to us what I've read the whole thing. Have you? Oh yeah. Beginning to end.
That's really, really sweet of you. It is called Want.
In the 70s, there was a book by Nancy Friday.
In 1973, she had asked a community of women
to write in anonymously to her about their sexual fantasies.
And she published that book, and it was apparently
a huge success.
Women carried it in their purses and had it on their
coffee tables and it was in every household and it was risque and shocking and sold millions of
copies. And my book agent came to me at one point and said, I've had all these requests for you
since you did sex education, but the only one that I feel you might be interested in is this. And she suggested
us doing a version of anonymous letters, sending it out broader, on the one hand, to take a look at
the degree to which things may or may not have changed for women since the 70s in terms of what we
think about. And so that really made sense to me.
I was really curious about what that might look like.
And it made sense as to why I should do it based on having done sex ed and based on my
socials feed and how I interact with people.
So I started this drinks brand called G-spot and because of also leaning into that messaging and inclusivity and diversity and acceptance
and health and making choices for oneself about one's own body and how one
feels as opposed to what you know the wellness industry is telling us we
should do and should feel. So it was all this big conversation that was
happening and I thought okay it makes sense that it would be me that would do
this book. I put the call out to women from around the world and my imagination, I was thinking we'd get
letters from the trans community and from differently abled people and from non-binary
and from anyone who identifies as being a woman and that they would come from the far reaches of
the world and even because we've set up a portal that will be protected and be anonymous that will get, you know, women from Iran
and will get women from Saudi Arabia
and will get every representation of a woman.
And to a large degree, we did.
We've got a wide range of voices in here
and we whittled down over 1,000 letters to 174.
And it's every woman, it is.
It's tender and touching and moving and beautiful and sad
and painful and heart-wrenching and sexy as fuck.
And there's some really good writing in there.
It's raw and honest.
And I feel like this isn't my book.
This is every woman's book who pitched in,
everyone who worked on it at Bloomsbury and the other publishers
It belongs to everyone and it's starting a much bigger conversation, too
So what's happening is we've asked women when they're reading they're asking themselves
Do I get what I want in the bedroom?
And if I'm not have I asked for it and my complicit in not getting what I want Can I ask for it and if I can not, have I asked for it? Am I complicit in not getting what I want?
Can I ask for it?
And if I can't ask for it because of either
it's feeling too awkward and taboo in the relationship,
or I feel like my partner will get angry at me
and feel judged for not doing what I want,
or have I, you know, all those questions start to come up.
And it's not just in the bedroom,
it's also women are starting to say,
actually, am I happy?
Am I happy in my life?
Am I getting what I want in my life?
Have I actually really put myself out there?
I'm now 62 years old.
And this book is encouraging me to ask these questions
and really investigate
whether I am living my best life
and what would I need to do
in order to shift that for myself.
And maybe that's leaning more into the relationship
and the intimacy with your partner,
your husband, your wife, your other,
and maybe it's not.
Maybe it's saying, I deserve better than this.
I don't know, it's just starting a big conversation.
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I want to take us back to the sexual fantasies, please,
because I have many congratulations on your sex.
Yeah, congratulations on your sex.
While you were talking, I was thinking,
you know that quote about everything in the world
is about sex except for sex, sex is about power?
I think about that all the time.
And there's something, I read the book and at first,
there was like many times where I was like, oh my God,
like, oh my God, why is this okay to be reading?
Like it's very, very sexy, okay?
But there's something about it
that actually had nothing to do with sex for me.
Like I love women.
I'm not talking about it sexually, although that too,
but maybe why Nancy Friday called her book,
My Secret Garden, there is a part of us
that we don't share with each other.
And with the women that I know, that's the only part that we don't share with each other. And with the women that I know,
that's the only part that we don't share with each other.
That's it.
So when I was reading your book from beginning to end,
the deeper tingle or beauty for me
had nothing to do with the actual fantasies.
I felt like I was sitting at a slumber party
with all different kinds of women where we were finally saying the thing we don't say.
