We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - How to Find DELIGHT Today (and Every Day) with Ross Gay
Episode Date: June 6, 2023Ross Gay teaches us how to notice delight and joy in our everyday lives. We discuss: concrete ways to rediscover and capture joy every day; how to rebuild your “delight muscle”; how to dissolve th...e myth of disconnection between us; and how to “unknow” our people so we can delight in them. About Ross: Ross Gay is an American poet, essayist, and professor committed to healing the world through observing and articulating joy, delight and gratitude. He won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry and the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award for his 2014 book, Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude, which was also a finalist for the National Book Award for Poetry. A devoted community gardener, Ross is a founding board member of the Bloomington Community Orchard, a non-profit, free-fruit-for-all food justice and joy project. A college football player, he is a founding editor of the online sports magazine Some Call it Ballin'. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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It stopped asking directions.
Some places they've never been.
Hello, Pod Squad.
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
Just get ready, because our guest today is just an insider of joy and delight.
And we have been waiting for this conversation for a long time.
Ross Gay is an American poet, essayist, and professor.
I think it I.U. right?
Yep.
Though big red, my mom said to say to you,
I really.
I guess that's a thing.
Who is committed to the rigorous work
of observing and articulating joy.
He won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry and the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award for his 2014 book, Catalog of Unabashed
Gratitude, which was also a finalist for the National Book Award for Poetry. A devoted
community gardener, Ross is a founding board member of the Bloomington Community Orchard.
A nonprofit free food for all, food justice and joy project. A
college football player, he's a founding editor of the online sports magazine, Some Call it
Ballon. It's literally like my world's colliding football and joy. I know. I want to learn
how to garden. Well, thank you for being here. Glad to be here. Thank you for having me.
So, your work is about so many things. Joy, beauty, laughter, crying, dancing, gardening, healing, skateboarding, love.
So, there is sometimes a reaction, which is fascinating, of how can you possibly focus on these things during such serious hard times?
So what do you say to that Russ? I mean, you know, more and more, I'm like, what aren't serious hard
times? That's one thing that I say. But the other thing, you know, because part of that question,
which is a little bit of a, sometimes it's a question, it's just like a sort of a generous, how do you do that?
But sometimes it's also a little bit of a rebuke,
you know, like you're not being serious.
And to me, because joy is fundamentally
a kind of practice of connection.
I wrote the book and came out like six months ago now
and now that I've written it, I feel like I have
a pretty good definition of the word joy. I offer one in the book, but I feel like it's getting better and I now that I've written it, I feel like I have a pretty good definition of the word
joy. I offer one in the book, but I feel like it's getting better. And I think that definition
might be something like the ways that we practice entanglement, the feeling that we have when we
actively practice being entangled with one another, that word entanglement, I think I kind of
come to that through this a beautiful book by writer named Anna Singh,
TSI and G, called Mushroom at the End of the World.
But, you know, that we are connected, fundamentally.
And if joy is actually the evidence of connection,
and it's the evidence of participating in connection,
to suggest that it's not serious,
is just wrong.
You know, yeah, usually I have stronger words than wrong,
but you know, like fucking stupid.
But I think you nailed it.
That'll do.
Thank you.
But it's wrong.
It's as serious as can be.
Because what you're suggesting is that the experience of joy
makes us feel connected to each other and the world.
And then that makes us aware of the connection.
And then that awareness of connection is what makes us want to love and heal and support
each other.
So joy is connected to saving the world.
Yeah, and each other, you know, yeah, absolutely.
Absolutely.
I think fundamentally that's what it is.
The connection is there, like to be a creature is to be connected, you know.
And to imagine otherwise is in a way to be brutal.
And I feel like we do a lot of imagining otherwise all the time.
I know.
I know my saddest moments of my life are when I'm imagining that I'm
unconnected and I start to sort of do all the stuff
to maintain that dream.
But when I'm feeling the best,
and I think the feeling is joy,
is when I'm not only witnessing,
not I'm not only attuned to the fact of the connection,
like that this black walnut tree is in fact,
we are connected,
like the shade that it's offering,
what it's doing with the air,
that it's housing all kinds of creatures
that I can't even fathom the number of creatures that it's offering, what it's doing with the air, that it's housing all kinds of creatures that I can't even fathom the number of creatures
that it's housing, I feel like, ah, now I'm starting
to feel something.
And then when I try to practice belonging
to that connection, you can do it by playing
a big up basketball.
Maybe that's a sight of it,
gardening's a sight of it, dancing's a sight of it,
you know, et cetera, et cetera.
Mm, I love that when you're saying that joy is not easy,
it has everything to do with the fact
that we are all going to die.
Yeah.
And it's so counterintuitive because when people think
of joy in the very shallow sense that you don't understand it
as is this like running away from the
fact that we're going to die, but it's you are going headlong through it. And there's a part where
you say that going to that place where we all realize we're going to die is reminding us that we
don't belong to an institution or to a party to a, but to, you say, but to each other, which we must
practice and study and sing and dream and celebrate belonging to each other as though our lives depend on it.
It's not the escapism, it's the reality. Yeah, yeah, it's not escaping, it's entering.
