We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - How to Make Betrayal Beautiful with Maggie Smith

Episode Date: May 16, 2023

For the first time, Glennon requests a one-on-one with our guest – author and poet Maggie Smith – in this deeply honest conversation about: how to tell the brutal truth without betraying our peopl...e, how to reclaim ourselves after infidelity and betrayal, how the shaming of women who dare to tell their stories keeps us powerless and isolated, and how they both have embraced acceptance instead of “forgiveness.” About Maggie:  Maggie Smith is the award-winning author of You Could Make This Place Beautiful, Good Bones, The Well Speaks of Its Own Poison, Lamp of the Body, and the national bestsellers Goldenrod and Keep Moving: Notes on Loss, Creativity, and Change.  A 2011 recipient of a Creative Writing Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, two Academy of American Poets Prizes, a Pushcart Prize, and fellowships from the Sustainable Arts Foundation and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. TW: @maggiesmithpoet IG: @maggiesmithpoet 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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Starting point is 00:00:00 And through the joy and pain that our lives bring, we can do a heartache. Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. Today we have the Maggie Smith. Maggie Smith is the award-winning author of You Could Make This Place Beautiful. Good bones. The well speaks of its own poison. Lamp of the body and the national bestsellers Golden Rod and Keep Moving. Notes on loss, creativity and change. A 2011 recipient of a creative writing fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts to Academy of American Poets prizes, a push cart prize and fellowships from the Sustainable Arts Foundation and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. Maggie Smith, poet.
Starting point is 00:00:58 How are you? I'm doing well. It's good to see you. You two, have we ever spoken to each other face to face because I've read your work for so long that I feel like I know you, but this is our first time, huh? Same. Yeah. We've just been sort of communicating via our books and the internet.
Starting point is 00:01:17 Yeah. Yeah. So the Pod Squad should know this is an unusual day because I have requested from my team to have a conversation with Maggie by myself. And the reason for that Maggie is the minute I finished your new book. You could make this place beautiful. I knew I just wanted an hour with you by myself because the book is so beautiful. It's so honest and so deep and searing and I personally related to every single page. to every single page. The reason I wanted to talk to you alone is because I felt, as I read, your fierce commitment to truth on your own behalf, and it felt like on lots of women's behalf. And at the same time, this tension of equally fierce protection of your babies.
Starting point is 00:02:31 And that is why I felt such solidarity, whatever the word for protective without like a patronizing vibe to it. And I DMed you and said, OK, you did it. You did the thing where you did both in writing, but then what happens is you have to go all over the place and talk about the writing with people who don't have, feel the deep respect that you had for your family
Starting point is 00:02:57 and the words who are cheapening the things. And so it's a different beast talking about it than writing it. I just remember thinking, can you just read it? I already wrote it the best I could. I know you know. And it's hard and scary. And so I kept thinking, okay,
Starting point is 00:03:17 I just wanna sit with Maggie and let's just talk about it and figure out how to talk about it together and practice answering in ways that don't make us want to stick our forks in our eyes later. Oh, bless you. And it's honoring right to the truth and the art and to our babies. I love this. I love this. So let's talk Maggie. Set the stage for us. You're
Starting point is 00:03:46 a handful of years ago. You've got this precious little family in Ohio two babies and a husband. Yeah, and a dog. Well, we won't leave all the dog. The dog counts. Yeah, the dog you're right. The dog had a dog. And your husband comes home from a work trip. And you say, I think your words in the book are, things had shifted slightly. And so what did you do? And also, what does it feel like in a home? Because I knew exactly what you meant. Like when things just have shifted slightly
Starting point is 00:04:21 so you know some things up in your bones. Yeah, I think if you've lived with someone for a number of years, you sense the weather change a little bit. Like it's like a low pressure system coming in. You sense the like distance or lack of eye contact. Or I honestly at this point, maybe mercifully don't remember exactly what that felt like, but it definitely felt like something was just a little off for me. So then what happens? So I snooved. And I hate that. I wish that it had happened some other way, so I could have told
Starting point is 00:05:01 the truth and not been a snoop. But alas, when we write about our lives, like we have to, I don't know, be accountable and honest and open and brave. And so that means owning your stuff. And so I snooped and found something without too many spoilers that let me know that sort of my marriage wasn't exactly what I thought it was. And I mean, we are going to have to tell them Maggie, since this is a full interview that it was betrayal. It was infidelity, right? We're not going to give away most of it because wow, is there more? I went out of a very similar story. I found out that my husband had been unfaithful to me 10 years in tour marriage and that it had gone on for a very long time. But was different than yours because it was sporadic.
Starting point is 00:05:56 It was a bunch of different people. And yours was a relationship, which I'm sure has completely different vibes to it. You said, I love this moment, you were talking about a scene in the crown when the queen goes into her husband's bag and finds a picture of a woman. And you say she's kind of steals herself and just puts it back because of her role,
Starting point is 00:06:24 nothing could change. And I remember feeling that way. I remember feeling like, oh my God, the cruelest thing about this is it doesn't matter because there's nothing I can do. And of course there was something I could do, but babies were little. We had no money. I know this, but I can't let myself know this because my role can't change. I think it can change.
