We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Indigo Girls: Sexuality, Sobriety, Faith & Freedom

Episode Date: September 22, 2022

1. Why Emily couldn’t stop crying (and it wasn’t because she was emotional). 2. The intervention that got Emily sober – and why Amy wasn’t there. 3. Glennon admits something that she’s never... told anyone before. 4. Amy and Abby agree on the shared cost of internalized homophobia and misogyny. About Indigo Girls: One of the most successful folk duos in history – Amy Ray and Emily Sailers aka THE INDIGO GIRLS – has recorded 16 albums and sold over 15 million records. Committed and uncompromising activists, they work on issues like immigration reform, LGBTQ advocacy, education, and death penalty reform. They are co-founders of Honor the Earth, a non-profit dedicated to the survival of sustainable Native communities, Indigenous environmental justice, and green energy solutions. Their latest record, Look Long is a stirring and eclectic collection of songs that finds Indigo Girls reunited in the studio with their strongest backing band to date. IG: @indigogirlsmusic, @emilysaliers & @amyraymusic TW: @Indigo_Girls, @EmilySaliers & @AmyRay 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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Starting point is 00:00:00 Whether you're doing a dance to your favorite artist in the office parking lot, or being guided into Warrior I in the break room before your shift, whether you're running on your Peloton tread at your mom's house while she watches the baby, or counting your breaths on the subway. Peloton is for all of us, wherever we are whenever we need it, download the free Peloton app today. Peloton app available through free tier, or pay subscription starting at 12.99 per month. Okay, welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. We're just gonna just begin because Abby and I just got in a huge fight. Abby, are you serious?
Starting point is 00:00:51 Yeah. No, we didn't get into a huge fight, but she's been a little bit on edge this morning. She literally shushed me a little bit ago because I came back from workout and oftentimes my volume is a little higher. Anyway. And so just recently, as you sat down, I said, are you upset with me? And she said, no.
Starting point is 00:01:09 What did you say? I said, no, I'm not upset with you. I'm freaking the fuck out. I'm having a nervous breakdown because we're about to interview Amy and Emily. And I can't stop thinking about it. I have dressed up as if I'm going to a ball. Like I have dressed up for two years.
Starting point is 00:01:24 Like one is wrong with me. I said, we have to just start this. We have to start it because I'm, so I don't run away. Okay. Why are you nervous? Yeah. Oh, well, that's a good place to start. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:01:36 I'm nervous because if there are two people in the entire world who have met more to me artistically, there aren't any more people who are, you see, I'm doing great. in the entire world who have meant more to me artistically, there are any more people who are me see, I'm doing great, I'm crashing it, I'm getting sentences. So when I was getting sober, I was 25 and I had just decided
Starting point is 00:01:58 that my feelings were too much to feel, so I just numbed myself out forever. And then I found out I was pregnant, so I had to figure out how to human. And I still thought I couldn't feel my feelings or I would die. So I was freshly sober. And when I got sober, I was almost dead. I was in a very bad place.
Starting point is 00:02:19 And I used to practice being human. I would start one of your songs. I would allow myself, like, the four minutes of one Indigo Girl song. And I would land my bed and allow myself to feel feelings for those four minutes. And for the first month, two months of sobriety, that's, I would say, you don't have to feel any other time,
Starting point is 00:02:44 just those four minutes. And do you think that I have spent a single day of our lives, like since I got sober for 20 years without listening to you all, every day of my life? Wow. You both are the background in our life and our children's life. So do you think we should tell the people who we're talking to and about? Yes. Today, we are talking to and having a double date
Starting point is 00:03:06 with the most important duo of Abby and I's lives. Yep. Emily Sailors, an Amy Ray, the Indigo Girls, who together make the most important music of our lifetime. One of the most successful folk duo in history, Amy Ray and Emily Sailors, aka the Indigo Girls, has recorded 16 albums and sold over 15 million records.
Starting point is 00:03:29 I thought that sounds impressive, but I bought 14 million of it. So, committed and uncompromising activists, they work on issues like immigration reform, LGBTQ advocacy, education, and death penalty reform. They are co-founders of the honor of the earth, a nonprofit dedicated to the survival of sustainable native communities, indigenous environmental justice, and green energy solutions. Their latest record, Look Long, is a stirring and eclectic collection
Starting point is 00:03:58 of songs that finds the indigo girls reunited in the studio with their strongest backing band to date. Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. Amy and Emily, thank you for saving our lives and being here today. Well, man, that's an honor. That's really nice for us. Yeah, totally such an honor. Wow, what a story.
Starting point is 00:04:21 Yeah. I was going to say, Glennon, like, if you were trying to have an introductory course into feeling feelings, I would have picked like Barry Manelow instead of the Indico Girls because we're like so intense, you know, an emotional and, you know, Barry Manelow is so intense. Well, I mean, it just would be like a, like a gentler introduction into real feelings. That's curious to me. Because I feel like at that time, I had never heard music that honored the complication of being a woman.
Starting point is 00:04:57 Like you were really honoring the complication of life. Listening to light stuff or reading light stuff makes me feel worse because I feel like, oh, I guess everyone else is fine and not sorely. And I think what probably was bringing you into the depths of your addiction was this cover or the costumes that you had to keep putting on. And Glenn and Tuxla a lot about going to our first meeting and finally listening to people telling the truth for the first time. And I bet because they speak so much truth in their music. And I bet that that was such an attraction to you.
Starting point is 00:05:35 Well, and then when I told Craig that I was in love with a woman, the first words he said to me, I was married, the first words he said to me was, is this what all the indigo girls have been about? Oh my God. Is that a compliment or a stint? No, I don't know. But it was right. I was like, I think it is. Holy shit.