Yeah, it feels like joy is something that, you know, it's sort of available. The connection,
the fundamental connection or the entanglement
It's available, but you're right. You don't escape there. You enter there, you know, I think that that's where maybe I have
Thought about joy
incorrectly. I think that my soul has known that the connection piece was
very important
But I always just thought joy was about
how it made me feel, like the joy was mine.
I never have considered this idea
that it was actually about the connections with people
and things and trees,
what you just said was so profound to me.
I wanna talk about the book of Delights
because my goodness, your work is just outrageous.
Can you tell us how that project came about and why?
Yeah.
I was having a nice day one day.
That must be so lovely.
It's a great way to start a project.
I know.
I was like in the middle of like a moment of Delight actually.
I was at a writing residency in Italy.
And I was walking along really.
And I was sort of like, you know, the birds are singing.
And the bees were like buzzing along.
And there's some flowers.
And I was like, man, this is so delightful.
And I was like, I should write a little essay about it.
And then really, it was like a bird flew in my head.
And it was like, do it every day for a year.
Write an essay about something that delights you every day for a year.
And then that happened to be like two weeks from my birthday.
You know, that was probably like early or mid July that that happened.
My birthday is August 1st.
So I was like, all right, let me start on my birthday.
And then let me give myself these rules, these little constraints that will make it easy.
One of them was like to write them quickly.
So I wrote them only like 30 minutes.
And then I, you know, did them daily
and I wrote them by hand.
And that's how it started.
That's how I started.
I didn't understand.
This is my first introduction to you.
Then I read everything that you've.
Yeah.
I thought, oh, a book of Delights.
This will be some light fun reading.
And then I get to day one, Ross, and you say
something about, oh, you're getting dressed and you're putting on flowered socks and all of this
beautiful clothes. And you say, it's a little bit of healing for my old man, surely who would warn
us against wearing red, lest we succumb to some stereotype, I barely even know, a delight that we can heal
our loved ones, even the dead ones.
Mm.
We are healing backwards, Ross.
I think so, if they're in us, are they still with us?
Yeah, yeah, but I think you're right.
That when we do things in our lives right now
That we were warned against by our parents. We are not only healing future generations, but backwards
Yeah, I often think of that. I was just with
My mother this last weekend and I think you know when you're around your mother, you're kind of like you know more
my mother this last weekend. And I think, you know, when you're
around your mother, you're kind of like,
you know, more acquainted with some of this stuff.
And I was like, thinking we were talking about my dad.
And I was just thinking, oh, in addition to like,
oh, I would have loved to.
He died when I was like 20, nine dogs.
You know, like not quite old enough to be grown with him.
And I have often thought it'd be so nice to be a full on adults,
like an aging person with my dad to have that conversation.
But also that so much of, you know, his sort of stuff that felt like difficulty between us,
the older I get, of course, the more I sort of feel like I understand that difficulty.
But I also feel like in ways there are some of his sort of wounds that I'm able, because
I've fun, you know, because you look at your hands and it's like here he is, you know,
or whoever it is, they're with us.
You're like, okay, well, I'm going to put that thing to the side.
We don't have to like carry that wound or that terror or that thing alone.
I do feel like that's part of what we get to do.
It's such a beautiful act of freedom because I always think of me having to heal my parents
or past generations by telling them everything they did wrong and then making them go to therapy
and maybe just living more freely and then imagining that as this
backwards healing is a beautiful thing. Can I ask you about this insistence upon joy and gratitude?
But it makes me think a lot about our trans friends right now who it seems like in those groups, trans and queer people, there's just this
adamant insistence upon trans joy queer joy right now that can feel confusing, I think, to
outside people because wait, everyone's under attack right now and as you said, have always been
under attack, but these are serious times. And so it feels as if if people who are being marginalized or being under attack
are constantly having to fight for their lives and they are never getting to
experience the things that make life worth living.
That's it right there. It seems to me. Yeah.
Yeah, it seems that's that's it it fundamentally like the joy, the joy is like the reason to be alive.
And if you lose track of that, you're like, you know, fighting is the reason to be alive.
That's kind of a meager existence. Yeah.
But if connection is the reason to be alive, that makes perfect sense to me.
Yeah. I mean, I think that's part of my part of what I'm sort of why I'm curious
about this, you know, meditate, thinking hard about joy is because it's and it's a little
bit of this other thing, which is like sometimes people will ask the question of like joy as resistance.
And I want to kind of refuse that.
And the reason I want to refuse it is because resistance implies,
I think, that what isn't joy, what is unjoyous or whatever, the incursions to joy are larger than what constitutes joy.
What I feel like is that joy is actually the truth.
And so it's not resistance.
I don't know if this is accurate either,
but it's like the offenses of joy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's bigger.
It's bigger.
It's just bigger, you know,
which is why it's dangerous.
Yes.
It reminds me of your loitering
where if the whole world is a no-loitering side and if the
system is that must be consuming, must not be loitering, then what is disruptive and appears
resistant to that is relaxing, is not being consumptive. It's a kind of a refusal that chooses each other over this thing that we're supposed to be convinced
is the truth.
Glad you mentioned that essay.
Yeah, I think that's one of those essays
where it kind of gets to that.