Starting point is 00:06:47 Yeah. No, I totally get that. Finding a postcard addressed to someone out of state, which was all that I knew, but I knew something was up. I didn't have a full picture. And I still, full disclosure, do not have a full picture. But I knew what I found, and I knew it wasn't nothing. And so that sort of, in some way, started a chain reaction. Like the thing was rolling, and there was no way to sort of undo it. Because maybe your role can't
Starting point is 00:07:20 change, or maybe you think it can't change, but you also can't unsee what you've seen or unknow what you know. So it's going to have an impact regardless of what decision you make about what to do in that relationship, whether you bring it up, whether you don't bring it up, whether you act like you don't know, whether you act like you do know and don't care, whether you've forced the person to do therapy. No matter what happens, it's never going to be the same. There's like a demarcation of before that knowledge and after that knowledge. And that is not to say that everything was peachy keen and perfect before that knowledge. It's just to say that that felt sort of like It's just to say that that felt sort of like,
Starting point is 00:08:06 just a different kind of shift because suddenly it wasn't just us. Yeah. And it's so infuriating because, well, for a couple of reasons, you said, God, I loved this. You said that when you lose your husband or your idea of it, it's not just the loss of the husband or the relationship. It's the loss of the knowledge of your future.
Starting point is 00:08:34 And you say, everything goes from like a period to just a bunch of ellipses, your future. Now for a writer, like all of your writing metaphors, it makes me so happy, because I only understand things and like compare it to a paragraph and I can get it. And I used to think of that like I don't think I wasn't and you know Craig and I talk about this so it's fine but I wasn't deeply in love with my husband. We got married because it was the right thing to do not because we were the right and we were great co-parents. So there wasn't a lot of passion there.
Starting point is 00:09:05 When I found out about the infidelity, I wasn't mad like a lover is mad. I was mad like a memoirist is mad. Like you fucked up our plot. The story, plot twist. This is not how I had mapped this out. I thought I was one character, but now you've written me into a new role that I did not
Starting point is 00:09:26 sign up for. Yes, yeah. It's like finding out that you're not the director of any of it, and somebody else has taken away that power from you, which by the way you never had. Right. I mean, the idea that the future was certain was a lie all along. I mean, the future was never certain. Nothing was mapped out. No decision that you make. I mean, the future was never certain. Nothing was mapped out. No decision that you make. I mean, for me and my 20s, like no decision that you make in your 20s about starting a family with someone is promised to you frozen in amber for all of time. But of course, that hadn't occurred to me. Exactly. Exactly. Yet, you know, in my mind, this was all completely permanent, and irrevocable. And this is not what happens. And this is not what we're going to do. And this is not my story. And I, I sort
Starting point is 00:10:17 of refuse it. Like this, no, this is not, this is not happening. But of course it was. Yeah, I always felt like you took our future, you took my future, but that's not what happened. We never had a future. It was just, you took my idea of what the future was gonna be. Yep, it was always blank.
Starting point is 00:10:37 There was nothing there. There was nothing there. We were just sort of projecting our own wishes and hopes. Here's a writing metaphor. It's almost like copy paste, right? we were just sort of projecting our own wishes and hopes. Here's a writing metaphor. It's almost like copy paste, right? Like you have a good day with your partner and you think, well, I'm just gonna copy paste this into infinity.
Starting point is 00:10:53 And the rest of time is gonna be just like this. Well, of course it's not. People lose their jobs or get promoted or have kids or lose kids or meet other people or don't meet other people or have to move or fall out of love. I mean, there is no copy-pasting period. And so no, no one stole the future from me. They just sort of made me realize I didn't have much control, which is a firstborn daughter's not an easy thing to give up. Same firstborn daughter. Yep.
Starting point is 00:11:27 You start the book with the Emily Dickinson line. What is it? I am out with lanterns looking for myself. I'm out with a lantern looking for myself. Yeah. Which really got me because I'm just always so confused about life period, but specifically the idea that I'm supposed to be the detective and the mystery. That's perfect. Like I'm one of those cats that's just like chasing my town. Almost there. Almost there and everyone's like kind of get it. But then my mystery self is just a step ahead all the time of my detective self. What did you mean when you chose that epigraph? I'm out with the lantern looking for myself. Well, I think I realized, and writing, keep moving.
Starting point is 00:12:13 That was the book that I was sort of trying to push forward through, right? That was me telling myself, I can do it, I can do it, I can do it, keep going. During the, during the divorce, during the divorce. During the divorce. During the divorce. During the trauma, right? And so this book was really more of a reckoning with the past and looking back and trying to think like, where did I go? And it really ended up being not about, where did we
Starting point is 00:12:39 go wrong? Or how did he do that? Or how did I allow this to happen? The big question, and I didn't know that going in. The epigraph wasn't the epigraph, the beginning of the book. But, you know, a portion of the way through writing this memoir, I realized the big central question is, where did I go? Yeah. And how do I get myself back more importantly than that? If midlife crisis is one thing, what's the opposite of crisis?