Starting point is 00:05:58 All those husbands and boyfriends. Yeah. Poor guys. Poor guys. So how did you find music in each other? We knew each other when we were young, like, 10, 11, a year apart in elementary school. But I think the way we really found music in each other
Starting point is 00:06:16 is high school course, right, Emily? Yeah. And then we decided that we would get together. We became friends with, like, a group of friends that were, were like cross grades and all had the commonality of course. And we were going to do like a talent show. We got together in my mom's basement. And we started learning cover songs. And I, for me, that harmony was, you know, kind of blew my mind. And I didn't know how to sing harmony yet. I was
Starting point is 00:06:47 in the choir at church, but I just would just do exactly what my choir director told me. I didn't understand like, how do you write the part, you know? So Emily was already doing that and her family was already singing in harmony with each other. I found it in the harmony, like in Emily's keen sense of harmony and then just the naturalness of how it just comes out. I was like, oh wow, that's the magic of music. Of this thing, which was, you know, for a high school or 16, 15 years old, it was intense. Wow. This is a completely random question, but you know how when you're an elementary school or high school, you always feel like people that are the year older than you are cooler your whole life.
Starting point is 00:07:31 Like if I meet somebody right now, I'm 46 and they were a senior when I was a sophomore. So they're 48. I automatically think they're cooler. So like, do you still think Emily's cooler than you? Because she's older than you. Oh God, don't ask her that question. I do. I think she, like I think you still think Emily's cooler than you? Because she's older than you? Oh God, don't ask her that question. I do.
Starting point is 00:07:46 I think you always have the dynamic that you set when you're young together. Yes. So Emily's always like a year older. Better at this, better at that. All that stuff, bigger hit songs, whatever. You know, it's way easier. I have to promise to be completely transparent
Starting point is 00:08:04 in this interview because I am such a dork. And Amy is so cool, you know, like so that's like, wow, but there is that there is the tear system in school where you just like, if you even get to hang out at the lunchroom with someone in a older, you're flying, you're high, you know, because it's like, look at me with an older kid in the upper grade. Yeah. But we, yeah, we're pretty close in age though. Like Amy almost catches up to me, but not quite.
Starting point is 00:08:36 And then I've always had to respect for her wisdom and her vision or things, how to make things happen. And also, if you see me crying, and I may cry emotionally, but I just tried false eyelashes. Just know you did that. Yes, I did. Look at my eyeball. Okay. What in the sense?
Starting point is 00:08:57 Oh, this makes me feel good for some reason. This is the best thing. Emily, tell us the story right now. Okay. It's okay. She's doing false lashes and a fractal guitar effects. And my eye is, yeah, it's true. And we'll get to the fractal later. It's like a new level for Indigo girls. Did you do this yourself? Did you go? Did you? No, I went, I'm going to tell you, I went to a professional
Starting point is 00:09:24 and who advised me where to go was none other than Carrie, Amy's life partner. And actually, she's really great, but I'm a red head and I'm compromised and I'm sensitive and I don't know what happened. So I have blonde eyelashes. You know, right. And I like to wear mascara.
Starting point is 00:09:49 This is so. She was talking about this. I think it's the best thing. It's just the best thing that's ever happened. It's so dimensional. Yeah. OK, so yeah, this is me, dimensional. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 00:10:01 Ah. So she's always been the film. Yeah. All things being relative. That's probably true. But, um, yeah. So I like to wear mascara. I don't like my lashes to be invisible. But putting on mascara is a drag. And then I started to watch, I watched a lot of women's college basketball. And then I started to watch a lot of women's college basketball. And I started to notice that all those young women are wearing false eyelashes. Yes.
Starting point is 00:10:32 Like, but those gals can carry them like an inch long. Right. So I was like, I was like, I can't do that. But that's cool. That that looks good to me. So I went and Carrie gave me this recommendation. And at first, I got the mascara look, okay, which is very not, you know, they have to place single eyelashes on. Yes. I know this. Well, I've lived this life. I've lived this life. We'll talk about
Starting point is 00:11:00 you later. Yeah. Oh, yeah. I look so anyway., this next time I was like, I said to her, let's just up the game a little. Let's look. Can you offer that's not like the basketball players, but that's a little bit fuller. And now my eyes killing me and I just cry all the time out of my left eye. I'm just going to send you an email after this with all the answers to this. Okay. Okay. Good.
Starting point is 00:11:23 So you two were born a year before we even had the word transgender five years before the Stonewall riots 10 years before any outqueer person ever held political office. You came of age during HIV AIDS epidemic, which they were then calling the gay plague. The world you came out in is so different than the world that I came out in. And that difference was created in part by you, which is so wild. How are people who came out when you did different than people who come out now?
Starting point is 00:11:55 Like what is the difference that you feel and see? That's a good question. There's some things that are similar. I'll say like kids that are in certain areas of the country or live in certain families or go to certain churches really still have the roughest time ever. So that's a similarity.
Starting point is 00:12:13 But the difference would be, I feel like access to language for one thing. We didn't know what the word gay meant really when we were kids. We were like, is that B.C. outie like what you know because we were in suburban south Now when you come out you understand that there's sexuality and there's gender and that's different and you understand You have the grasp of all these things about gender dysphoria gender fluidity
Starting point is 00:12:44 bisexuality Transissues are in the forefront, which they should be. And so for me, I think, for the most important difference, the thing that helped me the most when I got older was all of a sudden having all this language to talk about where I was at. You know, I know I also think you can reach out through the internet and find some mentors. I mean, when you're suffering, you don't have anybody to turn to where you live. You don't have any role models. There's so many role models and there's so much information. Emily's probably got some... I agree with everything you said. because through the internet or through community groups that can focus on queer community, it's I think maybe people who are coming out don't have to deal so much with the self hatred
Starting point is 00:13:40 and self homophobia that I'll speak for my own self that I still deal with. Because I think the more you have a community out there, especially if you have access, and I'm not talking about kids in a rural or a super evangelical Christian or any household that makes it as difficult as it ever was. But for kids who have, like where I live, it's pretty progressive, and there's queer alliances, and even kids who have, like where I live, it's pretty progressive and there's, you know, queer alliances and even kids who are, you know, lean more towards heteronormative, be long to these groups. And so there's more of a sense of I have a place where I can be.
