We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - How to Be More Alive with Cole Arthur Riley

Episode Date: June 9, 2022

In this beautiful conversation–in which Glennon names Cole’s book “This Here Flesh” the Next Right Book–we discuss:  1. What we learned from Cole’s insight that, “If you’re not in you...r body, someone else is.”  2. A mind-blowing revelation about all of our own faces that we will never stop thinking about.  3. Why the phrase “If you don’t believe you’re beautiful, no one else will” is horseshit.   4. Why dignity is the bedrock to being alive–and how to find it when we haven’t been loved well.  5. The connection between fear and awe–and how to practice wonder as a cure for despair.  About Cole:  Cole Arthur Riley is a writer and poet. She is the author of the NYT bestseller, This Here Flesh: Spirituality, Liberation, and the Stories that Make Us. Her writing has been featured in The Atlantic, Guernica, and The Washington Post. Cole is also the creator and writer of Black Liturgies, a project that integrates spiritual practice with Black emotion, Black literature, and the Black body.  TW: @blackliturgist IG:  @colearthurriley @blackliturgies 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)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Whether you're doing a dance to your favorite artist in the office parking lot, or being guided into Warrior I in the break room before your shift, whether you're running on your Peloton tread at your mom's house while she watches the baby, or counting your breaths on the subway. Peloton is for all of us, wherever we are whenever we need it, download the free Peloton app today. Peloton app available through free tier or paid subscription starting at 12.99 per month. Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things. So here's the deal.
Starting point is 00:00:46 I am a writer. Yeah, and at this point on the planet, everyone who is a writer is expected to have a book club. It's just like, where's your book club? Why don't you have a book club? It's like, I'm not going to have a book club. I'm not going to have a book club because club, I feel like there's going to be meetings. I feel like there's going be meetings, I feel like there's gonna be things expected of me, plus I treat books like I used to treat booze.
Starting point is 00:01:10 Like, you know, I read like six books a week. That's right. So by the time I'm in love with a book, like I can't wait for everybody else. No, that's right. No, that's not gonna happen. So I am not gonna have a book club. What I am gonna have, I'm announcing
Starting point is 00:01:26 right now. And only because I read a book that is so effing beautiful. Yeah. That I have to demand that everyone reads it. We're starting something today called the next right book. Oh, because that's how I live my life is the next right thing. I didn't make it up. It's a recovery thing. Today I announce the next right book. Now, no one is allowed to expect anything of me. This might be the only next right book I ever
Starting point is 00:01:59 choose in my entire life. No one's allowed to ask when the next right book is. The next next right book, the next next right book. This might be the only damn next right book you ever get. Yes. Okay. So pay attention. I'm looking at the person's face who we're interviewing right now and I just realized
Starting point is 00:02:15 I forgot to mention to her that I was announcing her book as the next right book. Yeah. I also forgot to mention it's me and Amanda. No, I told sister. I just didn't tell sister. All right. Today we announced the next right book of the world. Everyone must read this book. It's not even a book. It's a sacred text. It's a it's a spirituality. It's a it's a whole thing. The book is called This Here Flash. The book is called This Here Flush. It is by Cole Arthur Riley.
Starting point is 00:02:45 Cole Arthur Riley is a writer and poet. She is the author of The New York Times Best Seller, This Here Flush, Spirituality, Liberation, and the stories that make us. Her contemplation, writing, and spirituality embody her lived experience as a black, queer woman who lives with autoimmune disease. Cole is also the creator and writer of Black liturgies which she
Starting point is 00:03:10 describes as a space for black spiritual words of liberation, lament, rage, and rest. Welcome Cole to our first episode of the next Right Book. Hi, things for having me and for calling my book, The Next Right Book. Well, if you would have been present in my home and on the Zoom calls with Amanda, you would understand why this is the first. Yeah, it's... And maybe the only Next Right Book.
Starting point is 00:03:43 The conversations that we've been having about this book and you are, they will continue beyond this conversation that we're having today. Thank you for being here and thank you for freaking you and putting your spirit and your love and your mind into this book. It is unfreeking believable. Thank you. Sometimes when I love something so much, my entire life is about telling women to trust themselves, so I constantly doubt myself all the time. So I was reading it and I was like, wait a minute, is this as freaking beautiful as I think it is? So call my sister and I say, I'm reading it.
Starting point is 00:04:24 Are you reading it? And before I say anything, she says to me, I think this is. So call my sister and I say, I'm reading it. Are you reading it? And before I say anything, she says to me, I think this is the most beautiful book I've ever read. Glennon, we've been talking about the word contemplative. We've been calling you that. I don't really understand it because I am not one. And I need you to tell me what you, what is it? What is a contemplative? I'll tell you what I thought a contemplative was because maybe some people have this in their minds. To me, I thought a contemplative was like the people
Starting point is 00:04:53 who go off and sit and silence in an empty room and just think for hours on end. And I think I had that impression probably because I was operating in a lot of white intellectual spaces that kind of co-opted true contemplative practice from Eastern spirituality and made it this complete practice of the mind. So that's what I thought it was. When I went to write this year of flesh, I started to really have to put language to what
Starting point is 00:05:22 does contemplation mean for me. And the best way I can describe it is a kind of sacred attention. And maybe that happens in thought, in silence and solitude, but I think it doesn't necessarily need to. It can be attention to the body, it can be a presence. Incidentally, we had this mantra in my family growing up. My father would always say to us, pay attention. Or are you paying attention to, like, look up. He'd say, like, he would quiz us.
Starting point is 00:05:51 Like, what was the waitress's name? Were you paying attention, you know, or where is home from here? And I think that was so in me that by the time I started a contemplative practice, it really melded, really naturally into just who I am because of that kind of family upbringing. I'll also say that there is some kind of connection to like one's interior world and just kind of like a nearness to oneself. And it's not just a attention to the exterior or the interior, but it's kind of like a bridge,
Starting point is 00:06:29 or at least that's how I think of it. Wow. It's funny because the thinking thing, most people think the contemplative is somebody who thinks all the time, but it's kind of like the opposite of that. Like the mind is the least contemplative place. It's like it's paying attention. Is that true? Is it paying attention for you to your surroundings, to your body, to your
Starting point is 00:06:50 spirit, and getting out of your head? Listen, I'm with you. I think other people might disagree with those glen and but I'm with you. The mind is interesting to me as like a form of contemplation, but I think there are so many forms and the one we've tend to neglect is kind of a connection with one's physical self and one's body and a kind of presence. I'm an escapist. I've always been an escapist from the time I was a child, and so I think I was drawn to kind of a false contemplation that was about disconnecting. Let's live up here. This is safe.
Starting point is 00:07:26 I can't be hurt here. I can be analytical and not feeling because feeling is such a risk. And I had to unwind a lot of that. And I really did this by thinking about the people who had come before me. And the spiritual practices that they contained and had access to.
Starting point is 00:07:46 And I talk about this a little bit in the book, having this imagination for the spiritual lives that say my ancestors who were enslaved had to have. And this restraint of expression, this restraint and articulation, they couldn't say what they wanted to say always, they didn't have control over everything, but what they did have control over is this connection to their interior life and this kind of hiddenness of self that I think is so special and secret
Starting point is 00:08:15 and such a part of my contemplation is this, where are the secret places in me? And I go there not because I think everyone needs access to them, but because I deserve that union with myself. And so I'm trying to adopt some of that as well. Do you think that secret places in you and that need to protect yourself had anything to do with you were anything to do with you were selectively mute until you're about seven. And you have dealt with anxiety over your entire life. I'm wondering how that all fits together and whether it was kind of an innate protection of what you knew was the sacred innu, not wanting to share it or was that about about anxiety or is it all just a need to pay deep attention and shutting off your voice was a way to kind of keep paying closer attention. Oh, that's interesting.