It's such a kind of assault to a system
to not be chasing after it or something.
It's such an assault.
And that the system only exists because of the assimilation to the system.
Yeah, totally, totally.
I've been thinking lately about like, with Buddy and Mike, and I were talking and, but
there are all of these kind of modes of authority.
And the modes of authority have to have made us imagine, you can say the state or something,
but you can say other kinds of authority.
Have to convince us that they actually
are the suppliers of care.
And once we fully sort of assimilated that,
we're like, well, we will wait for the system.
We will wait for it to distribute the care because they are the ones who have access to the care.
And they do a good job of making that the case that they have access.
But it's also not, it's not, it's a thing that we sort of submit to, you know.
We submit, we sort of have to, it feels like we have to sort of forget that we are in
fact the providers of each other's care
all the time every day.
Even if it means like someone walking by
and be like, oh yeah, I got some seeds for you.
Like we were just walking on the street the other day
and we're looking at these trees and dude came outside
and we're like, what kind of trees are those?
He was just like taking his trash out.
He's like, oh, you know what?
And he looked on his phone and did his little thing
on the phone that I guess you can tell
and kind of trees they are.
And he's like, what's this week?
I'm such a like a little interaction,
a little brief fleeting caretaking interaction.
That is the fabric of our lives, you know?
And it's the kind of thing that makes you be like,
walk into the street and you see someone
needing help carrying something.
And you're like, I got you, I got you.
Or doing this and that.
But it feels like that kind of fabric of care,
we have to be convinced that it's not available,
or it's not true.
And the way that the care comes is from
the kind of administrators of care.
But the evidence to me is that administrators of care
are the withholders of care. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
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I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
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And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
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You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing,
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I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows
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Classy.
A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
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house for a while and she has an interesting take on money, which we talked about forever that night. And she just believes it comes in and out and so she does not
save. Yeah. And it reminds me a lot of you're not how you're ruled out not
hoarding the delights, not saving up the delights and having to do the
meet today. But it's because she believes fully. And things belief means you act
on it until it's real too too that the community that she's been
taking care of with this money that flows in and out will be there when hers is gone and she just
has to live that way to believe that life is as beautiful as she thinks it is. The principle
of sharing, that's the other thing. The question of joy is also like when you're sort of thinking about connection, you're sharing.
Sharing.
And like sharing is also an offense to who needs us to buy things, who needs us to believe that.
And you see it, like all these kind of instances of like what you might call radical care, but it's just like care.
You know, are often made illegal.
Yeah. Well, yes, giving people anything in the street is made illegal giving and we've
even institutionalized that. How do we care for each other? Okay. Support this 501C3. How
do we care? We're looking for the the institutions support, instead of seeing the direct through lines of connection that you
Open our eyes to I'm deeply interested in your practical discipline of
capturing joy and you talk about this kind of
Delight muscle that we can hone and you say that the more you study
delights, the more delights there are to study. And it seems to me, myself included, that
many of us have that delight muscle very atrophied because we have not exercised it. Where do
people begin? Who believe what you say,
but the muscle is not, it's not working at the moment.
Yeah, I love that question.
I've been touring a lot with this Insighting Joy book.
And so I've been having a lot of conversations
for the first time in a while in person with people
who read the delights.
And a lot of people who read the delights,
it's so interesting, I didn't realize this would happen. But a lot of people are like, oh yeah, I started a little delight practice.
And so sweet, or people will be like, I've done this thing with my friends, like this one person
said, me and my like three friends get online every morning for like 20 minutes and we like go over our
belayets every day and her partner was there and was like, yeah, you missed like four days.
And like the last few years, oh my god, you can't even...
That's not an answer, but it is like a question. It is something about...
There is something deeply communal about the game, you know?
Yeah, Sharon, Sharon totally. It's more about sharing. It's amazing
when a hummingbird like lands four feet away from you. It's amazing. But there's a little bit extra
amazing when you're next to someone and you're like, yeah, yeah. Actually the other day I was in
the airport and Steph Curry made a stupid, beautiful move. And I found myself looking around to find someone to be like,
you know, yeah, yeah, that was impossible.
Well, it's the witnessing that you talk about. You witnessing in yourself and then someone
witnessing the same thing with you. Yes. Yes. It's just bearing witness to the reality.
Like you're saying, like, we live in a world with deaf fucking curry. Totally. I was walking. I remember like so
many times you just like I'm thinking of like walking by
the cemetery here and there's a beautiful sickle mortuary
and evidently chimney swips come into it. And I remember
walking by one day and a friend of mine was just sitting there
looking up at the swifts and it was like not quite desk. I
guess when they could start to pour out,
but I had to go like, do a thing.
And I was like, what are you doing?
And she's like, I was waiting on the Swift.
You know, and she's like, so beautiful.
So just witness other people witnessing things
that delight them, things that they love.