Starting point is 00:14:18 When I was coming up, all I heard was you're different, you'll never be validated. What are we going to do with this band when we got signed? We can't like, you know, sell their sexuality as women and all these things. You know, I still am unraveling that. So I think that's a difference too. Like some of the young people I know who come out are just they're still overjoyed and happy and they didn't have to fight this dark internal battle. I have that with Glenin. I have like a lot of internalized homophobia
Starting point is 00:14:50 that still lives in me today. And Glenin grew up with straight privilege and has always been fighting for gay rights for the longest time. She was marching at gay pride parades before I was. And I just think that that's so interesting. Like I look at her and sometimes I think not fuck you because I would never say that. But like, really? Like you just got here and you feel free. And I've been keeping myself in this homophobic cage for so long.
Starting point is 00:15:26 I don't know. I just think it's really interesting. And you know, you, you both have said that you were a little scared of your own gayness, which is different than being scared of homophobia. Yes. What does it mean to be scared of your own gayness? Well, it's internalized homophobia. It means you're scared of what you really are. And sometimes you don't want to face it. And I think when you're young, you don't really know what it means and how to talk about it and all that. But I would say Abby that we may have that self-hate thing.
Starting point is 00:16:07 But, Glenn, and one of the things about you is that you went through this very compacted experience of like falling in love, you know, getting sober, falling in love, and having to really fight for what you really wanted to be. And I often think that people who have those intense fights feel a sort of freedom that you don't feel the same way when you have this graduated experience like we've had over the years of like trying to unravel everything, knowing we were gay not and it not being this compacted experience when all the sudden you have this relief of like, oh my god, I'm finally free. I didn't realize I'm celebrating who I am. You know, and for us,
Starting point is 00:16:49 it's kind of like we were just not able to celebrate for so long. You know, that we got conditioned to that. Like that's just, we were taught that you don't celebrate it for, I mean, year. I mean, just, even if our parents didn't teach us that, like Emily's parents didn't teach her that she shouldn't celebrate that. You know, they were progressive and my parents were not happy with it at first, but they're awesome. They were awesome later in my life, but like, you just get the sense from something you're just conditioned. You know, everybody knows that. Your society is like, you know, trying to tamp you down all the time, no matter what you are. It's interesting that what you let me. Abby about, you know, talking to Glenn
Starting point is 00:17:33 and about this and straight privilege. I have a crystallized fear deep in me because my wife does not identify as a lesbian. And she never had a girlfriend. And it's terrifying to me that she would go back to a man, even though we're married and committed and everything, you know, but those fears are so primal. And that fear comes from not feeling good enough as a gay person, you know. And she respects the fact that she's had straight privilege, but she identifies as queer, but not lesbian. And so she would love whomever she loved.
Starting point is 00:18:12 And I can't get out of that fear yet. I don't have much time left. I feel like sometimes to get out of that fear. That's how deep they are. You could take them to your grave. What do you think, do you feel that way about me not? No, because I know how you feel about men and general. She knows for sure I'm not going back to a man. I might be alone for
Starting point is 00:18:33 the rest of my life. I think that you have been in a cage for so many seconds of your life that it doesn't matter to me. I know that we are going to be together forever. And of course, I just, I have that fear in general because of my own unworthiness complex that I've built over the course of my life. But I do think that there, for you, you need to have the freedom that there for you, you need to have the freedom to not put yourself into another box. Right, because then I'd have to get out of it if sometime, it feels like painting myself into a corner.
Starting point is 00:19:14 Well, it's the same with gender too. Like you're gender. Everything is very, very confusing. Yeah, but my thought experiment, you know, all is like when we try to figure out like, well, what are you? We still have these conversations. It's like, okay, if I had to be on the bachelor at and they were like, you got to pick your people that are going to be here. Sorry, like, you got to pick your people. I would choose, say, okay, women can be there
Starting point is 00:19:42 and non-binary people can be there. That's who I would choose. say, okay, women can be there and non-binary people can be there. That's who I would choose. So that is something, right? That is something. I mean, we were watching hacks a couple of weeks ago, and this non-binary person came on the screen, and she said, that is a beautiful person. And I looked at her. It was like, it was the first time that I was like, wait a second, that's my lane. You know that's talk about other people who are in my lane, like, what the fuck? She looked at me and she's like, she saw my sincere concern. She's like, what? Oh, no, I don't, no, no, I, you know, and was trying to back out of it. But you know, and was trying to back out of it. But wow, wow, wow. Yeah. Still figuring it out. Still figuring it out because I did.
Starting point is 00:20:30 I'm going to go ahead and go ahead and go ahead and go ahead. Glennon, do you have any, can you trace back in your life and see where this might have been blossoming in you early on? Or do you feel like because of your negative experiences with men that sort of shapes your vision towards loving women in a deeper way? I'm Jonathan M. Hevar. I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things, but I grew up working class. My parents were immigrants with factory I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things. But I grew up working class. My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
Starting point is 00:21:10 And because of that, I think about class a lot. And I wanna talk about it. That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy. And what did you all eat? You know, trailer food. 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.