Starting point is 00:09:16 I think the kind of shadow side, I think, of contemplation can be anxiety, can be like an overactive imagination of what could go wrong or what's at risk, what's at stake. When you're so close to your interior world, in your physical body, you become so aware of everyone else's. And you know, what's going on inside you because I know everything that is going on inside me that I'm not necessarily presenting. So, you know, imagination, it's such a beautiful thing, but there is this shadow side of what can this do when it's kind of put into hyperdrive and when it's the only way of existing. And as for kind of silence, I think maybe that's, it definitely has something to do with why I'm drawn to a more contemplative life is because I've had to honor that I'm distinct, that I have needs
Starting point is 00:10:16 and that I'm not always incredibly verbal and I'm not someone who's gonna process as I speak. There are these brilliant people who can just speak and say really profound things that they've never said before. I'm not one of them. You know, I need that pause. And I think I was resisting that for so long because I was ashamed of how I peered in the world
Starting point is 00:10:39 as this kind of shy and quiet girl. And I tried to force myself into this caricature of like the witty kind of charming. I did that for a few years in college. And it just, it required so much energy that I didn't have to give. And so contemplation was just this form of spirituality that I could just rest and say it's imperfect, you know, are there times when I'm silent, not because of choice, but because of oppression, because of insecurity, because of anxiety? Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:11:12 But are there times where my silence is actually a sacred path that frankly other people could learn from? I think so. For sure. I could. We're going to talk about all later, because you have such a beautiful perspective on awe, but do you ever think that awe and anxiety are connected?
Starting point is 00:11:32 Because it's like if you're paying deep attention, I get a little bit up to snitch awkward in social situations. Okay. Adi just like often call my thing is when someone introduces themselves to me, I panic and introduce myself as them. So like if a person named Joel walks up to me and says, hi, I'm Joel, I panic every time and say, hi, I'm Joel. And then it's like this moment, it's just off.
Starting point is 00:11:59 Okay, so what I try to describe social anxiety sometimes is it's like being star-struck by everyone. Hmm. Okay. Yes. If you're really paying attention, you're like, wait, look at all these, we're bodies walking around with all of these worlds inside of us just like so exposed. We're just looking at each other. We're just like naked out here.
Starting point is 00:12:24 Just look at, it's just, do you think being in all of things? I guess you would say the shadow side of that. I'm with you, I agree that there's something about all and fear that I think are really intimately tied. If you're a person, I mean, I say this, and I've said this in an interview a few weeks ago, and the person who is interviewing me was just like horrified, but I said I'm a scared person. I don't say that
Starting point is 00:12:50 to be self-deprecating, but I think there are just those of us who live with a greater day-to-day fear, and I'm always assessing risks and I'm looking around and I was very scared little child as well around. And I was very scared little child as well, of course, fear and anxiety are close. But also, you know, I do consider myself a person of all, and so anxious to get on this podcast call. But beforehand, I'm sitting here listening to the barns well as outside. And I'm grounded in maybe both for better words. But I think there's something about awe and fear that they're operating the same muscle almost.
Starting point is 00:13:29 That sacred attention can do really scary things as well. Isn't that fear and awe, even in the Bible? Isn't like fear God, isn't that original word awe? It's like those are always swimming together. Fear and awe. Yes. First, it should be said that your work you have always said and your work is clearly for black people and black liberation I thought it would be
Starting point is 00:13:53 okay to celebrate your book because you sent it to me. I felt like it would be okay but what do you think of white people celebrating your book and celebrating your work? What is your reaction to that? There's attention in me. You know, I've lived with what Tony Morrison calls the white gaze. I've lived with that over my life, just looming for so many years. And certainly I've lived with that in my writing. And while I was writing this here, flesh, I had to keep asking myself, who's in the room with you cool. And I'm almost embarrassed to say how many times the answer was some white intellectual man that didn't care about
Starting point is 00:14:45 me, didn't care about my body or my words. Who invited you? I'm trying to write something for my family. I'm trying to write something that matters and these different people I would find, they're not completely imagined, you know, they're real, but these kind of specters, these haunts were just looming over my writing. And I had to kind of keep exercising the room and say, no, I know who I want in the room with me. I want my ancestors. I want my own voice, my own soul. So anyways, when white people approach
Starting point is 00:15:17 black liturgies or this here flesh, I'm always a bit cautious, I'm a bit wary because I know there are times when the white gaze won. And I can be honest about that. And I think my journey will be as I continue to write books, hopefully, to continue to do better and better and be clear and clear about who I'm speaking to. And so I worry, but at the same time, you know, I don't really feel the need to to to
Starting point is 00:15:47 gatekeep, you know, and it would be kind of foolish of me to think that there's not something of my human experience. That's worth experiencing by a white Audi. Like that, I'm not really interested in that. I don't really have the energy to gatekeep my work in that way. Some people do. I don't. So if I think of a white person can approach either black liturgies or the book and de-center themselves, like I'm giving them a gift, you know. You're welcome. That's how I think about it. This is a gift if a white person is capable of decentering themselves, but I I really I've had this question so many times like who do you want to write for? Who's your audience? And at first, it was just black this generalized black people,
Starting point is 00:16:38 you know, because that's that's what you're supposed to say. black people. And whatever, that's fine. But when I'm most honest, I'm writing for my grandma. That's who I want my audience to be, my grandma, my father. Those are the people I'm thinking of. And when I think of particular people, and not just this generalized notion of blackness and this allegiance, you know, allegiance. It I think it helps. I think it helped my writing, if I'm honest, it helped my writing to seem
Starting point is 00:17:10 compassionate because I'm not talking to you and I'm not talking to a stranger. I'm writing to honor the people that I love and who have held me. I'm Jonathan M. Hevar. I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things. But I grew up working class. My parents were immigrants with factory jobs. And because of that, I think about class a lot. And I wanna talk about it. That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
Starting point is 00:17:49 And what did you all eat? You know, trailer food. And I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore. You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing, and strangely intimate things about what class means to them. She said, you know, for the house cleaner, I hide the tag on the $6 bread. And I just thought, don't you think she knows
Starting point is 00:18:16 that you're wealthy? You're hiding the tags from yourself. Classy, a new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios. Available now, wherever you get your podcasts. You said you've always been an escapist, and I really loved your interrogation in the book about escapism both internally but also in the Christian faith so often it's set up as we don't have to worry about now. We don't have to worry about bodies right now. We we're worrying about later and all our efforts are
Starting point is 00:18:58 for later. You just mentioned your grandma. You say I don't know much about heaven but I have no reason to believe it won't be made right here. And everything will smell like my grandmother's perfume. Why do we do that? And what is the power of reclaiming right now, the idea that heaven could happen right now? Yeah. I think the kind of illusion of the someday heaven, I don't want to demean it because
Starting point is 00:19:30 it's given so many people hope. Like, it's how so many people have survived by thinking of the someday, but I think it's been manipulated by the powerful and by people who are insecure and the way they are in the world, the things that they do, the people that they're pressing, the wealth that they have. And so it's kind of this yeah, cognitive escapism because you don't really want to pay attention to the very present material injustices that are happening to a person or the really present pain that exists in the world. Some people don't have the practice in attuning to that. And so the only kind of feasible answer I think is like, Escape, let's talk about someday, it's all going
Starting point is 00:20:16 to be okay. And we'll be floating blissful spirits around. And you know, I have no idea if that's true or not and so why it's expense so much energy, so much energy trying to force myself into this someday thing or live for this someday thing. And maybe that's because I'm just a past oriented person. I don't know, I'm a memory oriented person, person. I don't know. I'm a memory oriented person, but you know, I think what happens when we are able to, I don't know, interrogate that inclination to the Sunday heaven is we start to, well, I think we get closer to ourselves, you know, we get closer to our sadness. I think we get closer to our anger. Really every felt emotion, I think, is probably amplified when you bring yourself back in to what is happening now. And I wonder if it doesn't also make people more active. You know, there's a kind of urgency that changes. I don't
Starting point is 00:21:21 love the word urgency, but there is some kind of, there's an emotional urgency whenever you're able to say, I want goodness for you now. I want peace, I want healing for you now. I want clean water for you now, you know. I want good relationships for you now. It creates this kind of urgency in our relationships and our emotions, I think. I think it's beautiful because of the change that we don't wait upon.