That's the other thing that I think, I think that,
in addition to like that it being evidence of like, oh, there's a lot of things to think I think that you know in addition to like that that it being evidence of like
Oh, there's a lot of things to love. There's a lot of stuff to love also the evidence of like we're really inclined to share what we love
That feels to me really important
And so I think that's just like a ground that I would offer to think about like for people who are like
Man my delight muscles at your feet
offered to think about like for people who are like, uh, they're my delight muscles at her feet. There's some about like with other people. Yeah. Ross, my dad and I had not been
talking a lot. And after I read the book of Delights, I asked my dad if we could just send
each other a picture a day of something that delighted us that day because it's such a beautiful
way to communicate who you are to each other without all the words and I don't know. It worked for a while and then I guess you
stopped being delighted. Well, we've been walking around and every once in
a while one of us will go, delight! And I do think that there's that moment of
not just connection because we agree on it, but sometimes I didn't see it.
And it's like for me to see my wife in the light
without even having experienced it,
I can feel my like the dopamine like get pushed into my brain
and I get lit up just by her delight.
Yeah, it's cool.
Yeah.
Yeah, and I think maybe too, like even
if there was a thing that didn't particularly delight you. But but seeing someone else delight it.
Yes. It's the same thing, I think, probably, you know, because my delight is just maybe it's not on
that. It's her delight. I can tell you I'm going to walk right by that Steph Curry delight, Ross.
by that stuff, Korea to light Ross. Okay.
I hear you.
I hear you.
I hear you.
The connection, though, it's against these practices that you have tune us into the reality.
You talk about how joy is more likely to be found in these spaces where the divisions
between us get murky.
Because our practice in our lives is to think of ourselves under the myth
of being so individualized.
But in these spaces where it gets a little more murky
is the place where we can see the reality
of connectedness more fully.
So you talk about pickup basketball games
and gardening and dancing and organizing as a place.
Can you tell us more about the elimination of the divisions and what that does?
Yeah, that's a good question. Well, let me just talk about pickup basketball.
Yeah, please, please do.
Because it is complicated. It's such a good thing. Like, you know, we all know that feeling of like
whatever it is. Like I think a dance, a dance for is a good example of like where something happens and just, you know, like we get together
in a certain kind of way, but like we went free, I believe. We were free. Yeah, we go free.
And we go free because we kind of boom, we become each other. We become a
murmuration or something. But the, and pick up basketball is so interesting. You know, there's all these kind of rules and the rules are
not
fixed necessarily. There are all of these basically the way that it works. It's there's 10 people say on a regular court and
the winner the person who scores most points will stay on the court and then the next team will get on and
Every single time there's a new person
introduced into the system, the organism, there's going to be a new understanding of the rules.
So because there aren't there aren't referees and there aren't coaches. So it's the people who
are playing the game who are going to decide how we're going to play the game. Every single time.
And that means some people never call fouls.
Some people all the time call fouls.
Some people, when someone calls a bad foul, Belial,
sometimes they'll take the ball and go to the end of the court.
They're all of these modes of sort of protests and modes of like
trying to not fuck up the game, basically.
Additionally, in pickup basketball,
you can be playing against someone else one game
and they can really be, you know, kicking your ass.
And then, in just the nature of the game
is that two games later, you might be on the same team.
So it doesn't abide like the kind of animosity is.
You know, though it's deeply competitive, it also doesn't abide like a sort of permanent rival.
Doesn't doesn't work that way.
Also, everyone in pick up basketball, the nature of the game is that at some point,
you're going to be on the court trying to find people to get on your team to play next.
So you're going to be a host and you're always going to also be a guest because you're going to be someone who says,
oh, can I play?
So all of these things, additionally, you can call next game.
I'm going to play next. I got next game, but you can't call.
I have the next 10 games, which also is like it's a way that the game itself manages figuring
out how to keep everyone in the game. Oh God, that's so stressful. It's like a moving
constant trust and the energy of everyone and spontaneity as if the universe is fluid.
Oh, we have to just go into the flow of it. Yeah, yeah, totally.
And there was this other thing,
research talking to a friend,
Abby, this might sound ridiculous to you,
but playing basketball with a friend
and I was like, oh, and he's better than me.
And I was like, well, what if we just don't keep screwing?
Now you're talking to light.
I had the idea in my head.
In my head was like, hardly it was actually,
it wasn't just that he was kind of kicking my ass.
It was a little bit that I was trying to like think about this feeling
that I had before we would play, which would be a kind of nervousness.
And because I really wanted to win, I'm competitive.
But it was also thinking about this other thing,
which is like, well, what if a predominant objective
of the game is to make beautiful shit
as opposed to like beat each other?
But then I was talking to another friend
who was like, but in Pick Up Basketball,
you need a way to keep,
get the next people onto the court.
And there's something, you know, you could say,
we'll do it with a clock.
But there's something very nice about that
clocks don't fit in that.
It's off the clock.
You know, there's some other kind of metric
that's gonna get everyone on the court.
Is it because all those things are outer controls?
Like rules, clocks, that's like institutional
outer control and you are dependent upon interdependence.
Yeah, totally.
Yeah, like we have to negotiate how, and it's interesting too that a court is called a
court.
Yeah.
That we have to, without judges, we are going to be the ones who determine how to make the game go, how to keep the game going.
You know, which to me, I think of as like a kind of laboratory of care.
It's interesting trying to like create a no-win, no-lose situation in the thing that we call a game,
which is like the whole point, right? How did that work out? Did not try and...