Starting point is 00:21:37 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. A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios. Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:21:59 So a couple things. This is a complicated conversation. All right, sometimes when I get on the interwebs and start talking about fluidity and choice and whatever, usually someone calls, like, Brandy calls me and says, slow down. You're not allowed to talk like that. Well, actually, in reality, she just called and said, let's talk this through. Tell me what you're thinking, and I'll tell you what I think. And her points were very well, you know, she,
Starting point is 00:22:30 there are people in the churches and in places where when you start talking about, maybe I don't identify with born this way, maybe there is a fluidity and maybe there's choice involved, then the people who are sending their kids to conversion therapy use that as an excuse. Like it's like the people from the Bible belt need the excuse that God made you this way in order to allow their children to be who they are. So they get all of that. But.
Starting point is 00:22:59 Yeah, but you that's, there's anything in everything that can be used in bad ways. Like, don't worry about that. OK. Yeah. Well, here's the truth. You just got to speak your truth to power. I've never told anyone this before, including Abby. But since they meet Emily, I'm going to tell you.
Starting point is 00:23:16 This is exciting. So I'm sweating again. So I remember being very, very young, like 12, 13, maybe younger, and finding playboys. And being like, wow, okay. I know. I'm so happy. Okay. Well, I don't know what it means. Well, wait, what do you mean by, wow.
Starting point is 00:23:49 Just being like, I understand why people like this magazine. This is very interesting and beautiful. I wonder, cause this might be about to have been around the time that you started to delve into bulimia. Yeah, I mean, so then I shut down all of my sexuality and body and almost killed myself and married a bunch of men. And then, but yeah, it's interesting.
Starting point is 00:24:15 You just married one man. Yeah, it felt like so many. Oh wait, are you a bunch of men? A bunch of men. I was a cat. Yes, I was. Because you can't discount the influence of the church. Yeah. Two, I was. You can't discount the influence of the church. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:26 To, you know, the greatest woman that ever lived was a virgin. And then you carry on from there. I was named after her. Yeah. But do you know that the original meaning of the word virgin had nothing to do with sex and the original meaning was to belong to oneself? and the original meaning was to belong to oneself. Oh, hello. So that changes. So that changes that. I love that. Yeah, what is the influence, the power of these systemic structures that affect us,
Starting point is 00:25:02 the church, social norms, binary thinking, fear about fluidity in so many ways. It take a step back and look at the power of those forces on us. It's very, very, that's why we need community. Because together, together we can navigate that, tackle that and affirm our validity as human beings, our dignity. So that's why we need community. I loved church.
Starting point is 00:25:32 When I was three, I knew all of the church songs. I stood on the pews with my hands on the back of the pew in front of me. I was loud, I was into it. And then over time, as soon as I started to feel my sexuality coming to the surface, I fucking hated myself. You know, like I felt that shame and I embodied it in my cells and the molecular makeup of who I am.
Starting point is 00:26:00 And then I get to be 16 years old. And I, this is actually the first time I ever acknowledged outwardly, not with words, but with action, to my mom. We were in a store, and Y'all's CD was at the checkout line. And I picked up your CD and my sister, Laura, who's a little bit older than me, she's 10 years older, me, and she's gay. I came out first, but she listened to you all. And I grabbed the CD and I said to my mom, can I buy this?
Starting point is 00:26:33 Can you buy this for me? And she said, yeah. And that was like, that was like one of the most important moments of my life. It was like me taking ownership of myself. So you were trying to tell her something, right? Yeah. I mean, I didn't come out to her for like six years after that, but still, it was like one
Starting point is 00:26:51 of the most important moments of my life, and you all were a big part of it. Do you all think there's room for the conversation of choice and fluidity? Do you feel like there are forces in the world, Adrian Rich used to say, I'm a lesbian for political reasons. Or, you know, the second wave of feminism, what they used to say that, oh God, liberation is the goal and lesbianism is the way or something. That there have been times where being a lesbian by choice, not in a way that it was like, I would be different if I could,
Starting point is 00:27:25 but I was born this way because there's some sort of apologetic vibe. It's not like I would be different, but I'm gay. Like, no, this is the best life. This is the best choice. This is on purpose, kind of. Do you feel that that's dangerous to the conversation or do you believe that? I guess that's the, but you know, in the context of a second wave, it was a political statement,
Starting point is 00:27:53 like separatism was, you know, like we need a safe space, men are doing a lot of harm, and politically we need to be liberated from that power in order to be ourselves, actualize who we really are. And I think lesbianism was used as a term equated with separatism, right? So I think it's like totally like maybe a different context than like now, I don't know what the science is, but I know that I feel like you can be born in many different ways on the spectrum of who you're attracted to, right? So if you're born kind of in the middle, your nurturing can might push you on where the other may be, or you can be taught that it's not cool to be in the middle, and that's a sin too. Or your gender can be forced on you when you don't feel that gender.
Starting point is 00:28:52 There's like so many circumstances. I guess I feel like things are more fluid than we know. You know, but I think the political movements are like second wave. I think they were making a point, you know, which is so different from now. Yeah. I think it's still relevant. Don't you think Emily? I don't know. Yeah, I mean, I think, you know, there was a time when identity politics became very,
Starting point is 00:29:20 very important, you know, as a way to separate from the powers that be. And I also think that, and this is just my opinion, but in order to enter a sexual relationship, it's not really a choice. Like if somebody of the same sex makes you feel good or anybody makes you feel good, or you have a connection through your body, you don't really go, okay, now I'm going to like this, you know, I think the choice is more if you decide to enter into a committed relationship or can anybody elaborate on it? He opened to it at all.