Starting point is 00:13:09 Recovery. Return. So how can I have a midlife recovery of self, a midlife return to self, brought on by crisis? Absolutely. But how can it also be an opportunity for me to figure out where did I get lost in this, not even just this relationship, this relationship, this family structure, this town, this job, this, the whole Shabeng, like how many pieces of myself have I been
Starting point is 00:13:41 snipping off and sort of bargaining away, and how have I compartmentalized myself and stayed small in ways in order to accommodate other people? I know you get it. And I also very much get the midlife recovery of self. That's what I'm in right now. That's what I think in right now. That's what I think have been in since my
Starting point is 00:14:06 Invedality Revelations. I just read a recent poem, if you're just about embodiment, and that's what I'm trying to figure out right now. And all of the imagery in the book about ghosts and a lot of like references that made me think of Virginia Wolf's Angel in the House to just appearing as a angel in the house to just appearing
Starting point is 00:14:26 as a body in the world is like what we as women are trying to do in our forties. It's just stop being ghosts. Amen. Yes. Like not being invisible anymore. We're trying to fold ourselves up incredibly small to not get in anyone's way.
Starting point is 00:14:47 ["I'm Jonathan and Hevar." I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things. But I grew up working class. My parents were immigrants with factory jobs. And because of that, I think about class a lot. And I want to talk about it. That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy. And what did you all eat?
Starting point is 00:15:18 You know, trailer food. I was like, Girl, why not doing that anymore? food and I was like girl we're not doing that anymore. You'll hear from people who told me awkward embarrassing and strangely intimate things about what class means to them. She said you know for the house cleaner I hide the tag on the $6 bread and I just thought don't you think she knows that you're wealthy? You're hiding the tags from yourself. Classy.
Starting point is 00:15:48 A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios. Available now, wherever you get your podcasts. One of the things you've returned to over and over in the book, which I completely agree with, is that betrayal is neat. With infidelity, it was very easy to just be like, well, he fucked it up. You describe it as when there's betrayal, there's an explosion on one side of the street, so it keeps anybody from having to look at the other side. Yeah. So, let's go into some foreshadowing
Starting point is 00:16:25 because honestly Maggie, in some ways, it was copy and pasting. The stuff in the beginning that was the problem turned out to be the problem in the end. Like, for example, I was sitting at, I don't know, a little bit after the infidelity happened. And I had a memory of Craig telling me to my face that he did not want to get married.
Starting point is 00:16:51 Maddie, sitting on my front porch, I was living with my friends and saying, nope, I do not want to marry you. And I was like, I wonder what he means. Exactly. I was like, we can unpack that later. But like now I have to order a dress. So if we could just end this conversation, wow, did we end up unpacking that later Maggie?
Starting point is 00:17:12 Yeah. You say you convinced him to marry you. Like he did not want to get married, right? It was not his path. Well, it took a while for us to get engaged after we moved in together. And I remember feeling kind of crotchety and impatient about it. But it also, we started dating in our early 20s.
Starting point is 00:17:31 Should be getting married when you're 22, no one. So actually getting married at 28, even though it felt like on my watch it took a while, you know, quote, took a while was actually appropriate. And now I'm like, well, maybe 30s are a better time because you're fully kind of getting what you need out of life. You understand yourself and your needs a little bit better. I mean, who knows?
Starting point is 00:17:56 Our frontal lobes aren't even fully developed when we're 22. So I wouldn't say that I sort of pressured him into it, but he knew it was what I wanted. I always wanted to get married and have kids. And as a 22, 23 year old guy, he was like, yeah, I don't know. And I think about that now. And on one hand, could you see that as a red flag, maybe, but on the other hand,
Starting point is 00:18:21 how many 22 or 23 year old guys are super on board with the idea of marriage and kids with someone they've just started dating in the last year or so. Probably not many. And so that doesn't seem at all odd to me. What's maybe more, more a red flag is that I was in such a hurry. Like I can own that. And that's the thing about betrayal being neat
Starting point is 00:18:48 is that it invites you not to look at your own stuff. It invites you not to think about the ways that you were not completely showing up for the other person. Or it makes it really easy to finger point. Yeah. And I have no interest in doing that because I just, I don't think it's true mostly. It might feel satisfying.
Starting point is 00:19:14 And maybe I might do it like over a happy hour with a friend, but not in a book. So much of trying to get my whole self back through just the time of the last few years and in the writing of the book is also thinking a lot about having integrity about how I do that. I mean integrity means wholeness, which I love, like I'm such a word nerd. But so when we're thinking about what does it mean to have personal integrity, it means like showing up as your whole self and newsflash. That means not being always cool or perfect or good or right. It's probably going to mean sharing some things about you that you don't
Starting point is 00:20:01 love if you're showing up as your whole self. Yeah. And showing up as your whole self in a marriage is interesting. Explain to the Pod Squad. Why one of the repeated lines in your new book is you and he met at a creative writing workshop. Yeah. It feels, this part feels so freaking important and a theme that my friends are repeating to me over and over again in different levels about what is happening in their manage. Oh, okay. So now I need to hear about that. Yeah. Well, okay.