Starting point is 00:21:47 Also, you said that that structure of escapism means that they've set up a system where the only holy things are invisible. Yeah. Because if only the holy things are those things we cannot see, that means that all the things we can see, our bodies, our love, our partners, our planet, our planet, our planet, our planet are not holy. And so that reclaiming of no holy is now and these things that I'm looking at and these people
Starting point is 00:22:17 I'm looking at and myself are holy. That was really beautiful. So thank you for putting that in my head. Thank you. We are addicted to it though. This whole like, I'll be happy when. I'll be happy when I'm a grown up, I'll be happy when I have a job, I'll be happy. So the escapism religion is just like the ultimate arrival fallacy. It's like, yes. Okay, how about we'll just, we'll start, you know, we'll do, we'll start living after we're dead. Like, it's really a bit wild. That's what it is.
Starting point is 00:22:54 Save yourself, save yourself literally. Save yourself till you're after you're dead, right? And also, relieves us of doing anything hard, like a fighting for justice now. It's okay. Everything will be fair later. A fighting for the planet now. It's okay, there'll be some other planet later. It's fascinating. And so you, your book, to me, I think that,
Starting point is 00:23:15 there's so many books that are about sacred texts or reflections as either your book feels to me like a new sacred text. And as such, people are gonna like, try to figure it out. So we've been thinking about you know reading a book is different than planning a podcast. So how do we talk about your book in a way in a language that all people of all faiths and no faith are understanding? We started talking about your 15 categories in this book and
Starting point is 00:23:47 then how they are ways of not of redemption salvation now, not waiting for redemption salvation later. Does it track for you to also call these like ways to be alive? Are these ways to be alive? Are these 15 things different ways to be alive? Are these ways to be alive? Are these 15 things different ways to be alive? Are we getting that wrong? No, I see that ways to be alive. Yes. And maybe the beginning, we begin with dignity. Maybe that's the one that's distinct. If there's something inherent about it, it's not a way it just is. And that can offer maybe some stability as you're approaching the other things. That's a constant, at least in my belief system, I don't think that
Starting point is 00:24:35 your dignity is predicated on anyone else's belief, on your own belief. I don't think it requires that, it just is. And maybe liberation is just the, I don't want to call it the ending, because it's not linear, but liberation may be functions in the same way. That's the last chapter in the book of it's this kind of form throughout the book.
Starting point is 00:24:55 I think you're liberated into lament. I think you're liberated into rage, you're liberated into belonging. And then everything in between, I like that language, ways to be, ways to live. And you said, dignity is the bedrock. Can you tell us the story about when your hair started turning gray when you were little?
Starting point is 00:25:16 Yes, yes. So I started getting gray hair when I was like, I don't know, early six, seven, and it was getting worse and worse with each year. And I developed this ritual standing on my little stool in the bathroom and I would part my hair and I would try to find the perfect part where the least amount of gray was showing.
Starting point is 00:25:45 Again, I'm a completely shy child. I'm just praying for my own invisibility and I'm already distinct because of my blackness, distinct because of my silence. Here's this other thing that's making me distinct. And so, I mean, anytime a classmate would even look at me, I'm trying to like duck and dive. And this thing was just kind of screaming out,
Starting point is 00:26:08 at least in my impression. So by the time I was maybe 11 or so, we were getting ready to go somewhere, my whole family and everyone was waiting downstairs for me and I'm upstairs, you know, parting, parting, re-parting, trying to pluck out hair. I was using my stepmom's mascara to try to cover up some of the grays.
Starting point is 00:26:32 I do that now. I do that now. And finally my dad sends everyone to the car and he comes to the bottom of the stairs and very simply he asks, how long I'm much longer is it going to be I'm cool and I don't know what happened to my little body, but I just lost it. I started
Starting point is 00:27:03 yelling, I hate my hair. I don't even remember what I said. I threw the comb against my brother's door and it was just not the kind of expression you would usually find out of me. I felt like spectacle. And finally, I look at my dad, he was just standing there calmly, face completely calm. And I say, I can't do this anymore. I have to die my hair. And he told me to calm down the stairs, and I came down, you know, afraid,
Starting point is 00:27:29 would be the consequence of my like outburst. And he just takes my head and tuxed into his chest, and he says, okay, we can dye your hair. And I was so confused, so completely confused. And I just stopped crying and I'm looking at him, like, that's not what you're supposed to say. You know, what's the script that we're told that we're supposed to say? We're supposed to try to rally someone's beliefs,
Starting point is 00:27:56 you know, tell them you're beautiful of the language, of the articulation. My dad very wise, I don't think he even understood the moment, knew that that's not what I needed, that I needed, that he would do whatever he needed so that I could stand unashamed in front of him and my family, that he had to do that. And it was a physical act, right? He tucks my head into his chest. He doesn't say you're beautiful, but we draw near to beautiful things, you know, he kisses my head. He puts my hair into the bun himself. He takes on the labor. He puts my hair into a bun. So I don't have to do it. We just walk
Starting point is 00:28:35 to the car and get in and we didn't talk about it again. We never went and bought hair die. I never asked about it again, which is the strangest part of this story. Something mysterious happened on those stairs, where the, you know, it changed me. And it's something that you don't know has changed you until after. It's like, it comes to you in memory, you realize, that was a real shift. Why? Because I didn't need the lecture. I didn't need the three point reason as to why I'm beautiful. I needed someone's nearness. I needed someone to say, it's okay. What can we do? You know, what can we do to kind of stop the bleeding before I try to get you to march out and strut a runway? What can I do? He said, sometimes you can't talk someone into believing their dignity.
Starting point is 00:29:26 You do what you can to make a person feel unashamed of themselves, and you hope in time they'll believe in their beauty all on their own. Yes. Just this past weekend, cool, I gave a friend was staying with me, I gave her your book. She went downstairs, she came upstairs to the kitchen crying and saying over and over again,
Starting point is 00:29:49 God made them close. They were ashamed, Adam and Eve, who throughout the book, you also switched to even Adam. Every other time, appreciate you. Good job. But they were ashamed of their naked selves, and God didn't give them the three-point speech. God just made them close. Like your dad. Why do you think dignity is the bedrock of all
Starting point is 00:30:20 of the forces of liberation or ways to be alive in your book, why is dignity the bedrock? If you don't understand that there is something inherent that can't be taken from you, it makes it very hard to even want liberation and thinking of that was sort of Shakur, quote, that she talks about, you can become so used to your chains, you know, that you don't have an appetite for liberation anymore because you start to think that's what that's what you're meant for. And so how could I take someone on a journey of kind of liberating spirituality if they don't believe they're they're worthy of that. And that moment, that moment in Genesis, with God and the close, there's something that complicates
Starting point is 00:31:05 the story in so many beautiful ways. I was taught when I went to college, this very unnew ones, frankly boring story about just this curse, this doom, you know, doom and gloom, and the dark clouds rolled in. And there's just this very simple, beautiful line that just complicates everything that's happening in the moment. Did God have to kneel? Did he kneel down in the dirt? Did he make the first kill? You know, he made the clothes out of skin. What did that cost him? And so it complicates the story, I think, of shame and an attunement and care, in a way that's really beautiful. It's tenderness, it's, yeah, it's tender, but it's painful.