Starting point is 00:29:57 Like because the choice is to shut down, you could shut it down. I shut it down. I'm feeling good. So the choice is to shut it down or not. That makes sense. But I also think it's a weird sort of thought process, but I think like when you come up with like I came up with feeling at some point, the bubble was burst and I was like feeling self-hatred about having being so masculine, right? It's completely separate from who I
Starting point is 00:30:20 was attracted to, right? And I became unfree because I was like, oh, now I hate myself, great. Just physically hate my body. It has nothing to do with who I want to go out with. And then I became attracted to women, but the self hate, I could be, it's a weird, I don't even know how you unwind it, in our generation, but we had so much self-loathing that when you found this safety with the woman and you
Starting point is 00:30:49 found this love and you're in love and you're sexually attracted to. But also for me, I was attracted to men as well, but I felt completely unworthy of that. You see what I'm saying? Like the self-hate of my body and the self-hate of me not being a good enough woman and the wanting also to be kind of be a guy, that kind of fluidity did not go hand in hand with having a boyfriend, right?
Starting point is 00:31:17 So I think there's something unraveling to be done for the total freedom that you might want to feel. Like you can be completely attracted to the opposite sex. You can be attracted to the same sex. You can be attracted to people that are genderqueer. Whatever you want, there should be nothing limiting you that has to do with you not liking yourself and thinking that you're unworthy. That's right. And for our generation, it's so different from the young generation now. Like my nephew's bisexual. He's just like, I love who I love. You know what I'm saying? And he's a six foot, you know, like big guy, you know, like actor, big guy, Ren Fair, stage fighting. And he's just like, men are beautiful.
Starting point is 00:32:06 You know, I'm like, oh my God, I love you. Like you, that's what I wanted to be. And I had a boyfriend for a while who I really loved after I had a girlfriend, but I didn't want to marry him. So I had to just tell him that. And I loved him so much. But I knew that it was not where I wanted to be, right, with him and and everything. But I felt so I just didn't feel like I was also worthy, you know, even though he didn't,
Starting point is 00:32:33 he was like, I love the way you are. You know, I love Lesbians, whatever, you know, whatever he meant. I love masculine women is what he meant, right? This is what I didn't love masculine women is what he meant, right? Yeah. This is what I didn't love masculine women. Ah. Right? Wow. But then I have friends where the couple is like a masculine woman and a feminine guy, right? A feminine guy. And some of my friends will be like, oh, they should just be gay.
Starting point is 00:32:56 And I'm like, no, they're actually like, can't you open your mind? Yeah. Like they're in love with each other. It's not, they're not covering up being gay. They actually love this is who they want to be with. And I think we even even us as gay people get stuck in that place of like, well, if you're this way and that way, you must just be in the closet, you know, and it's like, no, actually, there's feminine straight men, you know, and masculine straight women. Yes. I remember when Aani came out as bisexual or whatever she would term it now and like the lesbian community just lost their shit because
Starting point is 00:33:34 it's like that we only have so many of us and we've lost one of our own, you know, remember that, you know, I didn't feel that way of course, but I understand that, that fear. And so identity, I don't, you know, I didn't feel that way, of course, but I understand that fear. And so identity, I don't, we're so wrapped up in identity. And I think it's probably a primal thing, like knowing your place in the tribe and are you going to go out and pick the berries or are you going to like draw on the cave wall or what, you know, what I mean? Yeah. You have to be able to, you have to be able to recognize your place in your tribe or else you're, you're fucked. So I think a lot of this like focus on, it's not all because the more I
Starting point is 00:34:12 say this and think about it as I say it, but there is a lot to do with where do I belong in a tribe. Yeah. It's very, very compromising and fear-inducing to think that you either you don't belong or you've lost someone who you thought belonged, you know, goes way way back in that part of your brain. And my goodness, Amy, what you just said, I'm more masculine, I have more masculine tendencies. And so, of course, no straight man who would want to be with a woman would ever want me. So it felt, like this is the way you articulated that was like the most true thing that I have heard about my own gender and sexuality and how they are in relationship to each other. That it's like, well, I can't be that nobody will want me over here.
Starting point is 00:34:58 So of course, then I'll just, I have to be gay. Interesting. Yeah, and it's not, yeah. But to say, and it's like when we say that, people say, oh, you're just, you know, that's dangerous to say that because then it's like saying, you really want to be straight. And if you just felt better about yourself, you could. But that's not the point. No, it's not the point. It's like, I want to be everything, if I want to be everything, you know, like,
Starting point is 00:35:22 I have had sex with dudes and it wasn't like the worst experience of my life. We think that I'm gayer than she is because I was like, well, actually it was the worst experience. Every time I tried. So Amy, do you identify as a woman because you've said in the past year half and half, which by the way just makes sense to me. I mean, I don't identify as it, I mean, my pronoun is she, but I don't, but that's just because I've fought so hard to honor the woman inside me. I identify as a masculine female probably as the closest thing to it.
Starting point is 00:36:09 But I really, but when I see my inner self, it's very much a guy, you know, like I know. But I've, but I know society has influenced that for so long as I was coming up that I have this benefit of the doubt that I give to the fact that I probably have misogyny drilled into me at an early age. And so I'm just trying to welcome that feminine, right, and just be identified as a she. But I can theoretically see the idea of like transitioning to a guy and what that would mean, but it doesn't work for me for some reason. I thought about it. It doesn't work for me. And I think it's because I could not really feel completely a guy either. And so I don't want to go
Starting point is 00:36:57 through all that just to get on the other side of it and be like, well, shit, I don't really feel like a guy either. Here's another costume, my man. Yeah. I just think it's all so mixed up inside me that I have to just be like, no, no, this is just who I am. Like this is what you get. Yeah. And I gotta just learn to love that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:15 You know, Ed and I have friends that have transitioned and they're so completely who they are. You know, that I'm like, yes, that's like the prime example of like what, when it works, you know, that I'm like, yes, that's, that's like the prime example of like what, when it works, you know, and when you become the true being reflected on the outside that you feel in the inside, right? Yeah. And it's amazing to see that in this joyful and I celebrate it, but I don't think I could get there.