And so having nothing to do with sex in particular, I felt so close to other women.
Like I felt like, oh my God, like,
I feel when somebody says the really hard thing
that they think no one else is gonna relate to.
And it doesn't matter if you can't relate to it.
It matters that they said it.
It makes you feel so connected.
Yeah, just in the writing in, they feel seen and heard,
which is interesting because they're anonymous.
It's the act of actually doing what you're saying,
which is speaking to some of our inner truths
in a safe space.
And this is the conversation that seems to be taking place
around this, which is women coming together as a community
and offering that space to each other to have these conversations about
your innermost thoughts and feelings and fears and you know and I think we have obviously as women
we have a tendency to do that anyway but there's also such a culture out there I don't know why
I'm getting emotional but there's such a culture out there of women
hating on each other and obviously exacerbated by social media and anybody can say anything
to anybody and there are no consequences.
And it feels like if there is ever a time for us to come together and just say enough
of this fucking shit, enough of this.
Just even if we're supporting each other,
I don't care where you're from or what your religion is
or what your political party is or what your anything,
what your sex is, your sexual preference,
just based on the fact that we are women,
we are gonna stop hating on each other
and just lift each other up.
Because particularly, and I also keep thinking this too, is you know and what's happening in the states and what could potentially happen shortly
in the next few months if we lose our power you know to make decisions about our own body if we
can't even do that in the west how can we be the shoulders that women around the world can stand on
and in order to lift themselves up?
I never get political and I don't share stuff, I don't comment on stuff on my socials.
I didn't realize that actually I felt so strongly about this.
I mean, I know that I feel strongly about it, but if not now, when is what I'm kind of thinking.
And so my conversation keeps going in this direction.
When I'm talking about this now,
because it feels like we're at the precipice and it feels like this, the conversation around
this book is giving women a voice and it's a bigger conversation than just the intimacies
of what happens in the bedroom. But it's part of the same thing. It's the same thing.
I mean, it's undeniable the timing.
That's what kept freaking me out about this whole project is that Nancy Friday, the origin
of her book was fascinating where she had written a different book, a novel, and it
had a sexual fantasy in it.
And the publisher was so aghast that it had a woman with a sexual fantasy that they shelved
the book because not only because it was so anathema
that you would ever print a woman's fantasy,
they actually didn't believe women's fantasies existed.
And so they shelved it.
They were like, that's a bridge too far, that's nuts.
So she writes this book and she writes it in 1973,
which is when Roe became law.
You start your project in 2022,
which is when Roe is overturned.
Oh, don't, oh, don't.
I didn't actually make that connection.
Crazy, right?
What about that is this?
Wow.
You know, it's just what we were just talking about.
It's being seen and being heard and also the community of it and supporting each other.
It is.
It's just saying enough is enough.
And choice, right?
When we say we're pro-choice, there's the power comes from the ability to make a choice.
The idea of fantasy, is there power in saying, I have a choice?
I have a preference?
Is there power in being like, I have the right to feel pleasure?
Pleasure has been a dirty word.
People think of pleasure as being a frivolous thing, and it's not, it's really important,
and it's also important to lean into it.
It's important to embrace it and to give oneself permission
to feel it, to ask for it, to give it to oneself,
to identify what it is that gives one pleasure,
because it brings joy, it's a joyful thing.
Whatever one's version of pleasure joyful thing. Whatever one's version
of pleasure is, even if one's version of pleasure is sitting on the sofa and eating ice cream
and watching your favorite, you know, there's a noise that I make, me and my partner make
whenever we're like under a duvet or watch it, when we finally have like let go and are
sitting doing something that, because we work really fucking hard. And so if we give ourselves
that moment where we're either under duvet or on a
sofa about to watch a documentary or something, we go,
and that's our moment of pleasure.
It is, there's something mischievous in there.
And so there's all such great stuff to embrace and enjoy and take ownership of
and identify for ourselves. It's important.