Starting point is 00:31:49 Yeah. Yeah, because your dad, because it cost him something, because he probably wanted to say, my darling perfect daughter, you're perfect, you're by, blah, blah, blah, blah. Yes.
Starting point is 00:32:00 But he chose you. If you think yourself, what does that mean about me? Imagine what, and my dad, he's a very young father, he was a teen dad. What does that mean about what I've done? I can only imagine the thoughts going on in his head. So there's two, I mean, my shame, I think this is how shame often works.
Starting point is 00:32:16 Like, it doesn't just stay where it's meant to go. My shame activated something in him. I'm sure, you know, of his own questions. What does that mean about my face? You bear my face as well. You hate your face. What does that mean about mine? What does that mean about the things I've told you?
Starting point is 00:32:32 What does that mean about me greasing your scalp every morning? The shame in a way can be a kind of contagion. But I think there are people out there wise people like my father who are able to take that and de-center themselves in a way that allows them to care, even though it can be costly. What do you say to someone who was not loved like your father loved you, who was needing to find dignity as a bedrock in order to begin living? There's so many times that you say dignity isn't something we offer to people, we just
Starting point is 00:33:24 affirm it. How does someone find dignity when they haven't been loved well? Right. I mean, I'm biased, but this is where I think that the spiritual should come into play, whether or not that's a Christian spirituality, and I don't really care, but just an attentiveness to the mysteries of the world. How about we use that word? If I'll speak from my own experience, when I'm drawn into the mystery of being, I don't always need the clarity of someone else's affirmation
Starting point is 00:33:56 or my own affirmation. There's this really cruel rhetoric out there that I'm sure you've heard it that says, if you don't believe that you're beautiful, no one else will. How did we get that? How cruel? What kind of strength, I mean, leave it.
Starting point is 00:34:15 Leave it to us to decide, we'll meet self-hatred with self-hatred. We'll meet self-hatred with blame. If you don't believe that you're beautiful, no one else will. You just have to muster belief. I think it's so impractical. And right now we have a ton of people
Starting point is 00:34:30 on social media pretending that that self-love is there. It's a theater because that's what you're supposed to say. That's what you're supposed to believe about yourself. I just feel so sad about that. I feel so sad about that kind I feel so sad about that kind of theater that we're all kind of forced into. Instead, I think we have a kind of, we can have a kind of mysterious framework for existence that says, your beauty, it actually is not predicated on you. I don't have to believe it when I wake up in the morning. You just are. You can choose to breathe the air or not breathe the air, but the air is there, you know.
Starting point is 00:35:10 It's there. And it's more of an awareness than anything else. I think that's been so healing to me instead of trying to contrive this really triumphant, you know, this really triumphant form of dignity that says I deserve to be honored. I now say I possess honor. I possess that. I'm not waiting. I'm not waiting for anyone to give me the honor that I need. It's in me and that changes, that changes how I'm able to, yeah, how I'm able to survive frankly in a world that doesn't love my body, that doesn't love black women bodies. It changes things.
Starting point is 00:35:53 Cole, you originally thought you were going to write a book of spiritual contemplation, but you grew up in a family that you called not overtly spiritual, but had a very strong commitment to storytelling. So you had these stories of your family that you were compelled to write. You wrote those and now you have this gorgeous book of stories that isn't exactly the spiritual contemplation book that you originally planned. Yet it seems to me that in writing your intergenerational stories of lament and joy and struggle and wonder that you compelled into spiritual contemplation the missing piece, right? The dignity and wisdom of you and your people.
Starting point is 00:36:43 the dignity and wisdom of you and your people. It makes me think of Jesus was called the word made flesh. How is imperative that the message became the body? And it's likewise imperative that the body become the message. So faith can't be embodied without the story of our bodies. It must take on account of our stories and our bodies. What does it mean to you to have your faith integrate and take account of your story and your body and your father's story and your father's body and your grandmother's story and your grandmother's body. I mean, it's terrifying. It's terrifying. I could have written a book that's just purely contemplation and philosophizing, but this book, there was something about connecting it to the stories that made me, that forced me to tell the truth about things that I think I could have really gotten away with lying about.
Starting point is 00:37:51 I you know people say they believe all kinds of things. We can say we believe all kinds of things. I don't I think the percentage that we really believe this is probably really slim for most people when you take account of their lived experiences and their stories. I can go on social media and say, love your body, listen to your body, but the more honest thing would be to say, I've been outside of my body for over a decade.
Starting point is 00:38:20 You know, I'm telling you to listen to yours because here's the story of, I don't share this in the book, here's a story of me having blemia for 10 years, me living with blemia for 10 years. That has the message, there's something behind it that's storied. And I agree with people who say we carry our stories in our body. So I couldn't tell the stories without talking about the body. I couldn't talk about contemplation, without talking about its effect on the physical material worlds, including me.
Starting point is 00:38:51 And so, yeah, it was always going to be connected, but it was hard. And the body, living in a body, or body, I should say, is another way that you tell that you write about a way of being alive. So like dignity, body is another way of being alive. And as you write about it, and as we all have experienced in different ways, we are often cut off from that way of being alive through shame. So can you tell us the story about your grandmother as a child and
Starting point is 00:39:26 this note she got home from school from her teacher? Yes, so my grandma I can't remember her age but she was she was young, young like this was elementary school and she's she's had a chest, she's always had a chest. She's always had a big chest and she was starting to mature. She's a teacher, took a little note and tucked it in her, in between her sweater and her backpack strap that said,
Starting point is 00:39:58 Phyllis can't run in the playground, needs bra or something like that. Now, my grandma, she was living in a, I mean, all kinds of abuse were taking place in the house that she was being raised in, but yeah, verbal abuse being no small part of that. She then had to look at her, the woman who was not her mother,
Starting point is 00:40:21 she had to look at her face and watch that person hate her even more because of her body. So she was also enduring sexual abuse, surviving sexual abuse as a child. And she talks about being so, you know, disconnected from her body. She did stop running on the playground. And even though they bought her bra But she said she would sometimes look down and think is that my hand? Is that hand mind because she was so disconnected or she would
Starting point is 00:40:57 Pass herself in a window and do a double take because she was so disconnected from her physical appearance from the side of her own face and the side of her own flesh for a number of reasons Yeah, and her journey was kind of I want to say to overcome, but I think it's probably more complicated than that. I think her journey is maybe partially overcoming but partially learning to exist with maybe partially overcoming, but partially learning to exist with what everything that happened to her and childhood did to her relationship with her body. And I think many of us have had similar experiences of the shame that begins at childhood and it finds a place to rest in your body and it just grows and grows and grows and there are seasons where you're maybe able to kind of cut out the cancer a little bit, and then maybe it grows again, but I think it's just a journey, and it was hers, and it's mine, for sure.
Starting point is 00:41:50 It is an expulsion. It feels like an expulsion. It's like if being in our bodies a force of liberation is a way of being alive, and the shaming of our bodies that happened so early, it's just ejects us. It's like an eaten ejection. Even ejection is a, and then we don't get it. Exile, thank you. It's an exile. Yes. And then we don't get it anymore.
