We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - How to Create Unbreakable Bonds with Brittany Packnett Cunningham
Episode Date: August 13, 2024336. How to Create Unbreakable Bonds with Brittany Packnett Cunningham Activist, producer, and on-air political analyst, Brittany Packnett Cunningham joins us to talk about community, sisterhood, and ...progress in the upcoming election – and in life. Discover: -How we can jump off the invisible “people mover” and into community; -The five different ways to deal with bigotry and the one that works; -Why individualism is the enemy of progress; and -How white women can embrace the power of sisterhood to create change. On Brittany: Brittany Packnett Cunningham is a leader at the intersection of culture and justice. Brittany is Founder of the social impact agency Love & Power Works, Host and Executive Producer of the news and justice podcast UNDISTRACTED, and an on-air political analyst. She has been an elementary teacher, policy advisor, Presidential appointee, and will forever be an activist. You can find her @MsPackyetti on all social media, and subscribe to her podcast wherever you listen to your favorite shows. 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
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Okay, Pod Squad, today we have one of our favorite human beings on the planet here.
And we just let's take a moment and acknowledge how effing lucky we are that this person is
spending an hour with us because they're probably the most wanted person
on the planet in this moment.
Trying to figure out our way forward
because that's what she's always doing.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham is a leader
at the intersection of culture and justice.
Brittany is founder of the social impact agency
Love and Power Works, host and executive producer
of the news and justice podcast, Undistracted,
and an on-air political analyst.
She has been an elementary teacher, policy advisor,
presidential appointee, and will forever be an activist.
You can find her at Miss Pac Yeti on all social media,
and you really should, and subscribe to her podcast
wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Brittany, how you doing? I'm so
great and I'm so glad to be with you all. I'm still a little bit shaken in the
best way as to how much has changed very very quickly. You know before we get
started though I want the squad to know that like,
we are friends in real life, right?
This is not some like internet situation.
I remember when you all were doing together live
and you had become joined some of those shows
and that was where I first met y'all.
And I like watched you, Glennon, sit on the floor
of the stage and be so authentically yourself.
And I was like, what is happening, right?
This is a movement.
And it was so beautiful.
And building that friendship with you all
and remembering being at one of my lowest points
and you all calling and checking in on me,
you sent over the woman to give me an IV infusion
so that I would be okay.
And I think that the community can so often get lost
in these conversations because everybody's got a hot take,
everybody's got analysis, everybody's got a platform
and they're trying to do something with it.
And that is a beautiful thing.
And if we are not building community
throughout all of this, we have nothing.
There is nothing to go home to.
There is no one to hold you accountable. There is no one to go home to. There is no one to hold you accountable.
There is no one to be a shoulder.
There is no one to make you better.
There is no one to engage in mutual aid with
if all we're doing is talking
and we're not able to be with one another.
So I wanna thank you all for being people
who are community for me.
And whether it's been a million years or five minutes,
we pick right up where we left off.
And I'm so thrilled to be now a part of this podcast
community that you all have been building.
Because I know just like at Undistracted,
this is not an audience, right?
This is a community and a family.
I'm grateful to engage in all of this excitement
and confusion and building and trial and error
and trying again.
Okay, well since you did that, before we jump in,
can I just share with the pod squad
the first time I ever saw you before?
Okay.
So we were at this big speaking event,
who the hell knows what it was, I don't know.
No, it was in Florida,
because it was with our friend Barb and Michelle.
That's right, okay.
And there were several of us
that were gonna go speak together.
We were backstage, I was doing my nervous thing,
because that's what I'm always doing.
We were getting ready to walk out,
and all of us who were gonna be the speakers
were kind of buzzing and talking to each other
and feeling nervous
and like preparing in that way in this little circle.
And I look over and Brittany is standing absolutely awake.
She had been with us, but at this point, right before we go off, she's standing away from
us. She is quietly standing in front of kind of this big huge wall and she's just gathering herself.
She's looking up at what looked like the ceiling, the sky, and she's just magically, I don't know, praying.
I think you were praying.
Yeah, that's what I was doing.
I actually took a creepy ass picture of you.
Yeah.
And then immediately showed it to you
because I was like, oh God, she's gonna be like,
why is this woman taking pictures of me by myself?
But I just remember thinking, oh,
that's where this like confident, calm, grounded power
comes from and I remember thinking,
I need to get her prep partner
because mine are kind of freaking me out.
So anyway, that was my first experience of you
and I have never forgot it and I will never forget it.
And every time I see you speak in your power and beauty
and brilliance, I think of that moment.
Oh, thank you, friend.
Thank you.
I always spend that time asking God to hide me
behind the illuminating shadow of the cross is what I say.
And that whatever words come out,
whatever thoughts come up,
whatever concepts are spoken are not mine,
but that they are divine, right?
And that I'm used as a vessel.
And you're the first person to ever notice
that I was doing that,
because I really never did it to be noticed, right?
I would truly always scoot over into a corner
and people, I'd come back and people would kind of be like,
where have you been?
And I'd be like, it's all good. Now some of that preparation is because now
I know I have ADHD and I actually like need this before I go on stage. But I really, in
my faith tradition, you know, I was raised by two very faithful people and my father
was a liberation theologian. So I learned about like dark skinskinned, woolly-haired Jesus,
you know, who comes from the Middle East and from Palestine
and who, you know, worshiped with thieves and sex workers,
right, and like all of the people that the world tells us
to forget that he told us were the most divine among us,
right, and that if our world is not safe for all of them,
then it is not safe for any of us.
So to be clear, like that's who I'm praying to.
Because I think, you know, you talk about being a Christian
and understandably, we have not had very good PR
for a long time.
Okay.
But I, yeah, I don't actually want people to see me.
Like I want them to feel whatever is divine for them
and feel empowered to go walk in their divinity
as they go and change the world.
Like I always feel like that's my task.
So I gotta have a conversation.
So I'm actually equipped to do that
and I get out of my own ego,
which is not easy because we all got them,
but it's necessary work.
Yeah.
So that's my prep partner.
No shade to you, Abby.
I'm sure you're a very good prep partner.
I'm just over here, sitting here, chilling.
I don't do, like, I know the whole conversations
before big moments.
I've prayed, even though I was an atheist
during a lot of my gold medal winning performances,
I was praying to God that we could win.
No atheist in a foxhole or on an Olympic match.
Yeah, so I think that maybe I'm more agnostic.
I'm more agnostic these days than I am atheist.
Well, and Brittany, Abby just loves going on stage.
She feels differently about going.
She likes to go on stage because it's the place
that no one interrupts her in our house.
She gets interrupted a lot.
I've got three kids.
Three kids don't care about what I have to say ever.
You know what I mean?
And like, this is where I let my ego come out.
I get to-
She's the opposite of you.
Yeah, I get to actually have it come out.
I'm like, oh yeah.
That's perfect though, because it's been like,
it's been hidden and shielded all this time.
So it just has been like ripening for that moment for you.
Tell the stories and inspire the people
and finally be able to come out of your shell,
because as soon as you get back home,
you gotta go right back in it.