Are we in my buddy. We would do it on the clock. Yeah, and it could be okay. And we kind
of itch back towards, well, let's just play this one up to five, you know? Got it. We got
it. We got to get a little competitive. We got to like, no, get the skin. I know. This
is going against everything I have known to be true.
Speaking of sports, I need to talk about crying.
I need to talk about crying. I need to talk about crying and laughing. So you talk about your time on the football team in high school and I think college. College. Okay, and the kind of specific
brand of kind of masculinity shaming that occurred specifically by this one coach. And
when you've recounted one of these horrible stories to Stephanie,
you explained to her that you couldn't really share what had happened with anyone back then,
because if you would have, you would have started crying. And Stephanie said,
and what would have happened if you started crying? And you said, I would have had to kill everyone and everything around me.
And she said why.
That's pretty good question.
Why?
It's so, right.
No, it's so deeply.
I understand.
So can you tell us why?
Why?
Yeah.
And too, I want to say that the thing that's even like just as interesting to me is that
it had never even occurred to me that oh, that feeling I had was I was about to cry.
Like it took me 25 years until I was playing ball with this kid who every once in a while we wouldn't keep score and I was talking to him because he's sort of easy with tears. It's not a big deal
with him. And I was explaining to him. I was like, oh,
It's just not a big deal with him. And I was explaining to him, I was like, oh, damn,
I realized I spent like the last 25 years
every time I tell this story even to myself.
I never acknowledged that, oh, the thing that was
about to happen is that you were about to start crying.
And then, yes, and then when's there?
It's such a great conversation, because you could imagine it's just a person who's like,
not hung up in that way.
And he's like, oh, why would you have to kill everyone?
It's not.
It's not.
It's not like a disproportionate response.
It's not a situation.
But it's not.
It's not.
Pride, you've gone a corner, pride.
Yeah.
And it takes me like whatever, 60 pages in that essay to kind of try to figure out like
what that's about.
But I do feel like part of it in this long way is that, you know, so much of the training,
that's certain kind of training of being a so-called man or whatever is like to be, and
not only though, not only, you know, is to be not falling apart.
You know, like holding it together as one way, I was sort of saying it,
but it's like not falling apart.
And so much of the training it seems to me is like
that any evidence of,
when I say falling apart,
what I kind of think I really mean is of being a creature.
And of being a creature, what I mean is of having need
which all of us are mostly need.
Shaveful as it is.
I think it's that.
I think it's sort of like that kind of intense
and I feel like that instance is a really interesting
glimmer of it, but that was like evidence of intense, and I feel like that instance is a really interesting glimmer of it,
but that was like evidence of like,
oh, my need was about to be exposed.
And my need just something like,
you know, my need to be like cared for or not abused,
you know, in the way that you know,
coaches get stupid sometimes and make mistakes,
and I also wanna say that.
I better coach and have said things I wish I would not have said,
you know.
That was my need talking and to have my needs shown to me at that time in my life and
to not be able to register that as need for years, I think also speaks to the depth of
the aversion again to being a creature.
What a sorrow it is.
And just like so many of the sort of mythologies of growing up or like being successful or,
but look, it's like eliminating your need.
It's like going beyond your need.
It's like being able to manage your need, you know,
or like have no needs.
But to be without need means you're not alive.
Right.
You know?
Is the need to kill everyone that needs you'm not, you dropped it, okay? You dropped
it to Stephanie, then you dropped it on me, and we're going to work it out, okay? But is
the, is it the need not only to eliminate having needs but to eliminate anyone who may have witnessed you having the need right exactly exactly
Exactly
Totally and then we're so great wise my partner being like
Oh, what was that because obviously when you're in a relationship
Your needs are always being shown to you. Yeah, sometimes they weren't nice
That's right.
The falling apart is fascinating.
Because you can fall apart when you're crying.
You can people say, oh, she fell out laughing.
She fell, it's like when we're all together,
when we're keeping ourselves together,
we're the opposite of falling apart,
but you need to fall apart to connect with other people.
That's it. That's it. And I'm glad you mentioned laughter too, because it is like,
laughter is police too. Yes. Can I lead your part about that? Yeah.
Because they know laughter is a contagion. Those who laugh are its vectors.
And one of laughter's qualities is that it can draw us together
by reminding us of the breath that we share, which also reminds
us, or can, especially when we fall off our chairs,
when we gasp for air, how we sometimes
do, of the dying we share, which is a pretty big thing
to share when you think about it, maybe one of the biggest.
And if we share that, why not share everything else? It could be epidemic this
sharing, which is why they try to nip it in the bud. Oh, Mike, we talked to Gloria Steinem
about this laughter thing. And it's like, you know, I think it was Margaret Atwood who said
that men are afraid that women will laugh
at them and women are afraid that men will kill them.
So which is so tied to what you just said, like when women see men's vulnerability, it's
like dangerous.
And when women show their actual power by laughing because the only thing that can't be forced
that that is proof of freedom.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. freedom. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. What do you mean by laughter draws us together by reminding us of the dying we share?
Laughter is the expelling off in a breath. We breathe because we die. Or breathing is evidence of our dying. It's hard to forget it then.
I do a lot of that.