Starting point is 00:20:39 Not that they all met in creative workshops, read it right in the workshop. But you say that something about the most wonderful things that ever happened to you individually were the worst things that ever happened in your marriage. You say that there is a type of situation where a man in a marriage can be very progressive on the outside and say the right things and vote the right way and where the right t-shirts. But when it comes down to what's going on
Starting point is 00:21:10 on the inside of the house, the deal, the unwritten deal, is that the man's work is real and important and that the mental load of the family will be carried by the woman. And when you said Maggie that you would be out working and when you called home to check on the kids, you would feel like you were getting in trouble. I felt that. Yeah. Talk to us about that vibe and why it was that the best things that ever happened to you, individually were the worst things that happened to your marriage. Well, I think probably most people who are married or who have been married
Starting point is 00:21:53 would say that the biggest stressors on their marriage are kids and their work. Those are the two things that take the most time. They also change your relationship with your partner. It is not the same when you have small kids and you're just trying to get through bedtime, bath time, who's napping, who's not napping, who picked up the acid reflux medication, who did this, who's doing that?
Starting point is 00:22:18 It becomes so transactional. You're almost like co-workers in a project, and the project is the children. And yet, I wouldn't trade that for anything. I mean, I wanted to be a parent since I was a child myself, and they're the loves of my life. And I wouldn't take it back. The other thing is, my writing, it's incredibly important to me. Those two things are the things that make me feel most realized as a human being, spending time with my kids and writing. And writing ended up being a
Starting point is 00:22:55 pressure point in my marriage too. In large part, because once my poem Good Bones went viral, I had opportunities to leave my house more often. And up until that point, I was working full time in an office for a while, but for a while I had been self-employed and I still am to this day. And so I was really home, you know, if a kid couldn't go to school, it was fine. Because I was working here and I could juggle to make sure that I could keep an eye on them and take them to the doctor. If somebody needed something, if someone had to go to a doctor's appointment at the orthodontist or, you know, needed a volunteer to come to story time or whatever, I was the one who was available because, A, I worked in my house, and also my work didn't
Starting point is 00:23:46 pay as well and wasn't frankly essential to our family. It was essential to me. Which meant it was essential to your family because your children needed to know who you were fully. So it just wasn't essential financially. No, that's true. It wasn't essential financially. And so it was more of an inconvenience when I had to be gone, right? My invisible labor was made painfully visible when I was not here because the laundry doesn't just float from the washer to the dryer and then float folded up into the children's dressers. It does by the ghost in the house. Is the ghost in the house? It's quite amazing how all of these things happen.
Starting point is 00:24:30 And I don't think that for people who work outside of the home, especially if they have a partner who works inside the home, there's not necessarily a lot of cognition about how things run so smoothly like it's not accidental that that happens And so it became a problem it became a problem if I was invited to do a two-day visit at a University to give a reading or three or four days at a conference or every once in a while a week, you know, teaching a workshop. It was a problem because I wasn't here to do my other job. And there are so many things that you can do to kind of maneuver, to help take the load off of your partner when you leave the house, like setting up play dates and making sure that everything is like done, done, done and typing up
Starting point is 00:25:31 things and making sure the Tylenol dosing is clear. And I know there are people listening to this who know exactly what that's like. So, be trying to manage things from a distance or pre-manage them when you know you have to be gone. But of course, when my then husband traveled, he didn't have to do any of that prep for me, not just because I was home, but because I knew all the stuff. Like that institutional knowledge lived in me. And I had to somehow pass it all off whenever I left the house and it became a source bot.
Starting point is 00:26:07 I guess is the best way to sum it up. Maggie, do you believe that that was it though? Because it feels to me that it was also about ego. Well, because there's the moment where you're signing in a signing line, signing books. And one of your friends says, I'm going to take a picture and send it to your husband. And you say, no, don't, that will make everything worse. So it wasn't just that you were away. It was not in a creative writing workshop.
Starting point is 00:26:42 Okay. Fine. That's fair. that's fair. That's fair. I accept that. Yeah, you know what, it's double. I've thought about this. I'm a ruminator.
Starting point is 00:26:51 I've thought about this a lot. And I've thought, you know, what if I was a pharmaceutical salesperson and I made a lot of money traveling? So it was actually really contributing to the family income. And also it was true that I had to be gone a lot, but it had nothing to do with creative work and didn't seem, quote, fun or interesting, what I was doing.