Starting point is 00:37:39 Do you love or hate the fluidity of that for you? Well, theoretically, I love it but the 12-year-old in me hates it you know or the 14-year-old I guess. Yeah and because we all want to belong somewhere that's why people want to know your identity who do you belong to but then who do you belong to automatically creates an enemy. It's like if you're in something, the only reason to be in something is to know who's not in that something. Well, you can look at it differently though because true tribal thought from an indigenous perspective doesn't have to be that. You know, like we, I think that's a white perspective
Starting point is 00:38:22 of what tribal is. Honestly. And I think you just have to look at tribe as this is my community of people that work together to create something and help each other. And there are other communities over here that do the same thing. And sometimes we get together and have a party and try to achieve something even bigger.
Starting point is 00:38:41 It's just functional. Like you have to have these tribes that are, you know, situated in some way that's convenient to really help each other out and really be there for each other and build something and create your life and have a journey. And then these other tribes are just as worthy and it's not us and them. That's so beautiful. You're so right. That's just all lightness. That's good. So Emily, you're sober, right? Yeah, so good. Yeah, tell us about how you got sober.
Starting point is 00:39:07 Did you have a rock bottom? Like, what was that decision and process for you like? Well, I have alcoholism on both sides of my family, both sets of grandparents. I mean, my grandmother and my dad died when he was five, so I don't know. But all family, both sets of grandparents. I mean, my grandmother and my dad's side died when he was five, so I don't know. But all the other grandparents were alcoholics.
Starting point is 00:39:30 And so I was sort of aware of that. Like my parents were very moderate with alcohol. Growing up, there was no alcohol as evil, and you should never have it or anything like that. So I always had that in the back of my mind, but that was destined to be alcoholic. And I didn't know it. But like when we played bars and stuff and we did shots from the stage, this is like when we were, I don't know, babies and drinking was such a social part of what we did
Starting point is 00:40:00 for work, you know. And then I had a very social life. I thought I was an extrovert. I was really just an alcoholic. I was not an extrovert. And, but I think that might be me too. Oh my God, I was just like, I thought I was so funny and so charming and so attractive, but I was just drunk. You know, I did have a rock bottom
Starting point is 00:40:20 and the truth is that Amy, she knew I was alcoholic and she came to me. I think at least two times and maybe three. And this is funny, but I always liken it to the way Peter denied Jesus like three times. It's like when I look back on it, it's very deep that I lied to Amy. Those, I don't have a problem. I really, I mean, I love to drink, but it's classic. I was a liar. All alcohol is a problem. I really, I mean, I love to drink, but it's classic. I was a liar, all alcohols are liars. Yes.
Starting point is 00:40:48 And then my body broke down. And I would say that I was pretty close to death very shortly. Both my mother and my little sister who had addiction and eating disorder, she died when she was 29 or 30 and they were both dead and towards the end of my drinking. I started dreaming about them every night and they're like, you know, come, come on. And I got to the point where I was like, my die. Okay, that's cool. You know, or that's fine, whatever. And so Amy can attest to how terrible it was when I was drinking all the excuses I made,
Starting point is 00:41:33 my irresponsibility not showing up, but I was terrified, I think all alcoholics are terrified to admit that their alcoholics, like I had a friend who went into the program way, way before I did and she gave me my first blue book and she was like, and I don't really want to talk about the program because that's, you know, anyway, she gave me that book and it was like on fire, I wouldn't touch it, it's not there on a little alt turn, and it was, and then, and I was like, oh, well, I'm not like that, it's classic. And then I started reading the stories
Starting point is 00:42:06 because I just could not, it's like going to see personal best, you can't stay away from it. You know? You've got to read the stories eventually. And then I was like, I can't really do that. But then at the end, like everybody knew I was just fucked up and dying. And Amy was gonna quit the band.
Starting point is 00:42:23 And, you know, everything was falling apart for me and I tried to hide it so much and you just can't. And then in the end, there was an intervention and actually Amy wasn't at that intervention because I think that my wife knew that I wouldn't be able to be honest. I was so vulnerable to Amy and to my best friend who was not at the intervention. And I know that I believe that that hurt you Amy because you had a lot to testify to
Starting point is 00:43:00 and to. And but I don't think in that moment, I had the courage, strength. I was so bitterly rageful and angry. And I had an intervention in there. I thought I was going to get on a plane and get us some shows which shows, but I had my bags packed.
Starting point is 00:43:20 All of a sudden, there's a knock on the door. It's my dad and my sister and our manager and the leader and a friend of mine who I was trying to get sober with who was just incredible, like sobriety angel to me. And then I was like, okay, well, okay, well, this is great, but I gotta get on a plane. And they're like, no, there's no plane.
Starting point is 00:43:45 You're gonna go to this hospital, and they're gonna check out your body to make sure you're okay. And then you're gonna go to rehab. But prior to this, I knew I was alcoholic. I'm, I was, I'd go over to like my sister's house and go, I'm an alcoholic, so I have to drink, okay? And then I would like make them pour me a bourbon. I have to drink. I'm not a alcoholic. But that was my way of like
Starting point is 00:44:08 slowly admitting. And then this intervention happened. And then I because prior to that, I had called this rehab center. And I'd talk to this guy. He was like a brother in the Catholic community. And I was always drunk when I called him like, okay, yeah, what's it like? And what do you do? And I'm sure he dealt with people like me all the time. And I decided I would go outpatients for 30 days.