That energy, it's trickster energy because it's a little witty.
It reminds me of the feeling that you get when you're out of the talents of something.
Like when you have escaped your grind, your work addiction, your capitalism,
all the talents that are in us all the time, the freedom from that,
under the duvet, is the same thing as fantasy.
It's when you are free from the talents of all the other things.
And I think that's why it's so scary.
When I read all these and I'm thinking, oh my God, I'm connecting, they're so human.
Everybody's so human.
That is what the people who want to control our bodies cannot abide by.
They cannot abide that we would have trickster energy that is full of agency, that is full
of imagination.
When you think of imagination and sexual fantasy being similar, they are the only things that
are free from power and control.
So that has to be squashed because they cannot consider the fact that we may be as fully
human as they are and deserving of equal human rights.
Ugh.
It's exactly how I feel when I take an afternoon nap.
I know you do.
I think it's the exact reason why I take my afternoon nap.
Yeah, you're out of the talents.
Just like, fuck everything that's making me think that I take my afternoon now. Yeah, you're out of the talents. Just like, fuck everything that's making me think
that I should do something different.
Yeah.
I'm gonna go do that.
Ashley Julie says that.
When you start breaking the rules, what's next?
It's true.
It's true.
This is connected completely.
Tell us about, we read that you had a point in your life
where you had never exercised
and that you said, fuck you to wellness culture.
And I almost started crying when I read that one sentence.
So can you talk to us about how wellness culture has its talents in us?
Well, I think, you know, as I said, that that same part of me that, you know, grew up bordering
in the punk world and, you know, flipping the bird on the streets of Grand Rapids, Michigan,
where I moved from London when I was a kid.
It was that same kind of energy that went into the rest of my life, you know, refusing internally to
do the things that I felt people were telling me that I should do. I've never been good
at doing shoulds. I know that I have enough shoulds in my head and they've, you know,
at various points in my 20s when I, you know, became very famous young, there were certainly
shoulds in terms of feeling bad about myself and my weight going up and down
and certainly had a lot of that in my head. But despite all that, there's always
been this part of me that has stood kind of on the outside looking at all of the wellness doctrines and watching
the trajectory of impact that, whether it starts with Jane Fonda and when she started
the aerobics and all of that, just viewing all of that slightly from the pressure and the beating up that women do to themselves when they don't conform
and do the thing that they're told on the outside now through social media and everywhere about what
they should not do, what they should and shouldn't look like. And so I think I've always had that in
me that said, no, fuck off.
That's just not me.
I'm not going to do that.
And if you tell me to do it, I'm more likely not to do it.
But then recently in the last couple of years, when I realized that I wanted to look at that
again and take ownership and say, okay, hang on a second. Instead of to what degree of my rebelliousness is that actually
harming me? And can I reframe this and say, okay, here's the deal. I know that I still want to be
lifting grandchildren up. I know I want to be able to put my wheelie bag up on the top of the
airplane. I know that I want to be able to walk up the steps.
All those little things that, of course,
now we take for granted.
What can I do for myself by choice,
but not, God damn it, by anything that anybody's telling me
that I have to do, that I'm just going to,
for myself, look at these things that I can start doing,
and not feel like I failed.
Like I gave up sugar last year and I hated,
all of a sudden I realized,
because most of my adult life I've said when people say,
is there anything you don't eat
or do you have any meal restrictions or whatever,
I'm like, no, no, no, I'm fine.
And then suddenly I started to say,
well, I'm not doing gluten and no sugar.
And I hate saying that because I feel like that part
that that is like I'm suddenly that actress.
And that actress is suddenly like I'm succumbing to the,
I cannot stand it.
Yeah, I see that.
And I wanna qualify it.
And so I've let go of that and I just say it anyway.
But it was interesting what happened
when I started to say those things.
I have an issue, but I'm okay with my issue.
You seem to be someone who lives from the inside out
and not from the outside in.
So like the-
Yeah, definitely.
You said, I want to be able to pick up my grandkids.