That's right, humble pie, right, when you walk in the house.
Can I ask you about that, Brittany,
because it's a paradox that your faith,
so much of your liberatory work and social justice work
and political work is based on your faith.
And then, you know, you saw just recently,
Trump is actually speaking to the,
quote unquote evangelical Christians,
the Christian nationalists who,
when he's telling them they won't have to vote anymore,
he just needs them to vote this time.
So much of the base is the self-avowed Uber Christians.
Is it their real faith that's being perverted
and manipulated?
Is it that they have bought something that isn't the real faith?
What's happening?
They're speaking truly to their faith because they worship at the altar of white supremacy.
They are not praying to the same person I'm praying to.
They are not reading the same word that I am reading.
If I look at the red letters, the words that Jesus spoke,
when he decided to, in my faith tradition, become flesh,
become human and experience both joy and suffering
of the human experience in order to be a relatable leader.
And when we talk about leadership, that is antithetical.
That is what's antithetical to a Christian fundamentalism
and evangelicalism that is rooted in Christian nationalism,
that is rooted in white supremacy and patriarchy,
that's rooted in heteronormativity and cis supremacy, right?
That these are things that they have put
at the center of their world,
which means that is the that they have put at the center of their world, which means that is the
idol they have built, which to be clear, biblically is the exact opposite of what the commandment told
you to do. Right? There shall be no other gods before me. You will not build false idols. They
have built false idols and refined them and sharpened them over generations. And then they have found human vessels
to stand up as representatives of the idols they've built.
So Donald is a representative, right?
He is the idol in human form.
Ronald Reagan was the idol in human form.
I mean, if you ever listen to a Republican
talk about Ronald Reagan,
it is like they are talking about God.
Deified.
Completely deified, straight up, right?
Like he could do no wrong.
Meanwhile, he is where Make America Great Again
originates, right?
Meanwhile, he could not even utter the words HIV and AIDS
while a massive now epidemic was raging, right? He is the one that built the
system of trickle-down economics, which permanently, at least thus far, reversed government investment
in communities and people and put that money straight into the hands of billionaires.
Like the reason why all of these billionaires were able to get richer during COVID
has everything to do with a man named Ronald Reagan
that they made God, right?
So they don't worship at the same altar I worship.
I'm not confused about that.
So for me, I tell people,
I'm not progressive politically,
despite being a Christian. I'm progressive politically because I being a Christian,
I'm progressive politically because I am a Christian,
because I was taught who Jesus actually was
and what he stood for,
because I was taught not to center my own image,
but his, right?
Not because I was taught that the basis of our faith
is justice.
Right, that is what the fight is always for.
And so I, yeah, like I want so many of us
who are progressive people of faith
to reclaim that identity and take it back, right?
I think it's so interesting,
and this is something that I've heard her do for a while,
watching Vice President Harris,
now that she's the presumptive Democratic nominee,
reclaim the conversation on freedom and liberty.
I know you all have heard this.
But these are words that for decades
had become synonymous with Republicans,
conservatives, the GOP,
because they snatched it for themselves
and they perverted the meeting and then sold it back to us.
What they sold back to us was a lie,
because they told us that real liberty meant restriction,
that real liberty meant a lack of bodily autonomy,
that real liberty meant all the women back in the kitchen
and all the men in charge, right?
So here she is reclaiming what freedom means,
reclaiming what liberty means, reclaiming what liberty means,
not because a single politician or party or election
can set us free, but because we deserve to stand fully
in what we are fighting for and not let anybody
thieve that language from us,
thieve those concepts from us.
And it's that reclamation is important. For
me, that reclamation of my faith is important. I know so many more people who are people
of faith who operate similarly to me, who have taught me how to operate in this way,
who sharpen and refine my own walk as it relates to my work every single day. I know far more
of those people of faith
than I do the other time.
Now, I don't spend a lot of time at evangelical churches.
That's probably not a surprise,
but we deserve to reclaim that.
We deserve to reclaim that
because if I'm going to believe what I believe,
it should be of help and not harm to my neighbor.
Community and belonging, such a deep human need.
What do we do about the average person
who has found their community,
their little version of mutual aid in their neighborhoods,
in their churches, and they believe
that the price of belonging and the price of community is ceding
to this vote, this belief,
even if it doesn't sit right in their soul.
Like, what do we do about that?
Because that might be the reason why none of this
that makes any sense is happening.
Yeah, you know, awakening to something
that you've been raised in is a very challenging
thing to do, right?
It is emotional because you are coming to the place where you're rejecting the things
that feel part and parcel with your identity.
I knew people growing up who were like, I am a Christian first and I'm everything else
second.
And I'm not here to judge if that's how anybody decides to declare their identities. It's not
for me, but I'm not here to judge you for that. But if that's how you identify, and then suddenly
you start thinking a little more critically about the sermons that have been preached about who's
going to hell and who's not, about who you should love and who you shouldn't, about what is the role of the woman and what is not.
And then you start looking a little bit more critically
at the person sitting to the left of you
and the person sitting to the right of you.
And then you start thinking a little more critically
about the lessons that you're being taught in Sunday school.
And then you start getting around
more diverse groups of people,
and you start to realize that not only is this thing
that you so fully identify with so different
than what other people are bringing to the table,
but that it actually can cause harm
if you continue to identify
in the particular way that you are, right?
And you look up and you're doing harm
and you didn't intend to,
and this is just what you've been taught
and this is what you were raised in
and this is all you've known,
everyone you've ever gone to school with,
all your friends, every birthday party you ever had,
every holiday you ever celebrated,
this thing was at the center.
Extrapolating yourself from that is so painful.
Because you have to learn how to distinguish
between rejection of dogma and rejection of yourself
and the people you love.
I can't imagine how absolutely challenging,
actually I can't imagine how absolutely challenging that is
because in my own faith I have evolved
and I had to, like when my husband and I,
when we moved to DC, back to DC from St. Louis,
we decided very intentionally that we were no longer
going to go to a church that was homophobic and patriarchal.
That we could say, well, it's really hard to find a church.
And you know, like, you know, I know what I believe.
And so I just ignore that part of the story.
No, I'm not paying my tithes
to a place that stands against people that I love and that does not operate
in how I have been engaging with God
in this personal relationship and what he's been telling me.
I'm not, like, y'all not getting 10% of my money for that.
And it took us a year to find that church.
And I find myself now more able to have conversations with people who taught me those things,
not because they hated me,
but because they loved me
and they thought that was the right thing to do, right?
But that is hard.
That is incredibly difficult.
So to your point, I think what we have to do
is we have to simultaneously,
this is very difficult on the other side,
we have to simultaneously give grace
and expect responsibility.
So I like to remind people, I am not Christ.
I do not give grace and mercy a new everyday.
That is not, I aspire to be like Christ,
but that's not my ministry as of right now, right?
So my grace will extend as far as you take responsibility.
So if you are coming into that awakening,
if you are realizing actually this thing that I was taught
and this thing I used to say
and these things I used to post are really harmful
and I'm still peeling back the layers of that
and trying to understand who I should go be now,
I will have grace for that
because you're taking responsibility
for your own growth and learning.