So can you talk to us about when your neighbors came together
to plant a community garden and how do you eventually?
I mean, the garden stuff just talked to us about gardening.
And I want you to get to the point
where you have to decide whether to put a fence
around the garden.
Oh yeah.
I love it.
And it's so sweet.
And you say neighbors because my neighbor,
any countryman, is like the mother of that community orchard.
I could throw a baseball into their yard.
And she had this idea.
And she was a slightly older undergraduate student
at Indiana University.
And I was here at the farmers market.
She was a farmer and growing stuff. And she was here at the farmers market. She was a farmer and grown
step. And she was also finishing up her degree. And she did a project on food security and food
sovereignty and stuff. And she had realized how few of the trees in the urban canopy. And that
means the trees of the city manages, produce food. And she was just sort of thinking, well, maybe
an alternative way to sort of do something, provide a little bit of,
would be to have a community orchard.
So she proposed that she wrote her thesis
and then her thesis director introduced her
to the urban forester, the urban forester said,
well, if you have a call out meeting
and a lot of people are interested,
we'll let you use this acre
and we'll give you a little bit of seed money.
Seed money. Yeah.
And Jamie had this call out meeting and 100 plus people came and shortly after we were broken into
teams and it's just like the most lovely experience. In the process of doing it and you know,
doing hours and hours and hours and hours
and hours of labor, among which labor was like all of these awesome potlars. The most inefficient
meetings you've ever been to in your life. And it was due to the inefficiency. And I say
this too, like a lot of people had like little kids and stuff. It was hard. It was hard, you know.
We were like figuring it out.
People were having to figure stuff out.
A lot of people were having to support all of this going on.
And that inefficiency, I just want to say this,
it just feels so important that that inefficiency was so important
and so part of like the love that I feel for those people,
that we were wandering, that we were for those people that we were wandering that we
were bumbling that we were like not sure and that we were trying and that we were like sharing
recipes and stuff. But in those meetings those long-ass meetings like so long, so great. No,
no, it's new. It would have meant to be on a board. You know, we just kind of like, oh yeah, okay,
I guess you're supposed to be able to make a board now.
And then we became kind of the board
and then we were like doing these meetings
and they were like three hour meetings.
Oh gosh.
People who were like on boards,
like who like had different kinds of jobs would be like,
oh no.
Oh.
Oh.
Ha.
You.
Can't prove the minutes.
No.
That's a good one.
Yeah.
I know. At one point, there's this funny story. That's a good one. Yeah.
I know.
At one point, there's this funny story in there.
Like, at one point, my friend stays even the farmer.
And we were supposed to write the contract about, you know,
these, I think when you do these little contracts with cities,
they have a kind of, like a termination clause.
Like, if it, you know, the orchard gets out of hand
or no one's managing it, we're going to take the land back.
And we spent hours
trying to figure out like, what do you do? And I suppose we were like looking at, we were so bumbling and it was so fun. It was so meaningful. You know, the only termination clause that was written
in poetry. Exactly. Exactly. But at some point, because we had like all the tree, or we were about to have all the trees and we had to sort of, we're going to have a fence for a dear fence.
But there was like the conversation, the very reasonable predictable conversation about well, so the gate, like, is it going to be always open?
Is it going to, can you always get in? And you can imagine that some of us were nervous that if you could get in,
shit would get broken, basically.
And there were enough people, enough of us who were like,
well, the openness of the gate is more important actually than this other thing.
You know, it was a tussle.
It was like this really beautiful tussle.
And, you know, of course, the orchards,
then it's been open, the gates,
you can just go walk in there whenever you want.
And you can also just go and harvest what you need.
And it just works out.
It just works out.
Like, good God, it works out.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You said we decided that somebody stealing a few trees wouldn't be the worst thing.
The worst thing would be putting a lock on the dream of free fruit for all.
Yeah.
That's really cool.
That's really cool.
That's really cool.
I love the openness of the gate is is worth more than the brokenness inside.
I feel like that's the story of every human.
We can keep the gate closed and keep it like perfectly
unbroken, we can open it and be like,
it's worth the cost.
It's a little busted upness in there.
Yeah, that's worth it.
I feel like that's why I've struggled to stay at churches.
When I was reading to you about your orchard,
I kept understanding the problem from my perspective
of is like, there's always a moment where the church decides
that it has to protect itself instead of giving itself
because of the institution of it.
So it was like, actually, if the only church that
would ever work is one that was constantly dying and having to read, constantly dying and
having to rebuild, but the protection of his and what keeps it from what it reports to
be. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Say it again, say it again. It's like, okay, so there's always a moment
in a church that I've experienced where you're sitting down and everyone's like well-meaning and doing the thing and go Jesus and all the things.
And then it's like, but we have to like repay the pavement and like pay for that or the new whatever when we know there's people that are hungry the next town over.
So the actual answer would be we just give the freaking money and we let the thing fall apart every time that's the answer. But that's not the answer. That becomes not the answer over and over again.
So it's like the equivalent of just putting up the fence to me, which is like the only church that
would be really truly legit is one that was would constantly out of money. So it wouldn't exist.
Yeah, yeah. The given the given away is what builds the church or something.
The given away is what builds the thing.