Starting point is 00:42:16 The line where you said that your grandmother was the lone body that required bondage when they said she has to have a bra. But then your grandmother in that class became the lone body that required bondage and it changed the way she moved. Yeah, wherever. Do you have any clue what the hell bulimia? How do you understand bulimia with your contemplative self? Yes.
Starting point is 00:42:49 Yeah. Yes. Well, here's the thing. It begins with the body, but it's not solely embodied. Of course, it has to do with shame. We know this. But I've been pretty, I had a pretty distorted relationship with my body from a time I was a child,
Starting point is 00:43:09 even before I had developed bulimia as a way to kind of cope with the world. I already was kind of living in my head and leaving my blackness behind in certain spaces or feeling kind of alienated because of my bigness. I was a a chubby child. So there are all these and I mentioned this very briefly in the book, but I also survived ongoing sexual abuse as a child. So I learned at a time when kids are learning how to move in their bodies, their agility, the age that they were learning, how to be free, and how they can jump from here to there.
Starting point is 00:43:47 I was learning how to leave my body to survive. That was my strength. You need to leave. I'm certainly no expert, but we know that that's a very common and necessary trauma response, a dissociation gets a bad name, but in the moment, it's a mercy. In the presence of trauma, it's a mercy, sadly for me and for many other people, it just happens to be that we take that mercy and we extend it even though the threat is no longer there anymore. You know, we extend it. And I think that happened for both my grandma and I and we learned to dissociate even
Starting point is 00:44:31 when we don't want to and we don't need to necessarily for survival. And so I would, I would was already at a distance, you know, at a distance from my body. And that was my, that was my gift to you. That was my strength, that to leave to escape if you wanna connect it there. Then as I go into adolescence and I'm dancing,
Starting point is 00:44:52 I'm in front of a mirror, however many hours a day, pretty much every day of the week I'm in front of a mirror, I can't escape the side of my own face, I can't escape the relationship with my body. So what do I do? I turn against it, that distance becomes then, you know, really disdain self hatred. I mean,
Starting point is 00:45:11 maybe it begins with neglect, but it ends with self hatred. For me, at least, that's what my, I think that was the story of my bulimia, a hatred of my body, but more than that, a hatred of a hatred of my body, but more than that, a hatred of me, a hatred of myself, which I think is so sinister and it's so imprecise that I think it's really difficult because it felt so necessary to my survival. And the same way that leaving felt necessary to my survival, this new ritual of purging felt necessary for my survival. I mean, and so I wonder if you resonate with that kind of desire to leave becoming a desire to annihilate, you know. Yeah, I mean, you just said distance can become disdain. That's it. I feel like I've figured it out now. So,
Starting point is 00:46:06 and I'm going to have it figured out until at least you get off this podcast that I'm going to forget again. But yes, and I'm wondering if that's why the only things that really truly helped me besides my medication are practices where I'm in my body. Presence becomes love for me. When I'm forced to be present in my own body.
Starting point is 00:46:32 And that makes sense, right? Because the truth is love. It's there. Like you said, we don't have to earn it. We don't have to have self-love. We don't have to feel self-love. It just is. So when you're forced to be present, it is. But when you stay distant
Starting point is 00:46:48 hate grows, which is true for everybody and everything and every place, being divorced from which gets us to place. So place you talk about as you write about, as another way for us to be alive. that we have then separated from in a million different ways. And one of the lines you introduce the idea of place being something we need to reconnect with in order to be alive is you say, did you know that birds do not land because they are tired? They know and they have always known that their liberation depends on their ability to recall the ground. I still, I've read it 60 times, I still get, because it reminded me of immediately,
Starting point is 00:47:38 which then you wrote about my, all of my strategies with my therapist and all the people like about when I'm freaking out, or any sort of panic or big anxiety immediately go to, okay, what's one thing you smell. Tell me what you can hear. Fear. That kind of anxiety or fear is a way of not being alive. And a way of returning to life is to be re, is to remember the place I am in, where things are usually okay, right? And so you say there is a mysterious entanglement between our welfare and our capacity to ground ourselves in a certain place.
Starting point is 00:48:22 So can you talk to us? Because we often don't think about where we are at all. So what does place do you have to do with being alive, like being liberated? Yeah, I mean, I think it has to do exactly what you're saying, with the sensory, the very real sensory. What's one thing you hear? Tell me three things you see. But for a long time, I kind of was reflecting
Starting point is 00:48:50 as if it was only people who were forming me more than that I would say circumstances. And when I left home, and I mean, I didn't go far, I went to school in Pittsburgh, I was born and raised in Pittsburgh, but in very different parts of Pittsburgh. So when I left home for college, and I was in and raised in Pittsburgh, but in very different parts of Pittsburgh. So, when I left home for college and I was in this new place, I think I knew that something in me had shifted, but it really wasn't until I started to return home. And I, for the first time in my life, had experienced this home coming, that many of us experienced
Starting point is 00:49:22 that I realized just how much of me comes awake depending on the place that I'm in. And I don't think it means I'm faking it at college. It just means I can access. I there's an entrance into parts of me that I don't have I don't have easy access to when I'm in a room full of you know academics. But what but when I would walk the streets of Brooklyn, when I'm walking down the boulevard, there's some kind of nearness that I'm able to, I don't know, kind of move toward. But it's, I think it's easier not to pay attention. I'm kind of, the jury's out really on why this is.
Starting point is 00:50:05 I'm sure it has to do with dissociation and so many people living in their minds are living to kind of play out whatever conversation they thought they were supposed to have. We're kind of consumed with each other, consumed with our own thoughts and lack a kind of awareness of, okay, where are the lights in my room?
Starting point is 00:50:23 What are the shadows doing to that wall? And it's a very kind of awareness of, okay, where are the lights in my room? You know, what are the shadows doing to that wall? And it's a very kind of privileged thing to be able to pay attention to, to be able to take a minute and really ground yourself and see where you are. And for different people, I think I'm sure that grounding and that attunement is costly in a different way. And I can say this for myself, not all the homecoming, it wasn't all warm fuzzy feelings, you know, those entrances, it wasn't all warm fuzzy feelings, you know, those entrances, it wasn't going to necessarily beautiful places in myself. I was going into hard places and realizing, oh, that's the reason, maybe that's the reason
Starting point is 00:50:55 why you flinch. You know what happened to that door? You remember someone pounding on that door. That's why you don't like loud knocks. I'm passing the door and now I have a little bit more of an awareness for about who I am in the world. Wow. You're saying you're, it's a way of being alive. Nobody's promising that being alive is all touchy, feeling good stuff.
Starting point is 00:51:18 I mean, I have had moments where I walk back into my childhood home and I find myself in the pantry, shoving food in my mouth in the first 20 minutes. And I'm like, how did I like binging like that? And I'm 45. Like I've, it's just awakens, it awakens for, for better or worse, you can be alive, alive in different places. Yes. And it absolutely has to do with your body. I've completely resonate with you saying where I just end up a place and I'm like, how did I get here? I've started to tell myself, Cole, if you're not in your body, someone else is. And so who is it? Who is it? You know, get here? You're not just walking around empty.