I need, I want, which is different than you should.
There's this outer structure. It's just another religion, right? Another bunch of
rules you can live by to keep yourself safe. And trying to match yourself to
the outside structure is different. It's like the difference between porn and
sexual fantasy. Sexual fantasy is from the inside. It's something that rises up.
It's a want and a need and then perhaps manifests on the outside, instead of a structure from the outside that you're trying to get inside
your body.
Yeah. I think even deciding what feels good can be tricky because I was on a walk.
When I heard your thing about fuck wellness culture, I had just finished my red light
therapy.
I had done my infrared sauna for the day and I was on my walk with my little weighted vest
on, okay, because this is something I was told I needed to do.
So what I realized is I was listening to you say,
fuck wellness culture.
I know that in my, I know it, I know it.
I know we should fuck wellness culture.
But my first thought was, but this makes me feel good.
And then I thought, wait, does this make me feel good
or does it just make me feel obedient?
I think that even what feels good can have a layer of dogma in it.
Like, do I feel good in my body or do I just feel like I did the things I was supposed to do that day,
which makes me feel safe?
It's like, do I feel good or do I feel like I am good?
Yeah.
Does this make me feel like I am a good person?
Yes, exactly.
Or does this make me feel good in my body?
That's so interesting.
Yes.
Yeah.
Because I don't know that I feel better at all.
I think I kind of feel like shit.
I just spent my whole day in my basement with, with lights shining on my face.
Like, what the hell is that?
I mean, then don't do things that you don't get any response from, you know?
Like I would never.
And maybe this is just cause my athletic background,
but the reason why we have that stuff is cause of me.
And it's because they do make me feel good.
Cause you know how to tell when you feel good.
All I know how to do is look at a list of things and be like,
did I do all the things I was supposed to do?
I must feel good.
Check, check, check.
I must feel good.
Yeah, yeah.
But that is a perfect question to circle back to the fantasies. When you ask a woman, what do you
want for dinner? What do you like to eat? It's so often like, well, our family likes what we do.
It's like a deference to those for whom you're responsible, deference to the greater good. Like the idea that you would be even making an inquiry to know what makes you feel good.
That's a very radical notion.
You've taken the time to be like, what would just make exclusively me feel good in this
moment in sex?
Yeah.
And what we're finding is that for my drink, we did a study at one point asking women how
much time they put aside in the week for their own pleasure.
And I think if I'm remembering correctly, it was about 30 minutes a week max, but also
that they are most likely to reach orgasm outside of the sex that they have with their
partner, predominantly
heterosexual partner I would imagine, but who knows, and that it's easier to get
there when doing it themselves. Which, you know, of course begs the question, what
if a conversation could be had? What if, you know, the start of that conversation
could be about asking oneself, I guess first and foremost, what it is that would actually
make it possible with the other partner there,
and radically deciding that it didn't matter
if you might be wasting their time
or that you are going to decide to not care whether you
are wasting time, that it's not wasting time,
because it's what you want
and what you think would help you get there.
And so to say, okay, we're gonna have a session today
where I show you actually what it is that would make
please, I know, right?
Difficult, really difficult.
I think it would be helpful if we had two,
I need some more words, okay?
I need it to not, first of all,
I need it to not just be fantasies.
I need us to all admit that there's two categories, okay?
There's stuff I wanna do and stuff I never wanna do,
but for some reason lights my brain up.
Like, okay, so you're an actor.
My friend told me, who's an actor,
that sometimes you're in a scene
and you have to appear to be crying
because you lost a friend or something, okay?
But if you're a person who has never lost a friend,
you imagine something else that has
happened to you that gave you that feeling. This is what she told me. Right? So for me, there are
certain ideas or like little plays that can go on in your head, if that's what a fantasy is,
it's like a thought you have that activates sexual energy. But it's not something you ever want to happen.
Yeah.
So I think one of the reasons why it's scary
to talk about fantasy with your partner
is because we don't have different words for these
is because if I say, this is my fantasy,
then you might think that that means I want you
to invite 12 masked strangers over to our living room.