You're going out there and finding community
that embraces who you are becoming, right?
That helps aid you in your journey.
Other people who have taken that journey,
you're finding space with them.
But if you stop being on that journey,
if you decide, well, I've read enough books
and I did the book club and I've got a rainbow flag
in my Twitter bio and hashtag Black Lives Matter
in my Instagram bio, so I'm good,
well, then my grace is gonna start to fade.
Because there is more for which you are responsible
than just that.
If you have Black Lives Matter in your bio
and I, as a regular black woman,
am not safe around you, at work, at play, at church,
with my own children, then you still have work to do.
And if I extend too much grace to you,
now I've made myself unsafe.
Now I've made my child unsafe, right?
So I need you to step back up in that responsibility.
And as long as you're engaged in that process,
I can be in community with you.
As soon as you step back and start saying
that's no longer my job, and I tell you it is your job,
and you still decide to stop making progress,
then I have to remove myself.
But I think that if we do extend the grace
where people are genuinely taking responsibility,
folks can find the kind of community in us
that they need to keep going, right?
And that they need to then turn around to the people
who taught them the wrong way
and start to pull them into the community as well,
start to pull them into awakening, right?
Like that's how we build a justice army.
All your words are so directional.
It's like, if you're moving this way, I extend grace.
If you stop, if you turn back, to me, it's directional.
It's like, Abby and I talk all the time about, okay,
so who are we forgiving and what?
Like about homophobia and there is a way of being
where you believed some stuff,
cause you were taught that.
And then suddenly you're directionally moving
in a different direction.
If you continue to move in that direction,
I will be with you.
But there's another way of doing it,
which is a stopping and like backwards,
well, I'm sorry for that,
but I can tell there's no movement.
You're not on the path.
You're not on a path.
So we can't be on the path together.
When I worked full-time in education,
there's a book that all of us read called,
Why Are All The Black Kids Sitting Together?
Me too, when I was teaching.
And if you were like a parent or a student
at like an elite white private high school
like I was at a certain time,
all of the book clubs are reading this book, right?
So I remember that book being very popular
when I was a student myself.
And then fast forward when I'm running
an education organization,
I'm having my team read it, right?
And one of the things that Dr. Tatum,
who is an education researcher and practitioner,
she's the former president of Spelman College,
one of the things that she talks about
is this moving walkway.
And it's not the perfect analogy
because it doesn't make accommodations for ability,
but follow me here.
So she talks about those people movers in the airport,
that you get on it and you can get to your gate faster
just by standing still,
that you actually don't have to make any effort,
the thing is making the effort for you.
She says when you are standing on that moving walkway
and you are facing in the direction,
the intended direction, right?
Going from gate 50 to gate 40,
you are part of a first group of people
that has accepted society,
that has accepted the rules of society, right?
White dominant culture, patriarchal culture, et cetera.
You've accepted those rules
and you're moving along in the intended direction, right?
You may even be walking with it, right?
Enthusiastically.
You may even be running with it to get to your next gate.
That's our MAGA friends, right?
Who are like trying to get in the intended direction
of white supremacy.
Yeah, it's not even fast enough.
As fast as possible.
Exactly, they're like, no, we gotta hustle, right?
And there are people who are standing still
and at least looking around and trying
to observe what's around them, but they're still moving
in the intended direction.
Then there's a second group of people
who started to realize, huh, what's ahead of us
in the intended direction doesn't actually seem
like the best destination for all of this.
Like we're headed to gate 40,
but maybe we need to be at gate like 57, I don't know.
So they turn around and they start curiously looking around
and trying to see what else makes sense to them
because the thing that was ahead of them
in their intended direction no longer computes, right?
They turn around.
But if you turn around
and you're standing backwards on a moving walkway,
you are still being moved in the intended direction, right?
You're still being moved toward white supremacy.
Benji talks about a third group of people
who realize the intended direction is unjust and evil,
who realize that simply turning around is not enough.
And so they start to walk in the other direction.
They start to try to get themselves
where they realize they should have been all along, right?
But y'all know just as well as I do,
maybe this is not true for you, Abby,
because you're an Olympian, but for most of us, when we try to walk
in the opposite direction of the people mover,
it is hard.
Because the force, the force of the intended direction
is still trying to take you back
to where it wants you to go.
Yeah.
And people are yelling at you
because you're going the wrong direction.
You in the way, you going the wrong direction,
stop playing around, this is too much. I'm trying to get where I'm trying to go and you're standing in the way, you going in the wrong direction, stop playing around, this is too much.
I'm trying to get where I'm trying to go
and you're standing in the way, right?
So that third group of people is working against
the quote unquote natural flow of things, right?
And it threatens to take them under,
it threatens to have them give up and say,
you know what, this is too hard, it's too much effort,
my thighs are burning, just whatever,
just take me where we were supposed to go,
because I don't feel like doing this anymore, right?
And that is of course the privilege of whiteness,
the privilege of being cis, the privilege of being straight,
the privilege of being a man, right?
Or, you know, like that is the privilege that says
I can tap out at any time,
because even if I go to the intended direction
that white supremacy has for me, I will be safe in it,
will be protected in it, will be
protected in it.
I know how to maneuver and navigate that space and I won't be found out.
Now for plenty of us, it ain't no turning back.
There's nothing for us over there but destruction, but terror.
Then she talks about a fourth group of people.
The fourth group of people realize is that if they are going to overwhelm the force
of the intended direction,
if they're going to actually change the momentum
and the velocity of the people mover
in the intended direction,
then they cannot do it alone.
That it is their job to go and link arm in arm
and recruit as many people as possible
because the only way to stop the thing
and move it in a different direction
is to overwhelm the original force.
And you cannot do that by yourself.
You cannot do that with just your own journey,
with just your own force, with just your own legs
and your own suitcase.
It's impossible, right?
The only way we're changing this thing
is if we're actually all moving in the opposite direction together.
And I like to add a fifth group.
Yes.
Because there's a fifth group of people who say, you know what?
Turn this people mover off. Shut it down.
That's right.
Shut the whole people mover down.
Somebody go press that little red button under the cover that you're not supposed to press.
The alarm will ring. It will freak people out. Folks will not want the people mover to stop moving.
Folks will be mad at you. Folks will say that you are a threat.
Folks will say that you are in fact the one inducing the terror when in fact
you are trying to get everybody on the people mover to turn around,
look and move in the other direction or or get off the people mover altogether,
because we need a different way to get where we have to go.
That's right.
And so, like, that's what I'm talking about
when people just stop or they choose to get radical.
And what Angela Davis says is that all radical means
is getting to the root.
That is a word that is intended to,
like people have perverted to scare people, but she's just saying, let's get to the root of this thing instead of tinker around the root. That is a word that is intended to like, people have perverted to scare people,
but she's just saying, let's get to the root of this thing instead of tinker around the edges.
Let's stop breaking off the branches and actually uproot what's bad and plant a new tree.
That is the kind of, sorry, my son is like freaking out the background.
But that is, that is all of our work at every given moment of the day.
And that's also what tires people out.