Starting point is 00:27:18 Would it have still been a sore spot? The answer is yes, it still would have been a sore spot. I don't think it would have been as sore of a spot. The answer is yes, it still would have been a sore spot. I don't think it would have been as sore of a spot. I think it was sort of the perfect storm. And yet, I'll never know because it only happened the way that it happened. And part of what I'm really committed to is not projecting into other people. So I can only speak for myself and say, well, this is what happened and this is my experience,
Starting point is 00:27:49 but I don't know what could have happened differently or what was going on inside everybody else's thinking at that time. And I think that's a beautiful thing for the pod squad to hear because people are always asking me, how do you write it out other people? Like how do you write about people you love? And that with that consciousness is how you do it, which is that you, like for example, you say every time good news would come about my writing, I would sense him cringe or I would sense him wince inwardly what you don't say is he winced
Starting point is 00:28:27 inwardly you don't take on a subjective voice on behalf of him you are saying what you sensed because that sensing could be real we all know it could be projected you are very careful I respect it so much from you, but that's how you do it. You take your side of the street, you tell it as truthfully as possible, and you do it in a way that makes it clear that you don't really know what the other person was experiencing. But you do know what you were, and you get to tell your story. You do. You get to tell your story, and as long as you're not sort of ventriloquizing right through other people, I think that for me was one of the big boundaries.
Starting point is 00:29:08 I can only talk for myself. I can only explain how things felt for me. That doesn't mean it's the objective truth. It just means that was my experience. Right. I say on the first page, this is an atelol because tell all don't exist. Like, it's not that this isn't a tell all because those exist and this isn't one. It's that even a book that is marketed as a tell all is by nature not that because we only have
Starting point is 00:29:38 access to our own stuff. We can't ever give. It's not like, you know, a cubist painting where you're going to see the face from four different angles at one time. We can only ever show our own perspective and what we've seen. And so while there are objective facts, there aren't really objective truths. No. It's tricky. I mean, forget it if you think you can do that with other people. I can't even do it myself. Maggie, I wrote an entire book about Levin Sex and figured out a year later I was queer. We can't even really tell true stories about ourselves.
Starting point is 00:30:20 We can only tell like, this is what I can see right now. And then it shifts and you're like, oh my God, wait, I can see more from the, it's like, I can put on this perspective and tell you the story, but I could put on another one and tell you a whole mother story. 100%. Someone asked me the other day, do you think this book would be different if you would waited five or 10 or 20 years to write the book? I'm like, of course, it'd be different. Of course, it would be different. And the fact of memoir is, and what you just said illustrates this perfectly, the book ends, and the life doesn't, if we're lucky. Right?
Starting point is 00:30:53 So what lives between two covers is a time capsule of your consciousness, your thinking, your cognition, your ability to sort of process and metabolize that experience at the time. And then you send it to your editor. And three weeks later, you could have some middle of the night sit bolt upright and bed revelation about something or while you're washing your hair, if you're like me, the shower out.
Starting point is 00:31:22 Amen to the shower. It's where I do all my best thinking. It's too bad. we're not doing this. We're just like with frosted, everything blurred out in the shower. It'd be such a intimate conversation. It's a portal. It's a portal. It's a portal.
Starting point is 00:31:34 But it's also maybe just the only place where no one's yelling at us. It's the only place where we don't have earphones in or children are asking for like, oh please. No, that's not true. It's not true. Are you kidding me with this? I have kids coming in with math homework while I'm in the shower.
Starting point is 00:31:50 Can you look at this long division? I'm like, I don't know. I don't understand it when I'm dry. Correct. No, I don't want to look at the long division in the shower. I'll be out in a moment. It's okay.
Starting point is 00:32:01 No, you're right. It's a complete time capsule. It's, and that's okay. It is. The right. It's a complete time capsule. And that's okay. It is. The gift is that we get to keep living and processing and expressing. And if we feel differently later, we can write that too. That's right. We're not done.
Starting point is 00:32:17 Because I think when people hear life goes on after the book stops, what they think is so more stuff happens to you. And that is correct. But it doesn't just mean that. Life goes on doesn't just mean more stuff happens. It means life goes on, more stuff happens so you understand the past differently. You keep understanding your past differently. The more life goes on. Thank God you wrote this book now, and I hope you write it again in 10 years. But we need people to do it close to the truth because we don't want 10-year perspective all the time
Starting point is 00:32:51 because a lot of people are going through it right now. So we want to see ourselves in the nouness, the freshness of what just happened. We don't always want 10-year wisdom perspective. Yeah, I think Kate Boller said to me, it's the messy middle. And I said, it 100% is the messy middle. And I understand this because it's comforting. I think we have a kind of preoccupation with before and after, which I actually am really interested in because I often prefer the perfor picture. I'm like, whether it's a kitchen or a hairstyle, I'm
Starting point is 00:33:28 often like which ones the improvement or why did you spend all that money to do that? You know, but I think we like stories where first this happened and then, you know, Q metaphor of chrysalis and butterfly emerging and then I figured this out and I was completely transformed and I was a new better person than it was all worth it and we can kind of wipe our hands of it and move on and I think that's not necessarily accurate. It would be the very euphemistic way I would say that, you know. Most of us live in the messy middle for a really long time.