Like there has to be two words.
I think what I'm talking about is that in the process
of having this joined up conversation about fantasy,
we're actually asking ourselves,
separate from the fantasies,
is am I actually getting what I want and I need
in the bedroom, separate from the fantasy.
So there is that version of things
where maybe you allow yourself to explore your fantasy
a bit more in order to either be turned on
or to help you get in the mood for sex with your partner.
But then there's the other part of the conversation
which is starting to happen, which is,
am I actually getting what I want, period, and can I start that conversation?
It's not about a fantasy, it's actually real life.
It's real life asking for what it is that we want and we need because in doing that,
we feel heard, seen, empowered, and that shows up a lot in the fantasies in this book of just
you know a lot of women saying I want my partner to look at me as if they
cherish me as if they love me exactly how I am who I am and how I am and how
I should if you're realizing that in your mind
that's part of what your fantasy is, you start to ask the question about
why is that so, is that such a hard thing to start to explore with my partner in real life just in terms of
finding out whether we still have that together, that spark that you know that I deserve to be looked at that way.
You know, it's opening up so many big questions
and so much of it at the end of the day
is down to what we feel courageous enough,
brave enough to address and look at for ourselves,
I think, that knowing that in this moment,
other women are starting to ask this question
Individually and together
Can we maybe even just some tiny tiny small ways start to think about ways that we can?
do things that
Make us feel like we have choice
Give ourselves permission to have choice, to declare what
it is that we want, to feel more empowered.
In working on the drink and writing the intros for the book, I suddenly realized that so
much of, you know, I talk a lot about the fact that through my career, I still get nervous.
I still, first day, second days, I'm terrified.
I think I'm gonna be fired.
So many scenes that I have acted in,
I have felt internally that I'm not that strong person.
I'm not that bossy person, that fierce person.
I mean, I am those things, but I'm not how to project that
as a Thatcher or as a Scully,
particularly when I was young and doing Scully,
and I was meant to be the boss of
or telling all these other FBI agents what to do.
And I was like, I'm fucking five years old
and had this squeaky voice.
And when I heard myself say these things
or argue with, you know, Skinner.
So in order to show up and do those scenes,
as every actor does, you have to pretend as if you can.
You have to act as if.
That's what acting is, you're acting as if.
And so if I can fucking do it,
if I can do it, this as five foot two and a half woman who's now 56 and has been, you know, has always
had a bit of a squeaky voice and is, you know, the older we get, the less heard we feel.
If I can continue for the last 30 years to do this and be in the shoes of really, really powerful women.
And we can all stand in those shoes.
We can all pretend to be that person.
I think sometimes we feel that we can, or how could we?
I can't speak up for myself.
I can't, they don't listen to me.
I don't, who am I to, you know, and I don't think it's that different for, for anybody.
you know, and I don't think it's that different for anybody. People in all walks of life get nervous, feel anxious,
feel like there's no way they're going to be heard or seen.
At the end of the day, it comes down to just doing it,
just acting as if, just, you know, giving yourself permission and the courage.
And if you have to imagine you're somebody else, you know, giving yourself permission and the courage. And if you have to imagine you're somebody else,
you know, there used to be these bumper stickers
when I did this series called The Fall
that said, what would Stella do?
Yeah.
And that's it.
If that's what you need to have in your mind,
that's part fantasy too, right? That's fantasy.
It really does, when you're talking, make me think
so much about how it all, the personal
is the political.
And if we're in our bedrooms with our person who's supposed to know us the best, who we're
supposed to feel safe with, and we cannot say, this is who I am, and this is what I
want, and I am as fully human as you, and I have needs too, if we can't do it there,
of course we're not going to be able to do it at work, at
the voting booths.
And it is so much, when I think about the fantasies in the book, it is so much about
being known.
So many of them seem to be saying, I know you love sex, do you love me?
I want you to want me because of me, not because you want sex.