Starting point is 00:52:07 Something is, who's at the home? It's not you. You're not leaving behind an empty vessel. And something about that, I think, has really changed me to think, hello, you know, that this is, it's risky. Are you sure? Are you sure you don't want to eat until 6 p.m.? Are you sure you want to? Because someone else, you know, it's something else. And I think that that something is probably different for different people, whether it's capitalism or the patriarchy or whatever. A white supremacy. If we leave our place, if we leave our bodies, if we lose our connection to the sensory, you know, it might seem like survival. That's what I'm learning. It might seem like survival, but really it's a death and it's very dangerous. Changes, changes how I relate to it now. I feel this kind of fierce protection over my body
Starting point is 00:53:00 in a way that maybe I didn't before. One of the many gorgeous things is that it feels like every chapter that you have or every way of being alive seems to be discussed as a way of being personally more alive. And then also a way of responsibly living among other people or the planet that is a shift in our understanding of that thing. So for example, you talk about place as a way for us to be personally more alive. And we've just discussed that. But you also talk about respecting place in a way that shifts our understanding
Starting point is 00:53:55 about our relationship to place. For example, when you fell in love with Wisewood, your home, and you buy this place. You have land ownership, whatever that means. You said of Wisewood, it never felt as if it belonged to us. But my own sense of belonging became magnified. Something was restored in me. I am reconciled to the land by this place, and I have no no greater Reconciliation to date and then you go on to describe your ownership of that land being your Responsibility to nurture it. Mm-hmm. Not that this this land is mine
Starting point is 00:54:39 But this land is my Responsibility to nurture. I love this so much. Can you talk to us about that and that shift in how all of us in this Western world, because this is part of the reason why our planet's on fire and everyone's moved off their land, right? So talk to us about that shift in thinking about land in place. Yes. I was raised in the city.
Starting point is 00:55:04 You know, I never, I know people say this, I truly never had an imagination for land ownership. It was the furthest thing from my mind. The reason why we were drawn to the house actually wasn't the land. It was the beautiful brick of the house, and it just happened to come with, you know, eight or so acres. And we're like, what are we going to do with this? It used to be orchards. It's so interesting. The shift that's occurred. And really, yeah, the whole household's heart is really toward the land. I started to walk around in the kind of reads that lead to we found a pond during the pandemic. We have a pond found a pond and a full on pond. It's not a small thing. I'll walk through their reads and I'll discover something new or I'll stop at a tree and I'll think, man, you are allowed to be here. And I thought, how interesting that my first thought isn't,
Starting point is 00:56:00 I own this. This is yours. I really didn't have that thought in my mind. Other people would say that to me, can you believe you own a pond? I thought that's interesting. That's not really what that's not really the first thing that came to my mind. I thought, you can be here. You're safe. No one's going to kick you off of this land, which I think is really, I mean, that in me is maybe some of my own formation, but that desire to kind of get away from the idea of owning and possession, I think is far more rooted in kind of indigenous wisdom than my own and knowing that this house exists because this land was stolen. That's complicated when you're walking down these halls. And because the house is so old, it was built in 1840, we have some
Starting point is 00:56:52 historical documents. So we're a little bit closer to the story because we have it in writing, you know, this land was granted to, you know, so he should, who shall not be named for serving in this war, they just gave away land as if it was something to be owned. So I, here I am kind of walking through this tragedy. I have to find a way to contend with my own like shame guilt, whatever you want to call it. But I also have to find a way to engage the beauty and the way that the land demands and to kind of take, not completely take the human experience away,
Starting point is 00:57:31 but like, are we able to de-center humans for just a moment, you know? Like we truly are small and not in a self-deprecating way, not in a degrading way, but there's a smallness to us, and there's a youth to us. And in the grand scheme of history and the way, not in a degrading way, but there's a smallness to us and there's a youth to us. In the grand scheme of history and the cosmos, there's a youth to humanity that I think we're not really aware of because we're kind of just a little bit, I'll say, human centered. Whenever I go outside and I'm walking around walking the perimeter of my house or walking to the land
Starting point is 00:58:05 I Need to find a different word besides smallness, but that kind of it's it's perspective maybe a better word It allows me to connect in a way that I never I mean Never thought I would and it doesn't just extend to these like really beautiful landscapes in the pond now when I go to the city I just extend to these like really beautiful landscapes in the pond. Now when I go to the city, I was able to go back to Pittsburgh for a while. I'll look at the buildings and I'll think what a miracle. How did we, how did we do this? How did we, how were we able to construct these things? There's beauty here, you know, the sidewalk, not a huge fan of sidewalks, but it's their beauty there. It's their history or their little marks,
Starting point is 00:58:45 so their people's names were written in it. But going back to Wisewood, it's hard to put language to it. But so this house was, the land was given in 1820. The house was built in 1840. We all know what was happening to my ancestors in 1840 and 1820, right? What is, like, when I think about it, kind of intergenerational self, not just me,
Starting point is 00:59:09 what a beautiful, kind of mysterious thing, and I'm not trying to romanticize it, but to think that I now am able to belong to land, belong to the land that I live on, not out of bondage, that I get to choose, that I'm safe, that I'm free to be here, I'm free to leave. But whenever I prune the path, whenever I bend down in the reeds and start picking the reeds
Starting point is 00:59:33 to clear the path, I do that out of my own love. It's a very mysterious restoration, I think, that happens. I'm all for black land ownership. Because I've seen it in my own life, I never thought it'd be something that just like sits outside and listens to birds. Like what is that? Who, why? You know, but there's this connection and there's this responsibility that I feel that I've never, I've never felt before. I was so taken by this part in your book in that
Starting point is 01:00:07 for. I was so taken by this partner book and that what really jumped out at me was the impermanence of it all. And how, because as me in my white body, it has been my goal in life to be an owner of things. And this completely shifted my mindset around that, that, oh no, I don't, and I can't own anything. It is all impermanent, and I will have to let this go. And so the idea of nurturing this thing, for whenever I'm here, however long I get to be lucky enough to be on this land, or in your case, at wise, that is my joy, that is my responsibility. And you only take as much, also, as you can nurture. Yeah. You can be in wonder about, that's a huge responsibility, which takes us to wonder,
Starting point is 01:00:57 oh, wonder, cold, your discussion of being alive through wonder. You talk about how wonder includes the capacity to be in awe of humanity, even your own. Can you talk about that the way that we have set up our worlds to kind of like an amusement parkward? This is stuff that is worthy of wonder. All this is just normal stuff that is, and how you so beautifully integrate that.
Starting point is 01:01:31 Yes. So when I have done some traveling and I hiked in the Himalayas, I try not to brag about it, but yeah, I hiked. I'm like trying to find a different way to say it. I'm like just say it. You just said that. And a beautiful, one of the most beautiful experiences that I've had seeing the snow on the mountains and watching the transition from like warmth to cold. So beautiful. I started to review my journal from that track, it was about three weeks. I was just talking about people. I was writing poetry and the images were so often about the people
Starting point is 01:02:16 that were with me, you know, the image of this young girl picking these purple flowers that would kind of burst through the earth. It's a zoom-in moment. I wasn't writing the image of the majesty, the mountain tops. I wrote very little about on the days that we were at a peak, and we were camping at a peak, very little written, so much attention and so much interest in the people that were around me. The people we would bow and say, Namaste to us, we passed and the tops of their heads, their images that were just as much grounded in, you know, the earth as they were humanity. It makes you wonder, what is it that we see in like a landscape that we're so unwilling to see in each other?
Starting point is 01:03:06 I Had this friend tell me one time it was he was joking, but he said let's look at each other like we're art for 30 seconds Everyone look at your neighbor like I'm like oh my goodness. It's one of those weird intimacy exercises. Yeah, it's like, no, thank you. I didn't do it, of course, but I started to do it on my own in practice. I'll find myself just drifting off,
Starting point is 01:03:31 staring at someone and think, well, look at the way their hair grows or look at those spots. I'd say, I mean, if I'm honest, it's difficult to do it myself. But what a practice to believe that whatever is in the mountain top is also in the face of your neighbor and the face of your child and the face of the person you love or the person you hate
Starting point is 01:03:52 that there's something beautiful in that. Do you think, Cole, that has something to do with the same discussion we're just having about ownership? Because I feel like people and their bucket lists and their acquisitions of places and of majesties and it's done. I've done Hawaii. I've done. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We're collecting them for our ownership for our own portfolios and so therefore it has to be things that are on that list And so therefore it has to be things that are on that list and not things that can be found in the every day because that isn't something worthy of ownership and acquisition. Yes. I think it's absolutely tied. We're just, we, man, not everyone. I think this of whiteness, I think whiteness loves the conquering of beauty, loves the collecting. I've seen that in white supremacy. I mean, it wants to be supreme. It wants to have the supreme.