Cause you telling me I gotta be running
in the opposite direction and recruiting people at my job
when I just wanna go do my work and go home
and get paid for it.
You telling me that in the meeting,
I have to bring up with somebody who's talked over.
You talking about in the meeting, I gotta show up as a co-conspirator. You telling me that I
actually have to like sacrifice something that I hold dear, the things that I hold dear, the position
that I hold dear, the privilege that I hold dear, the protection of that privilege that I hold dear.
You tell me I got to sacrifice some of that To be willing to either be the person who presses the button
or cover the person who presses the button, right?
Or make a distraction for the person
who's pressing the button so that they don't get in trouble.
You tell me, I don't feel like doing that, right?
I don't feel like being that person.
I don't feel like always being the squeaky wheel
at church and at home and at work
and at the city council meeting, and during the block party.
And people, like, if you have the privilege to tap out,
it is really easy to say, never mind, y'all got it.
But the y'all who always have to have it
are those of us who have no choice
but to move in the opposite direction.
And now how is it fair that a system that we did not build
and that we will never benefit from is on us to tear down?
We're not the ones who need to be the most traitorous
to that system, right?
In order to tear that thing down,
we need people to be traitors to that system.
We need white folks to be traitors
to the system of white supremacy.
We need cis folks to be traitors to the system of white supremacy. We need cis folks to be traitors
to the system of cis supremacy.
We need able-bodied people to be traitors
to the system of ableism.
That is the work all the time.
And yes, it is exhausting and it is taxing
and you lose things and you sacrifice a lot.
And when you've been smart enough to link up arm in arm
with people to change the force,
you have community in which you can do it.
Yes.
So this idea that when you step away from the things
that you've always known,
you're suddenly isolated and alone,
it's because you have yet to let go
of the white supremacist principle of individualism
that tells you I gotta go figure it out all myself.
Actually pick your head up.
Look around.
There are a whole bunch of people like you who were on the journey, behind you in the
journey, in front of you on the journey, right?
Who are there to be community for you so that you can keep your energy and strength up to
do that work.
Hi, Pod Squad.
I want to tell you about another podcast that you're going to love if you're not
already listening to it.
I recently was a guest on 10% Happier with Dan Harris.
If you haven't listened, it's the episode from July 8th. Go find
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it and I really appreciated Dan for wanting to take me there and being able
to take me there. The 10% Happier podcast has one guiding philosophy.
Happiness is a skill, so why not learn it? 10% Happier is hosted by Dan
Harris, a journalist who had a panic attack on live national television. That event sparked the
toughest and most rewarding assignment of his career. How can we do life better? He's still
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["Dreams of a New World"] to podcasts. Is there a connection, Brittany, between,
and please just everyone forgive me
because this is just a swirling
and I'm not gonna say it right,
but there's something about the affinity groups,
the groups that came together after Win With Black Women,
met right after, well, you all had been meeting forever
and then you all got together on the night
of Kamala's first endorsement from Biden
and then raised $1.4 million and there were 44,000 of you
and then the black men did it, then white women
and then, okay, there was something in that meeting.
Like honestly, Brittany, when Shannon sent me the graphic and was like,
do you want it, we're gonna do this,
I was like, wait, so wait,
are we saying that we're white women in writing?
No.
Like that's, like can I just have 30 seconds?
Then everyone will find out.
Is everyone, but like, are we gonna say it in writing?
Like collectively?
The reveal.
Right, right.
And by the way, four years ago, I tried to do that
and it was so much of a bloodbath
that the people I was organizing with were like,
stop, pull it back, this isn't working.
So there was something, seeing whatever it was,
165,000 white women say, I am in fact white
and am coming to this thing that I thought, is this what we have not been offering any sort of
alternative? They have only been seeing I have safety in these pews with these men who are telling
me that this is the only version of safety and community that is available to me.
So if I leave this, I have nowhere to go.
I have nowhere to be.
And is there something in these groups that feels fresh and new in a way of saying, no,
there is an alternative.
That was false safety.
That is not safety for us.
That's where we die.
Here's another place that maybe this is real safety.
Maybe this is a community we show up with.
Is there any connection here?
There's absolutely a connection, right?
Because again, that third group of people
on that moving walkway often are the most self-righteous.
They're like, I've read all the books.
I went to all the lectures.
I asked Ta-Nehisi Coates to be my personal mentor.
He said no, but I asked.
Right? Like, I show up at all the things. I make all the posts. Ta-Nehisi Coates to be my personal mentor. He said no when I asked, right?
I show up at all the things, I make all the posts,
and that hardly feels like a failure
because in a society built around individualism,
you get a lot of praise for that, right?
But when you start to realize that is a lonely path,
you then have to your point, Glenn, and two choices.
You can either press forward and find community,
or you can stop, turn around, and give up.
You might do that quietly,
because you don't want to stop getting
your social justice cookies,
but you stop and you turn around
and you go back in the other direction.
So it's absolutely related.
Here's the thing though,
and perhaps this is a conversation we should have.
First of all, when the White Women call came up
and I realized that it was you and Shannon
who were organizing this, I'm like, of course it is.
And I say that in part because I have watched
the both of you be intentional listeners and
then intentional doers.
A lot of people like to stop at that listening phase.
We saw that all throughout 2020.
Everybody bought all the books.
My agent was like, are you sure you can't get your book out right now?
Because it will be like an immediate bestseller.
And I'm like, I hear you.
I still have other things to experience in order to write this book.
Like I get you, but it's just not about the numbers for me.
But I understand why you're asking me this, right?
Because everybody read the books.
Everybody wanted to listen to Black women.
I've seen very few actually then go and do, right?
And do and fuck up and then do again, right?
Which is, again, in a society built off of individualism
and so-called merit, nobody wants to fuck up.
Everybody wants to be perfect at the thing
the first time out.
You can ask any of my trans friends,
I did not get that thing right the first time coming out.
Or the second time, or the third time, right?
I got better though.
So I was not surprised that it was you two doing that
because you have been invested in that process
for a long time.
And I think especially, you know,
a lot of us have been frustrated with,
after what I call the summer of our discontent, And I think especially, you know, a lot of us have been frustrated with after this,
what I call the summer of our discontent in summer 20,
in summer 2020, how much things not only went back
to normal, but went back to even worse, right?
That kind of backlash that we saw,
that we're seeing for DEI against clotting gay,
against Kentucky Brown Jackson, like all of that stuff
came up because we had the audacity to be forthright in who we are.
That's right.
And demand basic aspects of humanity be applied to us as well. But there were at least seeds planted
then, even if we didn't see them germinate in all the ways we wanted to over the last four years.
And I think that one of those seeds was that white women were forced to realize
they had not really been taught sisterhood.
And this is like, I actually wanna hear you all
talk about this because, and like,
tell me if you think I'm wrong,
but I just, one of the things I have experienced,
especially in this moment, right?
So you talk about the woman with black women call,
shout out to Joteka Eady and Holly Holiday
and so many others who were at the helm of that
from the very beginning.
We started meeting four years ago
because originally when presidential nominee Kamala Harris
was vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris,
the misogynoir that she faced was outrageous
and very few organized,
very few people were speaking up against it.