It's like, I remember that feeling from heterosexual relationships, not anymore, but like where
I felt so interchangeable.
Like, it doesn't matter that it's me here.
You just need somebody here.
And so that idea of just, do you even know me?
That's why like everything's about sex except for sex.
Sex is about being known.
Sex is about power.
I mean, even some of the fantasies that were about life,
I will never forget the one, there was this beautifully written one,
where the woman was just saying, I'm married to my best friend.
I love my marriage. I'm married to my best friend.
My fantasy is that in another life,
I'm married to a bad boy.
That's one of my favorite ones.
I'm married to a guy who doesn't care about my feelings as much as himself. I'm married to a bad boy. That's one of my favorite ones. I'm married to a guy who doesn't care about my feelings
as much as himself.
I'm married to, in my other life, I'm married to her.
And we are so tender with each other.
And we know every single thing about each other.
And then as a-
And protective and fierce.
And it's, yeah.
And it's voluptuous and soft and caring.
And yes.
Mushy.
Yeah, I know, beautiful.
And then it just ends with, and I'm married to my best friend.
That sexual fantasy is about fantasizing that life was different, that we didn't have opportunity
costs, that we had a million.
My version of that is, oh, I wish I could just, I can't believe I can't read all the
books.
Less sexy.
Yeah.
But that's what people mean, right? I can't read all the books. Less sexy. Yeah. But,
but that's what people mean, right? When there's not enough life to go everywhere I want to go,
to read every book, to have every marriage I want to have,
to be gay, to be straight, to be queer,
to be all the things.
It's the fantasy of not having to choose.
It's the fantasy of different.
Yeah.
The other thing.
Yeah.
It's so beautiful. Yeah, and it's enough. It's like the whole like Yeah, yeah. The other thing. Yeah.
It's so beautiful.
Yeah, and it's enough.
It's like the whole like, but I'm lucky enough, but I should be grateful for what I have.
I'm married to my best friend.
But like the idea that you would have this voracious appetite for life, that's scary.
Yes.
A voracious appetite for sex to be what it want, a voracious appetite for life.
I want that and also that and also that.
And I think it works, like you said, like if you can't even do it in your bedroom, how
can we have power and outside of it?
But I think the reverse is true.
Why in the world would someone think that they deserve what they want in their intermost?
Nothing's on fire if you're not going to get exactly what you want from sex.
Nobody's going to go hungry.
No one's going to.
If the actual needs you have, your healthcare needs, your needs to be able to make choices
about your own body, if those things are seen as not viable,
defendable, valuable needs,
why the hell would anyone think that their sexual desires
are needs that deserve to be heard?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, Jillian, you're doing such good work.
You freaked us the fuck out.
So mission accomplished.
Yeah. You're us the fuck out. So mission accomplished. Yeah.
You're so bizarre. Oh, and you know, I just want to say this for all of the lesbians out there.
You've been an icon, like a North star for so many of us.
And I'm just glad to get to know you a little bit because it makes me understand it.
I just want to say thank you for, you know, being that for us
all these years.
Oh, thank you. It's been a pleasure.
Yeah. And for the lesbians, it's not what would Scully do. The underground is what would
Jillian do.
Yeah, for sure.
So cool. I can't thank you enough for having me on the show and you guys are doing great
work too. And I so I so appreciate it. I've
started a kind of a media hub called thisisgeode.com where we're continuing the conversation around
the book and for women internationally as well. And there'll be lots of opportunities
to come together. We'll be doing a lot of live shows with celebrity readings of the
book and stuff like that. So hopefully at some point along the way, I will see you maybe at one of those things in person.
You know which one I want to read? The three lives. I want the three lives one.
Yes, okay. I will absolutely put your name on that one.
It's one of my favorites. It's so cool. I'm so grateful to all the women who wrote in. Thank you for being so present and for being there
and for letting me cry on your doorstep.
Thank you, Jillian.
Thank you, Pod Squad.
Bye.
Thank you, Pod Squad.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
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