Starting point is 00:34:10 And if there is transformation, it might not be one giant one. It might be lots of little incremental changes that you kind of feel yourself recalibrating in your life and noticing things differently and making connections between things. And for me, writing a memoir was so deeply contextualizing. Because as someone who writes essays and poems, everything's a one-off. Like, oh, I write a poem and I'm just done with that poem and then in three more days or in three more months, I'll write a poem and I'm just done with that poem and then in three more days or in three more months, I'll write another poem, but really digging deep into a project like this and looking over years and years,
Starting point is 00:34:52 and also looking at the different parts of my life, the mother parts and the partner parts and the sister and daughter and writer parts. It was almost like cartography. I remember going to France for the first time and then coming home and being like, I was that close to Spain. Like seeing a map later and finally realizing where I've been because I didn't really have a clear image when I was there of where I was in relation to other places.
Starting point is 00:35:24 And so writing a memoir for me was like that. It was like getting to lay the whole thing out and see the sort of echoes or like idea rhymes is how the poet me thinks of them between different parts of my life. And it was not an easy writing process. It was painful at times, but what a gift to get to really contextualize some parts of your life.
Starting point is 00:35:59 I think I've been contextualizing, but honestly Maggie, I don't freaking know. I don't know. Because truly, like sometimes I think we are such desperate meaning makers. I remember handing Craig love warrior and him being like, what is this? One of my thoughts to read. And I was like, so I took the shit you gave me and I spun it into gold. And that's what women are always fucking doing.
Starting point is 00:36:34 I was like, here you go. We took the shit you gave us and we spun it into gold. So the question is, are we, I never know if I'm writing my life or I'm living my writing. Like, right? Noting to take to my therapist right now. I don't know. Noting, yeah, noting to take to my therapist who's always saying, you're intellectualizing, you're intellectualizing. Yeah. And you need to get back into your body, which takes us right back to where we began. I write a lot in this book about the idea of material.
Starting point is 00:37:10 And this, like what you just said, like the idea of turning lemons into lemonade. I love that part. And like, oh, thank goodness, you're a writer. So these things weren't wasted on someone who wasn't going to write about them, or thank goodness, this happened so that you could write a book about it. And at least you got a book out of it. Someone said to my
Starting point is 00:37:29 friend Kelly, writing about her abusive marriage, thank goodness you got a book out of it. It's like we are writers. We would write about anything. If this none of this had happened, I would have written another book. I don't need trauma or grand upheaval or disappointment or disillusionment as material. Like I can write about birds. Yes, you can. If I want to. You can write about anything. It's so interesting.
Starting point is 00:38:02 It's like, did it mean all that? Did it mean all that? I'm so desperate. And it's real and true. It's a real need for redemption, need for meaning. But that's why I haven't written since untamed, because of the fact that the observed thing changes the thing. Like, do you know what I'm trying to say? That physics school completely, okay. My daughter just said to me the other day, when someone watches you do something, it changes what you're doing
Starting point is 00:38:34 because you know you're being watched. Okay, so your daughter said it. That's why I'm- She's 14, we totally know. Like, yes, if you are being watched, do you behave differently? If you are crafting something for an audience, you're doing it differently.
Starting point is 00:38:48 I agree with you. Like, it makes me nervous and I don't ever want to be feeling like I'm being performative or trying to put a positive spin on something that's just hard. Like, it's okay for it to be hard. Yeah. It's okay for it to be hard. Yeah. It's okay for it to be ambiguous. It's okay not to necessarily be the sort of hero or heroine of every encounter or every narrative. It's okay even to not be the good guy every time. I love that idea. The idea of putting away the
Starting point is 00:39:24 need to be the good guy. If you still away the need to be the good guy. If you still believe you have to be the good guy, you can't write. No, you can't. It's so obvious. You can't. And honestly, a big part of sort of like being out with lanterns looking for myself is really rethinking
Starting point is 00:39:40 what it means to be good. Oh my God, Maggie, me too. You know, like what does it means to be good. Oh my God, Maggie, me too. You know, like what does it mean to be good? Women are so self-sacrificing. So you're feeling guilty about having a life outside of your kids, which your male spouse does not feel guilty having a life outside of the children because it's not a cultural expectation
Starting point is 00:40:03 that the bulk of their identity would be pulled from mothering. And so, yeah, oh my gosh, I've been thinking so much about this. And the idea of like phrases that are so, I mean, the whole thing is so gendered. It troubles me deeply. But the idea of like getting too big for your bridges, of like getting too big for your britches, which I realize is a very medwestern turn of phrase. I can't help it, but just this idea of having to keep yourself small, less anyone think that you're trying to get too much out of life, which is, no man has ever been too big for his britches. No.