And there was little to no organized effort
to push back against it, right?
To call these outlets out,
to talk about why these things are problematic, right?
Even though some of these phrases and ideas
just feel normal for people
when they're talking about black women
and South Asian women.
So we really formed because we said that is our sister.
Whether we agree with everything she has ever done or not
is not the point.
The point is time and time again,
it has been proven that black women are all we got.
That there is nobody coming to our aid.
That we are expected to fix everything
for everybody else, and then when we are the ones in trouble, we have to link arm in arm,
hand in hand, because nobody's coming to join us.
That has consistently been our experience in the American experiment.
You can ask the black women who were fighting for voting rights as part of the suffragette
movement just to be left behind by white suffragettes, right?
Just for Susan B. Anthony to say,
I would rather cut off this right arm of mine
than to fight for the vote for the Negro
and not the woman, right?
Because even in that phrase,
she's not just not fighting for black women voting,
she's erasing the existence of black women
because she was talking about black men.
There's an anthology of essays written by black women
that I refer to a lot in my book
called All the Women Are White, All the Men Are Black,
but Some of Us Are Brave.
Black women have always had to be the brave ones.
So when we saw our sister being attacked,
the sisters mounted up like regulators, right?
We didn't have to all be the same sorority
from the same place, believe all the same things,
be the same faith.
We didn't all have to be biracial or not.
It did not matter, that was one of us.
In contrast, I remember watching the Kavanaugh hearings
and the ways in which Christine Blasey Ford,
Brett Kavanaugh's very credible sexual assault accuser
was treated by supposed representatives
of American citizens, was abhorrent.
And I remember watching how many of my white women friends
were incensed in a way I had never seen them before.
And I remember, and I was like,
Christine Blasey Ford is not the first white woman
to get, you know, crucified for the sake of patriarchy.
She's not even the first white woman this year.
But it did something to people.
But then that instinct to say,
how do we come together and organize to protect her?
Like that next step didn't happen as quickly
or as thoroughly or as broadly as I thought it would have
knowing the way that like black women show up.
So meanwhile, like when would black women started for that?
But when Brittany Greiner was detained, we had a campaign. When Claudine Gay,
the former president of Harvard University, was being attacked, we worked together. The reality
was that we had codified the sisterhood in a particularly political way in an era where
one can use many forms of media to not only get the word out, but
to protect one another.
We were, and even if it wasn't always a big, well-known campaign, there were ways we were
blocking and tackling for each other because heads of DEI at corporate spaces were suddenly
being attacked and we wanted to make sure that there was cover for them.
Organizers and activists were being attacked.
We wanted to make sure that there was cover for them.
Sometimes cover looked like making a call for somebody.
Sometimes cover looked like passing
the collection plate and putting $5,000
in somebody's account because they had lost all
of their jobs and speaking engagements
for saying the thing, right?
But that was the kind of cover that we were used
to providing for each other, that we knew was necessary
and that we knew we had to be the ones
to provide for each other.
And so I think that part of the resistance
that you experienced all those years ago
was that white women had been removed intentionally
from the instinct of sisterhood, right?
Because white women have been taught
to be committed to their husbands first,
which means you're committed to the church,
you're committed to your husband, you're committed to the offspring of you and your husband, your children, and then
way down the list comes you. And a lot of the white feminist fights have not always intentionally been
individualistic, but a lot of them have been, right? Because it was like, it's about my choice,
about whether I want to stay at home or work.
It wasn't like, let's build a school or a society for people
so that they can develop skills and we can send a bunch
of women out into the workforce.
But that's what Nanny Helen Burroughs did in DC
when she created a school for black girls and women
to make sure that if they wanted to go and pursue careers
in domestic labor, they could.
But if they wanted to be teachers or scientists
or go to college, they could do that too.
Like she was like, I'm gonna build the institution.
I'm going to be the institution as a sister.
And I just don't actually think
that y'all were trained toward that.
No.
And so the idea that white women would say,
I am a white woman.
I want to go stand in community with other white women
and stand up for another woman.
That took time and development.
It took you and Shannon and lots of other people
like having to take the blow back for so long
when people were not ready for that.
And I mean, I'm interested in your thoughts on this
because I'm not being all the way articulate,
but I just, in my experience,
I have not watched most white women that I know
be trained towards solidarity and sisterhood.
That it is a muscle that y'all have had to develop
if you feel like developing it,
if you feel safe to develop it.
Yeah, I mean, I have been thinking about this nonstop
because I've, I mean, first of all,
I have had very embarrassing moments where I'm in,
like just say before this meeting where,
well, one example, I'm on with Lovey
and asking a couple things and she's saying to me,
just check with your group chats.
Oh yeah.
I'm like, Lovey, like I'm my sister and my mom saying to me, just check with your group chats. Oh yeah.
I'm like, Lovie, like I'm my sister and my mom.
Yeah. Like, what do you mean?
It's embarrassing.
Meanwhile, I'm in like four group chats with Lovie.
I know, when Lovie tells me about her group chats.
That's how many group chats we all each have in our phones.
Yeah.
Is it something, this is for me, I don't know,
I haven't developed the language around it yet,
but I feel like this is what I have to figure out next.
Because when I look at your group chats
and your community and the way that you do things,
I feel a deep loneliness and a deep jealousy.
And I'm trying to figure out, is it because, is it a source of safety?
Like for white women, is it white women still have an option of alignment with white men?
And then you all didn't have an option.
You say over and over again, we protect us, we have us.
You are the only source of safety for each other.
So you have each other.
So you get to discover because of lack of other options,
this, the thing that everyone on the planet wants and needs
and dreams of, which is like this sisterhood,
is it a leap of finally, of white women finally saying
this safe, this safety is not real, it's actually killing us.
And so we have to take the leap,
even with the other option there, over to this other thing.
And I don't want to excoriate people
who don't identify as black women, right?
Because part of the reason why we have had
so few options historically is
because Black men have been intentionally removed from our families, right? So when
we're talking about families being sold off from one another during chattel slavery and
the transatlantic slave trade, when we are talking about mass incarceration and its impact
on our communities and our families, when we are talking even about social welfare programs
that used to come to housing developments
and tell black women you're gonna get more money
for you and your children if there's not a man in the house.
These intentional family separations
made the sisterhood necessary.
It's not that we don't wanna be in community
with other people, it's that our circumstances
forced us to be in community with one another
in a particular way, right?
And, you know, part of the reason why I'm so grateful for
my partner is I have watched him do his own work
about understanding the seduction
that a very white supremacist version of patriarchy
has for black men, and to do his work around
what it looks like truly to protect and love
not in a paternalistic way, but in a partnering way.
And I'm watching so many more black men,
especially younger generations of black men,
really take that journey.
So I wanna be really clear about that,
that a lot of this is circumstantial
and born out of necessity.
But to your question, it is hard to tell people
to walk the other direction
when the first option is still there.
Because if you watched your mother take it
and your grandmama take it
and your great-grandmother take it,
in part because plenty of them had to take it
because they couldn't go buy a house,
they couldn't go get a checking account,
they couldn't go get a credit card.