Starting point is 01:04:59 But you see this in whiteness in general, just like this desire to reach the mountain top. You know, that's the goal. Here I am. desire to reach the mountain top, you know, that's the goal. Here I am. You can reach the mountain top. That can be a beautiful thing, nothing against high groups or people who track in that way. But what do you feel when you're at the top of, I want to ask people, what do you feel when you're at the top of that? Is it feel like a conquering? Why? Why? Why do you need to feel like you've conquered something? Or the people who kind of,
Starting point is 01:05:27 they're able to practice wonder, but only so that they can, like you said, acquire it. They want the beauty. They want the beauty for themselves, as opposed to, you know, bearing witness. It's not enough to bear witness. How can I have this? How can I take it, you know?
Starting point is 01:05:48 this. How can I how can I take it? You know? So the the discussion of wonder is life changing and there's a few different levels of what wonder can do for us and for the world in your discussion of it. And one seems to be a personal liberation, right? A personal way of being alive. And you use the description of, I think he used the color purple, right? Talk to us about that iconic moment in the color purple and what she was doing, what she was reclaiming in that moment. Yeah, that iconic line. I think it pisses God off anytime you walk past
Starting point is 01:06:30 the color purple and don't appreciate it. I mean, talk about a complicated character, you know, talk about writing a very human character. There's something in, I mean, the story, the color purple, if you've read it or if you've watched the film adaptation, so much tragedy, right? It would be very, very easy to reduce that story
Starting point is 01:06:59 to mere tragedy. And I think we were inclined to that sometimes, especially in relationship to black stories, we're inclined toward the traumatic. I think there's a really sinister curiosity around black death, around black pain, everyone. I mean, even if you don't necessarily crave it, there's this interest, right? What does it mean to have a spiritual practice that's grounded not that doesn't begin at the site of trauma, but begins at the site of beauty and attentiveness. I mean, how liberating to be able, like I said, to listen to the Barnes-Wall, it was outside of my room instead of getting wrapped up in what, you know, you really smart people
Starting point is 01:07:41 will think of me. That's a act of that that's a liberating act, that's liberating access that I have to the beauty of the world, that it's not escapism in the way that I think you can use it as. It's not escapism, it's actually really unapologetic presence to the nuance of the world that there are terrors, you know, but there is also beauty and to be unapologetic in witnessing that and communicating that, you know.
Starting point is 01:08:06 I think is what Alice Walker was doing. Yeah, it's like, Blender, every time we behold, you say, we behold something, we look at it as a piece of art or we just feel the aliveness in us that comes when we have wonder. We are asserting what you say that we are more than a grotesque collection of traumas, right? It's like suddenly you are something else.
Starting point is 01:08:39 And then you talk about wonder as not only a personal way of being alive, a personal liberation, but a way to save the world, really. Because you talk about, I think you said, we can't destroy things that we're beholding. Something like that. Yeah, I think it's really difficult. I mean, if you're witnessing beauty, I think you're going to be inclined to protect it. You know, you could be inclined to take ownership over it, claim it, acquire it. But there's this other, you know, very true, I think women us, that
Starting point is 01:09:14 wants to protect beautiful things. If you're witnessing beauty in the world, that's what's going to kind of cultivate a love in you and cultivate the sense of how can I keep the safe? You know, how do I protect the flame? Yeah. Yeah, I don't know. We went back up forth about the most beautiful lines in this book and we have 40 million, but one of them has to be the Northern Lights are one thing. But when I die, tell them I went to Nomellaska only to find God in a Minecraft parody. You'll just have to read to understand that. But first out crying. Yes, first out crying when I read that.
Starting point is 01:09:53 Yes, she did. Okay, I want to, by the way, if you ever need a full reading guide of your book, please just email me because I have all 15. But what we will do is end with calling because that's the next one. Oh God, it was just as a complete control freak who was always talking about God and not even ever sure she believes in God. Like I'm just like, am I, what am I talking about? Am I making all this? I don't know. Okay. So you're talking to your brother about your lucid dreams.
Starting point is 01:10:32 Okay. And these are dreams in which you are making, you know you're dreaming. So you're calling the shots in your own dream. Yeah. Okay. You're changing your dream. You're deciding what's next. You're controlling your dream and your brother says
Starting point is 01:10:47 You live and sleep in control. Hmm. I want to know how to know And you say to him I wanted to know how not to know How to feel like there is a calling from outside of you driving you to that door until you walk through it like there is no other way. Sometimes you want to believe the dream. I'm not one given to belief. I don't know if I'll ever love anyone as much as I loved you after this line because to me, I just felt like, okay, sure things are beautiful and magical because I make them that way.
Starting point is 01:11:32 Like, I want God, this God that I'm a great PR agent for, to show up and do something so, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, that I will feel called to that and know that I'm not controlling all of this. That magic is real. Yes. And that was the first, the first one I ever got like that was this one. Was Abby.
Starting point is 01:11:57 When Abby walked into a room and I suddenly, God was like, here she is. And also, you're queer honey, surprise. I was like, she is and also your queer honey Supra like I was like This is a plot twist that I can say for sure. I didn't control That was a calling from outside that was a calling for but was it because then I'm still reading from call Right then I'm like, you know what? What if it wasn't even I mean because one of the things that's so important to me about your work is your refusal to decide whether God is just outside or inside or because in the Christian people get so freaked out if you ever even begin to consider that the deepest self is God. Do we even have to decide whether it's coming from outside or inside or whether it's God on some phone, in the sky or whether God is the self calling to
Starting point is 01:12:53 itself? Yeah. What whether going into yourself isn't going toward God, going toward the divine. How would Thurman talk about that beautifully? I don't know if I quote him in the book, but he talks about that beautifully. The sound of the genuine in you, he says, who are you? You have to find out who your name is. And he connects that to, if you're not, you're just going to end up like some Mary Annette on, you know, on the strings that someone else is pulling ultimately. Who are you? And that call to self being a call toward the divine. I think it's one of those mysterious things that I don't feel pressured to distinguish, you know, if it's true, it's true, it's true. It's true. You know, my dad says that
Starting point is 01:13:36 the truth is the truth, whether or not you're prepared to tell it or you just tell it, it's true, it's true. Any kind of fidelity to something that's true in me, I think is a fidelity into a truth in the divine and into a truth in who God is. So yeah, maybe the call, maybe the call was both. Yeah. I'm from inside the house and outside. And there's beauty in both. And you don't need it to come from outside in order for that to be valid. You don't have to wait for that to seem like it's, although I want that. Yeah, I want the magic. People say they hear God.
Starting point is 01:14:09 I'm like, I'm waiting. You know, hasn't yet happened to me. But have I met the face of God? You know, have I met the face of God in a person I love? Yeah. You said I've accepted that the whole of my life will be a pilgrimage toward the sound of the genuine in me. But also if practice right, you're calling into self-hood man,
Starting point is 01:14:35 hands the sound of self-hood in someone else, meaning, like, this is a kind of God pyramid scheme I can get into. Because usually, right? Because usually it's like, oh, I'm collecting people for God. And it's just like kind of God pyramid scheme I can get into. Because usually, right, because usually it's like, oh, I'm collecting people for God. And it's just like kind of like Mary K. It's like a pyramid, I brought him and I brought her and we're all getting points.