Starting point is 00:44:35 That's what I would do. But then the intervention happened. They take me off to the hospital, I'm okay. And I'll have any other addictions. And then I'm off to rehab and I stayed there for three months and I couldn't have gotten sober without it I tried but I had such privilege and such access and such false pride and
Starting point is 00:44:56 Shame I didn't know the shame I had Until I got sober and I couldn't bear to tell anybody that I was not all it the change that happens between finally admitting it and getting help, because I truly believe I couldn't have gotten sober without rehab. And now the fact that I can talk about it openly is just, it's kind of miraculous to me. And then Amy and I went to therapy after that.
Starting point is 00:45:22 So that Amy could, yes. So that is where you're anger, right? Once or twice. Once or twice. How did that go? Yeah, I think twice. Twice, yes. So Amy, you can talk about that experience,
Starting point is 00:45:34 but I can tell you that in sobriety, well, it's the hardest fucking thing I've ever done. I should not pride about it, but I'm kind of proud of sobriety this long and done the work. It's so hard sometimes. You just want to get out, you know, quickly, and you can't anymore, and you have to sit through a lot of discomfort.
Starting point is 00:45:57 And the other thing I'm learning now is I lost a whole chunk of my development, intellectual development. the whole chunk of my development, intellectual development, my evolution as a human being, I just deprived myself of that in that time that I was drinking so hard. So now I feel a lot of catching up and I feel a lot of like unworthiness because I'm behind and things like that. So that's now, but to be sober, to wake up feeling good, to know that you're not self-destructing, to know that you can be like, now I'm accountable to Amy, responsible to do us and to all the people and to my family. I never would have had my wife, she would have left me,
Starting point is 00:46:41 she was going to, or my child, and all the most beautiful things in life have come from sobriety. And Amy, it was hard for you, because this is like your best friend, your business. What was it like going through that from your perspective? I mean, it was super rough. But, you know, I have to say to start out with it, it is a huge achievement to get sober, I think. And huge. Everyone that gets sober like that should be proud of it.
Starting point is 00:47:18 I know you're taught, you know, humility and all that stuff. But, and I had stopped drinking when I was about 30, which, and I didn't do a program where you think, I mean, people that I went to, Alan on with are always saying, you should have gone to AA. But I stopped drinking because everybody I knew was dying and too drunk and Emily was drunk all the time and I just needed to differentiate, you know. and I had moved to the mountains and was drinking alone
Starting point is 00:47:49 every night and my best friend Tanner she just she said we're both gonna just stop drinking at the same time so we made this pact and you know and I think I just never I just I have alcoholism in my family but I don't think I have the I mean I'm addictive to some, in some degree, but it was just easier for me. I understand the monumental task of getting sober and the Emily was up against. And I think it's a miracle, honestly,
Starting point is 00:48:15 because I saw her before that. And I, and I had that vision of like, I'd rather die than not be able to drink is what, is what I heard from her over and over again, you know, in action, in word, in everything. And so for me towards the end, it was just like chaos. And, you know, I was afraid every morning that I'd wake up and hear that she had died in the mold the night. Like, you know, just the, the tour of us was crazy because Emily would fall out of her bunk or, you know,
Starting point is 00:48:49 things would happen that were just unmanageable and crazy. And I went to Alonan actually to help me just stay in the band, you know, for a couple of years. But I think the thing that was, the hardest thing for me about all of this was that I would talk to my manager I would talk to Emily's friends No one believed me for years no one believed me So I think that's the only thing that bothered me about the intervention because I was like wait a minute
Starting point is 00:49:15 I'm the only one that has been talking about this and all the sudden you guys have a wake-up call Like we this should have been done three years ago Like what is and everybody was fighting me on it, even even our manager, who I was like, Russell, I swear to God, you're not out here, but you need to be, this is, we, this, she is not going to survive this. And you are enabling it. I just let us carry on and you're making money off of us. Like, you need to stop. He was like in full denial, right?
Starting point is 00:49:45 And I was like, no one would listen to me, right? And so that was the hardest thing because I thought I was crazy. And instead people would be like, ah, you know, you don't drink, you don't understand. You know, you know, we know you're not a partier so you just can't like deal with it. And I'm like, I'm not a partier
Starting point is 00:50:01 because I can't deal with that. Right. There's a reason I'm not. And someone's got to keep it in the control. I mean, I really just was like, when Emily gets sober, I'll start drinking again, because then, you know, I don't need to be like in control of the situation anymore, because I think I felt like, wow,
Starting point is 00:50:17 someone needs to be sober right now, because it is like a mess, you know. And I think our audience, you know, was never really aware of it, but it's like, stuff was just going downhill and our music was, the shows weren't as good. And after the shows was always like a potential scene outside the tour bus, you know, and so I was just like, oh my god, no one understands what's going on. But me, you know, just felt like not even the people in our crew,
Starting point is 00:50:46 you know, because everybody was just partying, right? And so for me, it just felt like I felt a little crazy, you know, and insane. But I also knew after learning, you know, going to the outlet on its stuff and doing my own work that I was like part of the problem too, because I'm just, I just kept being confrontational, right? Instead of like letting Emily find her own answers
Starting point is 00:51:10 in her own way, I was like judgmental judgmental judgmental all the time, right? Which is kind of my deep, it's like my go-to anyway. Because like the way I was raised was by people who were judgmental, some people. So I contributed in so many ways to that shame and that constant thing, because I would just be like, well, I'm going to be in the band anyway, but I'm going to be judgy all the time when what I should have just done is like walk away. You know, I should
Starting point is 00:51:34 have just walked away from it, because it's like, it doesn't help to just make someone feel shame over and over again. You know? And so we were all in our own little system of like bad stuff. Family. Yeah, family. It was family. And I didn't want to leave it, but at some point I had decided. And I was like, I'm just going to, I can't do this anymore because it's just enabling, this whole system is being enabled by me, continuing to play in the band.