They could, the jobs that they could get,
only paid so much and they still had another option.
So let me go rely on the other option.
If you watch generations of them take it,
you are working against your epigenetics.
Like you're working against the things
imprinted on your DNA that help you
be the person that you are.
You're working against life experience,
memory, epigenetic, like you're working
against generational trauma.
And that's hard to do.
I also though think that
the waking up of white women to realize
that there's actually not safety in the thing,
because as you all have heard me say time and again,
your whiteness will not protect you
from what patriarchy has for you.
That letdown is something that plenty of white women
think that they can avoid.
It's been so interesting watching the divorce conversation
happen in the zeitgeist, right?
And so many white women who were traditional wives
get on TikTok and say, you know,
my husband had the six figure job
and we lived in a five bedroom house
and we went on vacation every month
and I had five children with him and I never worked.
I have a degree, but I never worked.
And now I'm living in my car and I'm worked, I have a degree, but I never worked, and now I'm living in my car,
and I'm trying to figure out how to fund said five children
myself because he wants nothing to do with it
because he has picked up and moved on
and built an entirely new life without us.
A lot of women out there are delusional enough
to feel like that will not be their story.
They're like, oh no, not me, not mine.
I'm the perfect wife, right?
We have sex 2.7 times a week, we're good.
That would never happen to me.
But it's interesting to watch how many white women
are coming to the realization
that not only could it be them, it is them.
And that even if they are married,
perhaps that marriage is loveless, right?
Or even if they are married,
perhaps that's the marriage where they're not
truly thought of as a partner, right?
And a fully realized human being.
I remember watching the show, Desperate Housewives,
when it first came out and like not all the way
understanding it.
Because I'd never seen my mother in a situation
where she was down and out,
where there was not always an entire crew
of black women to help her.
So the idea that they were like living these secret, painful lives in isolation, and it was some
big revelation when they finally started to reveal things to each other and support each
other, I was like, I don't understand why this is groundbreaking.
Because it was never my life experience.
I do think that it is hard to convince people to make the harder choice when the seemingly easy choice is still right there.
Because people don't wanna lose.
People don't wanna lose the five bedroom house.
People don't wanna lose the country club membership.
People don't wanna lose the basic access
to something that they think makes them powerful,
even though it's actually stripping them of their power.
And so like, y'all got a lot of work ahead of y'all,
but I'm glad to see that there have been some breakthroughs.
I think it really sadly is when I think that we believed
that the people mover that you described
was always going to at least maintain that the people mover that you described
was always going to at least maintain
or progressively increase,
even if it was not at the pace that we wanted,
rights and liberties, which meant for us.
But who, and to your point, who was doing that labor?
Like who was doing the invisible labor of making,
it's like the learn helplessness that people talk about
when you're like, well, I never wash the dishes,
but the dishes always get washed.
No, somebody washed the dishes because you didn't.
Right?
They didn't magically.
And it was the 98% to vote,
a black woman who voted when we voted 53% for Trump.
Shout out to Angela Peoples for that very famous picture
of her holding up that sign, right?
I think that was one of the things
that helped break the dam.
To say they were like, oh wait, we are not being sisters.
Because we voted against our own interests
and we voted against the interests of other women
and all the other women figured that out but us.
So what's wrong with us?
And now we're mad because it was supposed
to work out for us.
So we all showed up for this march because we're super pissed
because we thought we could be real quiet
and the people move forward, get us where we needed to go.
And now it didn't and now we're pissed.
I feel like if white women, if we could conjure the feeling,
the rage, the deep discontent and anger we have
about the men in our lives freeloading
off of our labor in our homes.
If we could conjure that and understand
that is exactly what we have been doing,
that we are the freeloaders of democracy,
that we have allowed black women and women of color
to carry the mental, physical, the entire load
of democracy
while we freeload off of it and just watch the game. We are the white men.
Like we are.
To be clear, not just freeloaded,
and this is I think the hard part for people,
not just freeloaded, but actively participated in the harm.
Right, because there's not just the step of white women
discovering I have benefited from labor
that I have invisibilized.
There's also the discovery that I have perpetuated
white supremacist harm and been a tool
of something that was never meant to benefit me,
but I thought protected me.
Because, you know, if I look at the story of Emmett Till,
he is dead, his mother mourned,
and had to have an open casket funeral
because she needed the world to see, as she said,
what they'd done to my boy.
That all happened because a white woman named
Carolyn Bryant decided to make up a story.
Literally, like there was no piece of the story
that was remotely true.
She made it up out of thin air,
knowing full well the environment in which they were,
knowing full well the consequences for a black man
if he was accused of even looking at a white woman
the wrong way, let alone touching her,
talking to her smart or laying with her, right?
So there are ways in which white women need to first
make peace with and atone for the ways in which
they have perpetuated white supremacy.
So you are taking the benefits of the labor of black women and women of color around the
world while actively making it harder for us to go and win said benefits.
And that's like, that's a painful thing to have to swallow.
I get that.
And yet it's not untrue. Atonement and action and community can happen in numbers.
Like, what we've done is just all felt really scared
and alone and ashamed.
Well, the ones who are even open to feeling that.
Alone and ashamed and petrified by ourselves
because we are always by ourselves.
Atonement, moving things, creating a more just world,
saving democracy can't happen alone and by ourselves
and ashamed in our own houses.
And so we can do that, but we can only do that
if we take the leap, come together,
and start moving together.
And there's a promise in it.
I think this is what my sister and I are talking about
so much the last few days.
There's a promise in it.
There's a beautiful alternative.
There's something we could be moving towards
instead of just doing it all out of shame, regret, atonement.
Yes, there is that, but there is also
this gorgeous possibility that we could have together
that we've never had before on the other side of it.
And so we've got to nail that.
We've got to like get it, when I say we, not you,
me and my sister, Nabil, and Shannon,
we've got to figure out how to make
the invitation irresistible.
Well, it's the reclamation, right?
I mean, you started, Brittany, with the reclamation
of this like beautiful faith and the way
that the vice president says, let's take back the flag
on liberties and freedoms
and reproductive justice and all of that.
Like we have ceded femininity, womanhood,
to the idea of being polite and quiet and not making waves.
And if we are to reclaim that power and say, no, it is not this, it is this.
Yes.
It is sisterhood.
It is power.
It is connection.
It is, I think it's part of the reclamation and part of the seeding that we shouldn't
have allowed happen and we did.
It's part of the reclamation and it's part of the new learning, right?
So I think about that quote,
well-behaved women rarely make history all the time
because it is true.
And as a black woman,
I have been on the receiving end
of when white women have decided not to be well-behaved
for the sake of history,
and I end up under their foot, right?
So again, if you have been oriented
toward an individualistic way of thinking,
your not well behaved moment, quote unquote,
has you at the center.
Yes, yes.
But to your point, the reclamation is not just
you told us that womanhood was this
and we're actually reclaiming that it is this.
It's also an expansion to say,
we were unclear that womanhood was also about the sorority
and the sisterhood and the power of the collective in that.