Starting point is 00:40:46 It's so amazing. You talk about just folding yourself up smaller and smaller. And this is in reference to your marriage where there were ego things. And you were trying to not, I don't know, emasculate, I guess. But the folding yourself up, and I think you said, you folded yourself up so small that you could fit yourself under your tongue,
Starting point is 00:41:08 and then you'd try to bite your, I mean, just the staying small of all of it, so as not to disturb anyone else's ego. Yeah, you don't wanna take up too much space, you don't wanna upset people or make make them feel bad or come across as demanding or as self-important. I mean, all of these things, a lot of it is like, I'm a Midwestern mom at my core. And so I'm supposed to be, what? Like what is the story? I'm supposed to be accommodating self-sacrificing
Starting point is 00:41:48 available. I'm not supposed to want too much. I'm definitely not supposed to be too demanding. I'm not supposed to be angry. I'm not allowed to be sad. I need to be grateful. You need to be a ghost. And I need to be a ghost. The good thing is so fascinating. Abby and I are talking about this nonstop because I'm a that's another thing that I'm always trying to figure am I a good person? And I'm making all my decisions based on this idea of a good person. What would a good person do? What does that mean? Is there any such thing and is anyone good and bad? I think not. And aren't we just like a big bunch of wants? I think we are a big bunch of wants. A bunch of like parts of ourselves. The parts conversation helps me understand myself. There's a part of me that wants this. There's a part of me that wants this as opposed to there's one single self that is good or bad. Yeah, I agree with that. And I think there's a lot more nuance that we are not opening ourselves up to.
Starting point is 00:42:46 Like it's not bad to want more in some aspects of your life. It's also not bad if you're satisfied with your life the way it is. And I think writing about this stuff has been challenging and talking about it has been more challenging. You're right. Because I just, I heard someone yesterday say something like she just doesn't seem angry
Starting point is 00:43:14 enough. And I never heard that one. That's what I haven't gotten. Yeah. And I thought, I can't win. Honestly. I can't gotten. Yeah, and I thought, I can't win. Honestly, I can't win, because if I were as angry as that person wanted me to be, I'd be too way too angry for someone else.
Starting point is 00:43:33 Yes. And that person who wants me to sort of seek peace and acceptance and forgiveness and, you know, sort of equilibrium would be completely turned off by just like self-righteous fury. So I don't even know what the measuring stick is for goodness because it's not the same for everyone according to whom. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:58 I think one of the reasons I'm so grateful for your work is that there is a shaming of women, writers, artists, all women, that when we dare to tell any truth of our lives, it is shamed back to us in terms of, why are you airing your dirty laundry? If you mentioned that in your book and I have heard that 49 million times, and my male counterparts who talk about their lives, talk about their families, they never ever ever hear it. But there is a strategic
Starting point is 00:44:31 shaming of women who dare to tell the truth about their lives by saying you're bad in a million different ways. You're bad for telling the truth. And they'll call you bad mom, how dare you, why would you say these things about your family, your kids will one day read it, whatever. But it's what keeps us alone and lonely, because we don't read our lives. And anything that true that happens to us is considered shameful and dirty.
Starting point is 00:45:00 And so I'm so grateful that you are in such a beautiful way telling the truth, because just have you gotten that yet. And so I'm so grateful that you are in such a beautiful way telling the truth because just have you gotten that yet. You know, I haven't, although I'm sure I will. So we'll see. Well, is there anything more dangerous than a woman who will just tell it like it is? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:45:21 I mean, I think that's a threatening thing. I asked myself the question over and over again, in multiple contexts, who does silence serve? Who benefits from me keeping my mouth shut about this? This could be something personal, it could be something political, it could be anything. Who does silence serve? The answer to that question almost always encourages me to run my mouth or pick up my pen. Because it's not me. And honestly, it's not my children. My children are watching what I do. And I'm modeling for them, living a whole life with integrity and doing it with care.
Starting point is 00:46:07 So, who does it serve? Who benefits from women being quiet? And the kids thing is so, it's like, the only people who talk about the truth, done with grace and grit and respect, hurting kids. Don't know shit about kids because family secrets are cyanide. Truth might be a little punch, it might be a a little bit painful at first, but it is freeing. The secrets are the cyanide. Every child therapist knows that. That is what the
Starting point is 00:46:45 underground things that are never said. It is not the messy truth that is said, that hurts them in the long run. Oh, 100%. I think secrets are so toxic. I think age-appropriate, in-time, real, gentle, honest conversations. Like honesty is care. I think it's caring for ourselves. I think it's caring for the people in our lives. Kids are pretty intuitive. They don't actually appreciate being So we'll see. I'll touch base with you and let you know how how that shapes up. It's funny. I think in part I wrote some of those questions into the structure of the book as a form of like, I'm going to go ahead and just head you off at the pass. I loved it. Because I know people are going to ask, what about your kids? I know people are gonna ask, why are your dirty laundry or was it always like this or why this or why that?
Starting point is 00:47:50 So let's just avoid having those conversations. Cause it's just in the book now. I can just say read page 72 if someone asks. Please do, cause they will. They will still ask. Yeah, they probably will. You're right. You did say when you were talking about the dirty laundry question, you did say as only a poet could, who says it's dirty anyway, it's just lived in. And I think for me, that gets at the core of it,
Starting point is 00:48:18 which is like, I see all your shaming stuff, but what we're always only talking about is life. I see all your shaming stuff, but what we're always only talking about is life. I can promise my children one thing, which is the only things that have ever happened to us are life. The only things that we have done are things that humans are capable of. Yep, right.