Yeah, or the being openness to dying.
Yeah.
And then resurrecting in a different way,
which is very tied to gardening and Jesus and such.
Okay.
Also, hold on a minute, just a second.
I just have to say, delight.
Are you hearing the birds?
Yeah, there's a bird chirping.
Yes.
So it's at Wast's house for sure.
It's for sure. And I just I love that so much. And
like for sure we're keeping the birds. Of course.
Delight. Can you imagine if we cut the birds tripping out of
Ross Gays episode? I think it's just coming from Ross's heart.
Yeah. Honestly, like when I look at you and you're
beautiful gorgeous smile. And I don't know how you're doing this
But you smile while you speak. Yeah, it's just like amazing
I don't know if this is post book of Delights and Insighting Joy or you've always been this delightful to look at
Well, my mom would say so
No, my mom would say so. Yeah. No, my mom really would say so.
Yeah.
I read this part too.
It's two days a year.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Could you tell us the story of when you told your dear friend Jay that you were going to
stop doing Brazilian jiu jitsu?
Yeah, that was big for me to read and understand.
Why did you decide to stop?
Well, and this is good because I was sort of wanting to come back a little bit, circle back,
in some way to that atwood observation. And that was part of what that fear of crying was,
that sort of the witness of my need, but also in that the way that she put it and the way that you
said it, is the witness of my frailty. And when your whole life is built around obscuring the fact or like tending to the spannisy of not being frail, that is such an assault when when someone witnesses the fact that no, no, you're actually frail. You're actually frail. But partly this, this, um, see if I can bring this over to the J and me and J,
I remember, yeah, I was on the phone and I was just doing, you know, like little,
I don't know, I was just taking this to get to not a class, whatever you call it.
And I was so, um, I was learning things, you know, and it's also good to say that kind of
in the beginning of this, sometimes people ask, but where do you feel like you started
to learn some of this?
Some of this stuff, I started to learn when I was reading Pema Chidro, who has a book
called Things Fall Apart, which I completely forgot until I have to put this book in this
essay, and who feels like a real teacher to me, like when I was completely losing it in my 20s,
my friend Nora gave me a copy of the book, The Wisdom of Noescape.
And it does feel like a book that kind of like kept me around a little bit.
But when I was talking to Jay, I had been enough, like I was starting to learn things about observing myself,
which had not been a thing that I had necessarily.
I was learning how to do that.
And when I got to talk about it in the book, I make fun of myself a little bit because,
you know, the language that we know would be like,
Oh, how could you feel into that?
Yeah.
I had no idea what the hell that meant.
You know, but I really know.
But at that point I started to sort of learn like,
oh yeah, well, if I felt into it, I was like,
I'm defensive all the time.
I'm ready to be at war all the time.
And the manifestation of that being all kinds of things,
like not feeling good, feeling on edge, feeling paranoid,
feeling, et cetera, et cetera.
And just having this sort of insight at some point,
I have to say, I don't know if it hurt
that I had got this little weird injury
where I don't know, my rib didn't break,
but something happened.
But it coincided, It wasn't like this sort
of like, it was, it wasn't just a moment of insight. It was also a rib. I think it might
also be a little bit of rib. That's beautiful too. End book. Sometimes it takes a broken
rib and really feeling into it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Feeling into my broken rib, which was
hiding my soul. Exactly. Protecting your heart. It's my heart. And I was Yeah, yeah, I feel it and do my broken rib, which was hiding my soul. Exactly.
I'm protecting your heart.
It's sort of thing.
Exactly.
And I was like, yeah, I want to figure out how not to do things that cultivate the sense
of defensiveness.
And I told him over the phone, me and Jay are like, you know,
bendesties for a long time.
And he probably knows me as well as most anyone from a long time.
It's seen my changes and everything too.
And I remember hearing over the phone, I imagined hearing over the phone, him making a face
that was like a face of like, that's different or a face of like, huh, that's different.
Or a face of this recognition.
I couldn't see him. There was not yet a thing called zoom.
And I also was like, I just sort of made it up.
I think I, there was a quiet.
And I imagined that he was not recognizing me.
And the feeling I had was of my body actually sort of dissipated.
Like my body sort of breaking into particles and floating around.
It was a strange and really moving feeling because it again, talking about with this,
it sort of made me feel like, oh, right, what does it mean to sort of encounter it, at least even
if only in your mind, what it means for someone who you love and
by whom or through whom you've sort of understood yourself who might not quite
recognize you. The idea of that, just the idea of it because like I said I think
Jay was probably like, oh cool, but the feeling was like, oh man what if this
dude doesn't recognize me?
And is it also the fear of the, because who knows what Jay was thinking, but, you know,
reimagining like yourself in that situation, the fear we have when someone that we know
ourselves through starts to change something about themselves, then we feel like we're disintegrating.
Because then it reminds me of like when somebody gets sober
in a relationship or somebody.
And then the other person's like,
but that's now what we do.
Yeah.
And does you looking in a mirror
gonna mean that I need to look at myself?
Yeah.
It's a disintegrating moment for everybody.
Totally, totally.
I think of that as like,
the many good lessons of like being in couples therapy
is to be like practicing witnessing each other change.
Yeah.