And so we're expanding our understanding
and definition of it to include this.
Part of why I talk about white supremacy culture so much,
and that's not like a phrase I made up, right?
Like researchers over time have talked about
and defined the elements of white supremacy culture
that exist outside of purely systemic things, right?
Laws and policies, and that exist outside
of purely institutional things, right?
Like practices at your workplace, right?
But the culture that Beverly Tatum calls the smog
that we all breathe in, that's the stuff all around us.
That's the way we dress.
That's what we consider feminine and not feminine.
That's the media.
That's the words that we use to describe a white woman
and a black woman doing differently,
doing the exact same thing, right?
That is the culture of white supremacy, of patriarchy,
of heteronormativity, of capitalism, et cetera.
That culture, because it is that smog
that we all breathe in, it gets up into everybody's lungs.
It gets up into everybody's respiratory system.
And it can be very difficult to detox yourself from that.
And then with great intention,
go and gather different inputs, right?
Because yeah, I can detox myself from the bad air,
but I still gotta go back outside.
So what am I, like, how am I putting my mask on?
And so I say that to say this,
because the white supremacy is culture,
has been centered on hoarding power,
has been centered on individualism
versus the collective power and shared power and other things,
that it feels completely against your muscle memory
to be doing these things.
And part of the benefit that black women have
is that even though there have been many attempts
to steal our culture, our language, our beliefs,
our faiths, what we knitted together,
especially in America, what we knitted together
was something brand new and unique unto us,
pulling together all of those pieces from different tribes
who suddenly had to become one tribe
if we were gonna survive.
So the benefit of that was
us saying, yeah, we've got some resistance. We've got some antidotes, some vaccines against us being
overly individualized. Because we recognize that even if you were Igbo and you were Yoruba, that we came from societies of collective power, right?
So we're going to have memory of those things
and infuse it in the rest of what we do,
even if we call it something else and it looks different
and it didn't look traditional to you or to me
or to your country or my country or your tribe.
We're gonna knit that thing together
and use it to protect us.
There is power in us being rooted in things we can't even translate, in languages we
have never learned, in people we have never met, in ancestry that runs through our veins
that compels us consistently to be for and with one another. Yep.
That is not the experience of being white in the world.
That is not the experience of being a white woman
in the world.
So to bring sisterhood into the definition of womanhood
for white women is to intentionally expand
what it has meant for all time
until the day you declare it is not that anymore.
I think, I'm just gonna say this.
I'm just gonna say this.
I'm gonna say this and it could be wrong, I don't know.
But when people watch our US Women's National Team,
I believe that something deep inside of us women go,
there it is.
It's this collective connection.
And it's like, it's deeper.
It's why it makes you cry because it's this longing,
this power, this community, this team mentality.
This, I just think, I don't know if this-
I agree with that.
And you know what's so interesting?
That same kind of affection and deep joy
in seeing it on the US women's soccer team
is not what the average American experience is
when they watch the WNBA.
Exactly.
That's right.
Yeah.
Although now, I would say the team is more diverse
than it's ever been.
There are half women of color that are now on it.
And so it's like, because it'll be interesting
to see how they are received.
But soccer is still more rooted in whiteness
and the WNBA is rooted in blackness in there.
So there's a different.
Which is like such an American thing,
because if you go anywhere in the world,
football is not rooted in whiteness.
I just wanna be real clear.
I know.
But the sports thing is big, anywhere in the world, football is not rooted in white. I know. I just wanna be real clear. So true.
But the fourth thing is big,
because something that I haven't heard talk about very much,
which seems like the obvious elephant in the room to me,
is that like, white women got scared.
Trump scared even us.
I think Dobbs scared y'all even more.
Yeah, Dobbs.
Trump and Dobbs scared us.
And then we were like, we need to get out of this.
And one of the reasons like, it wasn't that meetup wasn't because it was the right thing to do wasn't
because it's what we owed to the world. It's because we saw that black women knew how to do it.
That it was effective.
Yeah.
You said there's a template.
That like we needed to win and that's what it takes to win.
We needed it literally to say win with black women.
We needed it to be really literal.
Because we clearly don't know how to win.
So what we need to do is do that.
But you're so right, Amanda, that's what, yeah.
Abby, let me ask you a question.
Go ahead, go ahead.
I love listening to you talk.
Ask me the question.
So here's my question.
Do you feel like sports gave you a different orientation
towards sisterhood
that you felt when you were on the field,
in the locker room, on the bus,
than when you were outside of it.
Yes.
And there was still this complete understanding
that we were being ruled and run by men.
In the consensus, that little outer layer.
Co-centric circle?
Yes, that layer just beyond us,
just beyond our locker room.
We knew that the men were making the decisions.
We knew that the men were deciding on our contracts
and how much to pay us.
And so inside of this circle,
we knew that the way to maintain our strength and power and win
is to do it unified and collectively. And we've been doing this since the 90s. And this has been
passed on generation after generation. This is the Julie Fowdy, Mia Ham days to the time that I played,
to the time that now equal pay is a real thing.
And it's not a surprise that when the leadership
of that concentric circle on the outside of the team
changed from male to female,
it is no surprise that equal pay started to take form,
that we were able to achieve that.
So I think that interestingly enough, in my retirement,
I do feel less safe and less protected.
And whenever I am around my teammates,
just even being in their presence,
I'm like, I feel like, oh yeah, I'm safe again.
It's this interesting vibe.
Like, oh wow, we could could do and even when I'm with
Glennon, she sees probably I don't know if you've noticed, but like I become like a bigger version
of myself around my teammates. Yeah, that's true. I become more secure and I in numbers. It's just
the way that it is. Yeah. Yeah. And that immediate goal, I'm sure of equitable pay, fair treatment, decision-making
power, et cetera, that much more immediate goal, even though I'm sure it needed to be
more immediate than it actually was. But that tangible goal, I should say, I think probably
moved y'all to that place faster, no? That's right. Yeah, of course. I think probably moved y'all to that place faster, no?
That's right.
Yeah, of course.
I think a lot about my time on the national team
and hindsight is 20-20.
And so I feel intense jealousy
that they were able to achieve pay equity and I wasn't.
And I also have to remember that had I not done what I did
during the time that I did it, that they would never
have been able to achieve it when they did, right?
And so it's, you have to have people like women
who came before Julie Fowdy, who worked on Title IX
and got Title IX going that really allowed
that people don't know a lot of these women's names.
We have to get comfortable, us white women especially,
have to get comfortable being no-named people
in the fight of progressive freedom.
Is there something about the team,
like I feel like it will take me a lifetime to unlearn the individualness
of white womanhood.
I am like, I am just starting to understand
how individual I have lived.
And that's okay, that's cool, I'm gonna do it.
But I see it sometimes, I don't understand
your team mentality in lots of ways.
Like, I'm gonna say this in general.
If there is a person on the national team with the...
With counter views.
With homophobic views.
I'm just gonna say whatever.
Yeah, say it.
Abby and I will have conversations
until we are screwed into our floor about this.
Like we cannot, I think, absolutely not.
You cannot have someone representing our country
who is having these views and I'm on this side.