Starting point is 00:48:41 There it is, one category. There it is. Just life. Just life and humans is what we have experienced and what we have been the whole way through. And the beautiful thing about you knowing all of our human things is that when you get to these human things in your life, you will not feel alone and ashamed. Because you will know that all the life that happens to you and all the human you do and all the things that humans do to you are just human things and just life. There's nothing to be ashamed of.
Starting point is 00:49:07 Nothing to be ashamed of. Like let's not compound the difficulty by being ashamed. On top of everything else we're feeling. It's also just completely unnecessary. My hope for this book, honestly, is so small and it is just that someone will read it and say, I feel seen. It's such a small thing, and maybe feel slightly less squishy or shameful about giving language to something that they're needing to sort of offload and process.
Starting point is 00:49:47 Well, that's done because that's happened. That's what already happened with me. Oh, so I'm done. You're done. You can stop doing it in success. In this last five minutes, I want to talk to you about a thing I don't understand and I've never understood, which is forgiveness. First, I don't know what it is. I still don't believe that anyone else knows what it is because I ask everybody and they just say words, words, words, but nobody, nobody, it's only when it is.
Starting point is 00:50:30 I was so hoping you wouldn't ask me to define it, so don't ask me to define it because I can't. I won't. I won't. I started writing this book and I write pretty early on. By the time I write, I get to the last page of this book, I want to have forgiven. Like I really want to be in a place of forgiveness. That's my goal for this book. This book is not a finger pointing angry book. It's a book about me trying to get back to wholeness and peace.
Starting point is 00:50:57 That's what I want. You can choose war or peace. I choose peace. And I'm not sure I got there. But I also realized by the time I got to the end of the book, I don't actually know that that was a reasonable or necessary goal. And so I got to something that is a little texturally different
Starting point is 00:51:18 from forgiveness. And it's something I call acceptance. Which is that happened, period So that happened period. Yes, humans did things. All of it was life. It happened. I learned from it. I would have learned from anything that would have happened in those years. I didn't need it. Nope. I didn't need it to learn. But everything is an offering. Everything is a teacher. If you let it be, if you keep your antenna up, and so I'm not going to pass up the opportunity to gain something from it, because I think I deserve at least that. Hey, man.
Starting point is 00:52:05 It happened. It happened. Period. Moving on. Moving on. Thank you for that. Well, and with this, I loved so much when you were talking about feeling a bit of a cringed or uncomfortable feeling with, I think it was your parents.
Starting point is 00:52:25 Somebody's parents were celebrating some long anniversary. My parents are celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary next month. So it was, I think, their 48th when I was going to book. 48th. And there's this beautiful thing that Pads what I want you to listen to. I think the part is called golden and about like the loss of that long relationship and all that that stands for in our world. And that's a beautiful accomplishment. But Maggie talks about also she says when my sisters turn 48, I will have had 48 years with them.
Starting point is 00:53:00 When my children turn 48, I will have had 48 years of being their mother. And she goes on and talks about the other long-term relationship she has in her life. And she says that's as golden as it gets. Maggie, it's just so beautiful. Why do we only celebrate the longevity of romantic relationships when these other relationships are what have carried us. Oh my gosh, honestly, the most sort of fortifying, healing relationships of my life I realize have been both
Starting point is 00:53:36 my relationship with my kids, and particularly my female friends. Yeah. I don't know why we aren't like leaning more into that. Talk about being a lifeline. I wrote something to somebody. I think I get weird after I get excited about my idea. So I wrote that my sister and I were going to be having some kind of golden anniversary coming up. I was like, I am embracing the shit out of that. And Maggie, so much of what you give us is just a whole new, fresh, deeper way of looking at our own lives. And it's glorious. Your book is glorious. I love it, and it's going to make a lot of people feel seen. And thank you for telling the truth so that we can
Starting point is 00:54:15 just remember that we're humans having a life. Thank you. Love you. Love you to Pod Squad. See you next time. Love you. Love you to Pod Squad. 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 each or all of these three things. First, can you please follow or subscribe to We Can Do Hard Things? Following the pod helps you, because you'll never miss an episode, and it helps us, because you'll never miss an episode. To do this, just go to the We Can Do Hard Things show page
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Starting point is 00:55:23 I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlyle. I made sure I got one's mind And I continue to believe That I'm the one for me And because I'm mine, I walk the line Mine, I walked the line Cause we're adventurers in heartbreak So man, a final destination Can't stop asking directions Some places they've never been. And to be loved we need to be known.
Starting point is 00:56:32 We'll finally find our way back home. And 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 hard And I continue to believe The best people are free And it took some time, but I'm finally fine
Starting point is 00:57:37 Cause we're adventurers and heartbreak some man A final destination with that 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 a heartache This world finished her rose and heart breaks on land. We might get lost, but we're only in that
Starting point is 00:58:47 Stopped asking directions. Some places they've never been And to be loved we need to be loved. 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

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