Witnessing with love of each other change,
which obviously can require some breathing, I guess.
That's not, partly it's like,
what a relief to be in my experience, to be like, oh, this
pattern I have of just knowing everything about you without asking you, which is like
the pattern of knowing everything about everything without actually checking in.
Well, what do you love?
What are your values?
What are you, you know, what are we doing? That to have to learn that, oh, that's the thing that I do.
And then I do with my partner and I do with my closest people.
And to learn that, oh, actually part of being close
is to be like, I will always be learning you a new,
something like that.
Always unknowing you.
It's always unknowing you.
People should put that in their vows. Instead of knowing you, I will always unknow you because it's's always unknowing you. People should put that in their vows.
Instead of knowing you, I will always unknow you because it's like when you look at something
the closer you, you just don't see it. So Ross, everyone on the Pod Squad has to hear this every
episode. So sorry, but this is my quick reference to recovery and recovery for eating this sort
of right now. So I've gained weight, which is good, yay. But my wedding ring is too small now.
And I was so upset one day,
because it's like so tight and it almost broke.
And then I was thinking, no, no, no, no,
this is what Roskei will understand this as a poet.
This is my new metaphor.
Like, may my wedding rings just keep getting so small
that I just like bust them over and over again.
Let's just keep growing as opposed to having something
that keeps us one size.
Yeah, beautiful.
Thanks, Russ.
I just thought you might appreciate that one.
I didn't tell to anyone else but you.
Yeah, beautiful.
Yeah.
What you were just talking about, Russ,
when you're talking to Jay and feeling like you're just
disintegrating, I'm just imagining we feel like someone else's
that we love is changing before us.
Is it like the initial alienation from that where we feel disconnected?
Abandoned.
And then is it the, when you say like breath is both proof that we are living and proof
that we are dying, is it like we are active and changing.
And so we have to go through that and find a new connection
point to witness the evolution.
I'm imagining all these little particles
and then imagining the other person and like
what is happening in that ecosystem
when there is change.
Yeah, I think of it like, you know, again, being around my mother, I feel like, oh, man,
what an interesting project to have a kid and be like part of being a parent is to like
really know your kid and to also be around this person who is always changing.
Oh my gosh.
And part of the negotiation of that relationship
is to be like, yeah, I don't know, I don't know you.
And I don't want to lock you into this thing
that I think you were or you should be.
But like, let me just know you as you continue to change.
I feel like the way you put it sounds, I mean, as you continue to change. I feel like
The way you put it sounds. I mean, that's interesting to me. That sounds interesting Yeah, like it also comes back a little bit to connection, which I think is also really moving and beautiful and complicated
Which is that we do recognize ourselves through who loves us, you know
And we also recognize ourselves through people who don't love us. Yes
I think that's also important to know, you know And we also recognize ourselves through people who don't love us. Yes. Just as much.
I think that's also important to know.
But if we're talking about who loves us and who we deeply trust, that feels like a kind
of, it is this kind of disintegration.
It's kind of on making up oneself and reconstituting up oneself.
Yes.
And then on making up a relationship and a reconstituting up a relationship.
Again and again and again and again and again.
Yes.
And when you say joy emerges from this reality of shared sorrow, there is joy emerging
from this shared sorrow that we will never truly know anyone. And including ourselves,
someone else will never truly know us. And so we're like, all just buzzing around each other, trying and trying and loving and loving.
And yet we know that we're always just gonna miss each other.
And those rare moments you connect,
there was so much joy because of that.
Yeah, the way you say it too, it makes me think that
like a deep commonness is the unknown.
And if the unknown is kind of a ground, that's like, well, we really have, we have
sample of things you got to one of them is like, this kind of abiding unknowing.
I feel like if we practice, that can make us tender.
You know, I think.
I think. Roske.
What a freaking delight you are.
By the way, once I started reading all of your books, I text Liz Gilbert's one of my best
friends and I texted her and said, do you heard of Roske?
And she said, have I heard of Roske?
He's my neighbor.
I said, is he is great?
Tell me the truth.
Is he as great as his books make him seem like he is?
And she said, he's better.
He's even better. He's a little better, real life.
Pod Squad, go get Insighting Joy, go get the Book of Delights, go get all of Rosuke's work.
You know how we're talking on the pod lately about how we need to keep leaning into anything that
capitalism tells us is worthless? Rosuke is the guide through that, okay?
So go pick up his work, you will not regret it.
And just go forth this week and unknow everyone around you.
We love you, Pod Squad.
We'll see you next time.
Bye.
Cheers.
Yay!
That was great.
Thank you for that.
It's so beautiful.
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I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle.
I walked through a fire I came out the other side.
I chased as I er, 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 want the line
Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak
So man, a final destination
And that we stopped asking directions
And some places they've never been
and to be loved we need to be known
we'll finally find our way back home
through the joy and pain
that our lives bring We can do a heartache
I hit rock bottom It felt like a brand new star 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
because we're adventurers and heartbreak some man A final destination with that
We stopped asking directions
Some 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 a heartache Yeah Yeah Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Those perfect charers and heartbreaks on that
We might get lost but we're only in that
Stopped asking directions
Some places may have 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 hard things
you