And Abby has this, she said to me, we're gonna win.
They put her there because she's gonna win.
We're gonna win.
And I think that's blasphemy to me.
Like I can't, but then I think,
is there something in it for me to learn
in terms of white women and sisterhood
and how we do not know how not to turn on each other
and how we nitpick and divide.
And maybe right now I need to be saying,
oh no, we're just gonna win.
And we're not gonna point out every single, I don't know.
Let me say this.
There is a tendency among black folks,
which sometimes is healthy and sometimes it's not,
to not air our dirty laundry.
Now, when it comes to like mental health
and assault and things like that that happen
in our families just like they happen
in everybody's families and people are shamed
into silence about them, this is not a healthy thing.
There are times though, when we are smart enough to say,
the world doesn't mean us any good,
so I'm going to protect you from the world,
even while I get you together inside the house.
So, and again, I'm not talking about those other things
I was talking about before,
those people need to be called out.
But when it comes to black women's sisterhood,
so often, the choice that we are making
is to take it to the group chat and not to Twitter.
There are conversations swirling right now
about a particular black woman who has had some very,
shall I say, her views and the way that she's expressed them
have riled up a lot of people.
And people are talking about the content of what she's saying, but there are folks that know her well
or that have experienced her more intimately
who are not saying a mumbling word.
Because what we're not going to do
is put you out there on an island by yourself
and harm your ability to work,
your ability to make a living,
your ability to maintain your mental wellness,
your ability to maintain your reputation.
And when people have broken that code, we've called them out.
We say, you don't need to write that article.
It don't need to be no more think pieces on this.
And I'm not saying that's consistent across the board,
person to person, and that everybody abides by said code.
But overall, there is a spoken and unspoken understanding
that first do no harm.
Because the world is already set up to do you harm.
So what do I look like adding to it?
Now, behind closed doors, in the house,
in the sisterhood, in the sorority,
I'm pulling your coat tail.
I'm telling you, baby girl, this is not it.
Or I'm at the very least saying, hey, let's talk,
because I want to understand where you're coming from.
Maybe I don't get it.
Maybe I don't hear you.
Maybe I don't see you.
Maybe there's stuff we can learn from each other.
And listen, like a person is open to whether or not
they want to receive that on their own,
but the effort is made because at the end of the day,
we don't want to put each other in a position
to be more harmed by the world.
And we don't want to stand idly by
while we watch people put themselves in a position
to be harmed more by the world.
That's good.
That's good.
That's what sisterhood means.
That's good.
It doesn't mean lying.
It means being extremely honest.
It means being honest because I love you
in the most productive and protective way.
Damn, that was helpful.
That was.
But what I hear you talking about with the soccer team is you're like,
listen, I don't agree with the way she feels.
I'm hurt by the way she feels.
I don't like the way she operates,
the way we have tension in the locker room, right?
Like all of that stuff is true.
And if we go up and we fight for equal pay
for everybody but her,
then the whole goal is harmed for everybody.
That's right.
Right?
And I don't want her to not get what she deserves
just because I'm still working on the way that she feels.
That's right.
It's a different positioning.
It's a different posturing.
Not one that doesn't hold people accountable,
but one that holds people accountable
in a way that they still have the room to grow
and to receive what is duly owed them.
Oof.
Jesus.
You, it's a good idea that you pray a lot.
It is working.
Well, I'm glad my momma taught me how to pray
because that's where I got it from.
And you know, like I also like,
I am speaking from a lived experience
because I am the beneficiary of sisterhood.
Yeah. Right. Because I have had people pull my coat up. That's right. I've had people say in private, I got your back in public, but that's not it.
Let's work on something. Let's try something else. That's great. The people who pick up the phone and they call and they say, Hey, just so you know, this is coming.
I blocked and tackled for you in this way. Now I need you to do X, Y, and Z to protect yourself. That is my story as the beneficiary,
as much as it is my story attempting to be the benefactor
for somebody else.
That's so good.
And so when I speak to this,
and so much of my book is about this,
but when I speak to the sisterhood of black women,
it's because we are
called by our foremothers into a divine place that we should be so clear and forceful not to
allow to be interrupted. Because these are the things that have kept us alive. These are the
things that have given us joy where there shouldn't have been any,
creativity where it wasn't allowed,
family where it was literally forbidden by law.
It was through this sisterhood
that we were able to create the spaces
that saved us and that hold us and that heal us.
And so we owe it to our ancestors to make them proud
and to be as good of a descendant as we are,
the ancestors we're becoming, right?
That I have a responsibility to those who built the space
for me to exist in, and I have a responsibility
to make sure that space is ever more safe,
ever more beautiful, ever more powerful
for anybody coming up after me.
And that people, I want people to rue the day
that they ever thought they were gonna come break us apart.
Try it if you want to.
Fuck around and find out.
Okay, there it is.
There we are.
That, my friends, is what we call a mic drop.
The end.
Bye, Pod Squad.
The pod is over.
That will be our last episode.
Fine Brittany every year.
I love y'all very much.
And I'm glad we had this conversation.
I hope it helps somebody.
We love you so much.
And heals somebody.
For sure will.
We love you so much Brittany.
Thank you so much for the time and energy and brilliance
that you just offered to us.
It means the absolute world to me.
And God, I'm grateful for you.
Yep.
The feeling is mutual.
By Pod Squad.
We're gonna have to do part two of this,
not on Distracted, but we come back for this.
Oh, excuse me.
Yes, September coming back, right?
September 5th.
We're dropping that first episode.
Yeah.
We will be following, the Pod Squad will be following.
September 5th is when the first episode drops you said?
Yes, September 5th first episode of season 3.
So damn good but you can go back and listen to all the old ones now.
I know they will now.
They're there.
People have been doing that a lot lately actually.
I bet they have.
Which I find heartwarming.
I bet they have Brittany.
People are like I need some thought partners here in these wild times of ours so I'm glad
that Undistracted us with a thought partner.
All right. Bye Pod Squad.
See you next time.
See you next time.
If this podcast means something to you,
it would mean so much to us if you'd be willing to take 30 seconds to do these three things.
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We Can Do Hard Things is created and hosted by Glennon Doyle,
Abby Wambach, and Amanda Doyle in partnership with Odyssey.
Our executive producer is Jenna Wise-Burman, and this show is produced by Lauren Lograsso,
Alison Schott, Dina Kleiner, and Bill Schultz.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle. I walked through fire, I came out the other side
I chased desire, I made sure I got what's mine
And I continue to believe That I'm the one for me
And because I'm mine, I walk the line
Cause we're adventurers and heart breaks on map
A final destination we lack
We stopped asking directions
To places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain that our lives bring We can do hard things.
I hit rock bottom, it felt like a brand new start.
I'm not the problem,
sometimes things fall apart
And I continue to believe
The best people are free
And it took some time, but I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers and heartbreaks on that
Our final destination, we lack
We've stopped asking directions To places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known We'll finally find our way back home And through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do hard today We're adventurers and heartbreaks on map We might get lost but we're okay now Don't care that we've stopped asking directions
To places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things
Yeah, we can do our things