Starting point is 01:14:54 But maybe this is a sort of evangelism I can believe in, which is like the closer we get to God, which is the closer we get to our deepest self, freeze somebody else to get the closest that they can get to God and to their deepest self. And this is a sort of real ripple liberation. Yes.
Starting point is 01:15:14 In that speech that Thurman gives the sound of the genuine, he gave it to Spellman College. There is this line where he says, it's possible if I go down and me go toward my true self, I can go down and me and come up in you and having made that pilgrimage. I can see myself through your eyes and you can see yourself and there's this intimacy with the self, there's this intimacy with another person like, is that not what love is? You know, I can go down and mind yourself, come up in you, and make that pilgrimage of mutuality, of mutual love, and mutual beholding, you know?
Starting point is 01:15:52 Mutual beholding. And in fact, maybe that's the only way, because as you say, can you describe your father looking in the mirror and your revelation about what he saw versus what you were able to see? Yes. I don't know. Maybe someone listening has, like, if you've seen someone else's face in the mirror and you just know it's not lining up quite right. And I don't remember how old I was, but I had this experience with my dad. He's doing his hair, getting his curls with his vital point. I'm looking at him and
Starting point is 01:16:30 I'm like, do you think that's what you look like? And he's looking at me like, what are you talking about? And I'm like, that's not your face. That's not what you, I'm saying that just I want to shake him and say, that's not, that's not your face. What I want to shake them and say, that's not your face. What I wanted to say is, your face is way better than what that mirror is translating, what that mirror is communicating. Instead, I just grabbed his face and stared at him in a way that a very queer little child would do. I just grabbed him and stared and was like, that's not your face. Because even with mirrors, you know,
Starting point is 01:17:05 you're seeing this projection, you're seeing everything kind of new and out of alignment. It's not actually showing what you truly look like. It's showing an iteration of it maybe, but not your true face. And I think, I mean, how mysterious that we were made, that we cannot see our own faces. I will never, I will never see my own face.
Starting point is 01:17:27 Oh my gosh. You're seeing it. Really. I will never get over it. I will never get over. You telling us that we will never see our own face. It's scary. If you could see me cold, like literally crossing my eyes trying to find some way. How beautiful is that? It's the most beautiful thing. We will never see our own faces, which is why we need to see other people's faces for them. Yes. And why other people need to see our faces for us
Starting point is 01:17:58 and why we need other people to see the face of God because God is made in our image, which we are not able to see. Yes, I need you. I need you to look at me. For all the people who want to live in visibility all the little children, I needed other people to behold my own face. My dad needs that. You need that. I think that, I mean, it's the best case for belonging that we have. These pseudo wise people who think they can live a solitary life. Like, it's just not true.
Starting point is 01:18:38 There's something missing. There's some, there, you know, people always say, you have to know yourself. They say these things. The same with the beauty. They say, you have to know yourself. They say these things, the same with the beauty. They say, you have to know yourself. You have to really know yourself before you can be with someone. I'm like, okay, yes.
Starting point is 01:18:53 And you have to really know how to be with someone in order to really know yourself. It's not either or I have to really be able to stand and not cover my face while I'm talking to my spouse. I need to be able to stand and not cover my face while I'm talking to my spouse, you know, I need to be able to stand before them and have that very, you know, strange and, you know, scary experience of being seen in order for me to go into, you know, our nice little meditation space and then try to encounter myself. It's not how it works. I reject that. I'm a big evangelist
Starting point is 01:19:28 for belonging in the sense that I think, you know, we were made for that kind of mutual witness. And it's not right that we, you are, it's, it can't be that we know ourselves before we go knowing anyone else. It's like place. People are like place. They will bring stuff up in us that we don't even have never seen of ourselves before. They will show us part of our face that we have never seen before. Every new person, you cannot know yourself.
Starting point is 01:19:57 Just like every place brings us, brings a new part of ourselves out. Every person does. That's why it requires presence and aliveness. It's like the first time I've struggled with faith, religion, Christianity, being brought up in the Catholic Church, being a little queer kid, didn't have the language for it until I was in my teenage years. And Glenin has allowed me, and I'm now kind of putting these pieces together throughout this conversation, you've allowed me to see God because I see it in your face.
Starting point is 01:20:39 And it has allowed me to feel God inside of me. And I don't know. I just think that this is one of the most beautiful things that a person can experience, especially when you feel like you have to reject God because they rejected you first. I'm like, no, I reject you first. And so to be able to come back into it in a witnessing way, when I look at my spouse and I can see God, I can see the divine in her. And it's my job to kind of mirror that for lack of a better term right now, back to you. You just mentioned belonging, which is a whole nother unbelievable way of being alive that you discuss in the book. Okay. And you said, each year, I know love and belonging, a love that does not require a sacrifice at the altar of acceptance. Okay, did Pud Squad, did you hear that?
Starting point is 01:21:39 The belonging is a love that does not require a sacrifice at the altar of acceptance. What parts of yourself, Cole, do you continue to feel that the world wants you to sacrifice at the altar of acceptance? I mean, my blockness, my queerness, but I mean, in a different way, I think my silence, my nature, my person, my disposition, you know, I'm a writer, I'm doing podcasts, how can you be interesting, you know, my intellect, but there are so many, I'm not all belonging is good belonging. And I have belonged to spiritual spaces that were so concerned with what I thought about God, with any given belief or any given doctrine or creed that if you fall out of line,
Starting point is 01:22:39 then you're bad, you're the bad one. And your belonging is at stake. How terrifying for young people trying to grapple and make sense of who they are in the world and who their people are in the world to demand a kind of belief that means you belong. So anyways, I've decided that if it's a kind of belonging, that demands I believe any given thing, I don't want it because I know what that does to us.
Starting point is 01:23:11 I know we'll say that we believe all kinds of things, you know, if it means that we can have a place at the table, a place, you know, a warmth if it means we can have company, you know, everyone's looking for that. So I'm very skeptical of spiritual spaces in particular that are like that. And I think that's why many Christian spaces probably wouldn't claim me because I don't have an allegiance. I don't have an allegiance to Christianity that terrifies people.
Starting point is 01:23:42 Profit has nowhere to lay her head. Cool. Profit has nowhere to lay her head. Call. A prophet has nowhere to lay her head. I have an allegiance to the questions of what it means to be human and what it means to be a spiritual human in the world. And Christianity is one way I make sense of that. And I might wake up some days and think, yeah, God exists. Maybe it has something.
Starting point is 01:24:02 And I might wake up many other days and think no way. But my fidelity is to the questions, to the questions. It's finding the people who are okay with that, not just okay with that, but welcome that and know that they actually need that in order to and be whole and not whole be full themselves. Be full. I love that. Call Arthur Riley. Thank you. Just thank you. Thank you. The rest of you, your next right thing
Starting point is 01:24:36 is to get the next right book and you might wanna do this because I don't know that there'll be another one. The next right book, which must belong in any, any human being who, who loves life, who loves other people Riley. Thank you, Cole. Thanks for helping us do the hard things. The hardest thing, which is fully being alive. Thanks for inviting me into your space and trusting me with your people. Rest of you, get the book, and then we'll see you here next time.
Starting point is 01:25:27 Bye. We can do hard things, is produced in partnership with Cadence 13 Studios. Be sure to rate, review, and follow the show on Apple Podcasts, Odyssey, or wherever you get your podcasts, especially be sure to rate and review the podcast if you really liked it. If you didn't, don't worry about it. It's fine. you

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.