Starting point is 00:52:00 Because it's just like, it means that everything can just feel normal all the time. We're making a lot of money. We're, you know, you can sleep all day and then sing your gig and then get drunk and then sleep all day and you know, all that stuff. And at the time, I also had like, oh my god, I had just gotten through this terrible bout with endometriosis and I had, you know, like 20 pounds less and couldn't eat anything and had, and that, you know, that's endometriosis. Stress is a contributor to that, you know, I was losing organs. So it was, you know, it was, it was a crazy time that feels crazy when both of us are just inside this time. And we both know it's, it's going crazy, but no one else on the outside does, right? So we're just kind of in our own little world
Starting point is 00:52:43 trying to like muscle through. Everybody's making money off the end to go girls. And we are too. You know, and it's all, it all becomes like that absurd to me, you know, like that absurd. Like we're not playing music for joy right now. We're, we're playing music because it's all we know how to do to survive, you know, in every way spiritually, you know, your soul and all that stuff.
Starting point is 00:53:06 But I think that's just what we all do. We all get into Nile about different things and it had to happen the way it happened, I think, or it wouldn't have been such a great recovery. That's right. You know, because now it's like, you know, we fought and Emily fought really super hard. People that I know that have gotten through it, I'm just blown away by their strength. You know, like people I know that were addicts and heroin addicts or, you know, meth addicts or whatever.
Starting point is 00:53:37 And I see them recovering. I'm just like, oh my God, that's so hard. It's a miracle. How did you do that? You know, I can't even stop eating chocolate. I want to hear about y'all's experience too, if you don't mind. Oh, was it Friday? Yeah, with alcohol and, yeah, Friday and.
Starting point is 00:54:06 Yeah, you know how you're constantly looking back on your life and like, I feel like everything's just an episode of like, I see dead people. Like somebody changes perspective, I look back on my life and I'm like, wait, I need to write another memoir. So I don't know.
Starting point is 00:54:23 I feel like I was probably suppressing sexuality. That's what I think. It became, believe me, when I was 10. And that just morphed into alcoholism. And I got sober when I was 25. And it was a miracle too. I mean, when I hear you guys talking, it reminds me of me and my sister, although Amy would be my sister and I would be Emily.
Starting point is 00:54:48 And it is, it was so bad that every day feels like a miracle. Now, it's like, it's like when a winter is so freaking dark and then spring comes and you're like, I feel grateful for it because it reminds me of what you were talking about before Amy when there's like a intense fight for something like my intense fight for being free sexually and then feeling so empowered by it all the time that's how sobriety felt to me because I thought so hard for mental health. I walk around most days like holy shit. I am vertical. Everybody else. Everybody else needs other things.
Starting point is 00:55:29 I know and it's so cool. And I'm like, we're vertical. It's so cool because she got sober 20 years ago. We're not on the lamb. She still feels this way. This is a 20 year. I know what you're resting today. Like if I get pulled, I'm not going to jail again.
Starting point is 00:55:42 Like most likely. Ah, no, blue lights. Exactly. I'm like, I'm again, like most likely. Oh, no. Blue lights. Exactly. I'm like, I'm sober, ex sober, ex sober, Glatton. I'm like, no, I'm sober. I don't have an ex sober. How do sober people act? But I want to just talk about spirituality a little bit because you brought up spirituality, Amy. And in one of my favorite songs, which, I mean, I spent the week trying to figure
Starting point is 00:56:03 that out, it's impossible to decide. And second time around, do you talk about being God-fearing lesbians? Which is like, I don't know why, just that hits. Okay. So from your lives right now, from your perspectives right now, who is this God? Do you still believe in a God? Who is this God for each of you? And are you still afraid of her? Great. You go first and we oh my God. Okay, I don't like the word God. I don't know like any type of language that tries to describe what this thing is that's beyond human comprehension, any of that.
Starting point is 00:56:51 So there's not really a word for what I believe, but I believe in, it's more like a, it's more like a holy spirit. And it's, I believe in science and I believe in the presence of something that is not of the physical world that's in relationship to the physical world and to all of us. I believe in regeneration and energy isn't lost. And I just feel like there's an incomprehensible relationship between energy spirituality and the physical world, which is so awesome. And I know that I got help outside of myself, not only my community and people, to get sober and to any struggle I have in my life. I know that when I engage in the relationship with this spirit,
Starting point is 00:57:45 I'm able to get help, I'm able to get wisdom, and I have almost an unshakable belief, except if I'm sick, if I get COVID or something, or what happens in the world, or if children are shot in schools, then I'm like, I don't know if I really believe this. And then I just have to get back centered. But so that's my belief.
Starting point is 00:58:05 There is something it is more powerful, wise, incomprehensible than any of us can know. And it's not because I have to believe it. It's because it has shown itself to me in my life and in other people's lives. Amy. I don't really mind if people say God or whatever word they want to use it as a father of me because I think we all have constructs that we need to live.
Starting point is 00:58:33 You know, Joseph Campbell, myth and all that stuff. But I agree with Emily that I don't, it's limitless. It's a great mystery. I think the light, you know, is within all of us, says the Quakers say, and we all have it. So whatever you call God is within us. But my friend Katie Pruitt, the songwriter, was asking, she's a recovering Catholic and she was like, you know, where do you find the divine? And I was like in nature, in science, as Emily does. I mean, I think science is like a freaking miracle. I find it in looking in the stars, you know, in NASA, and looking at like the Jet Propulsion Lab and JPL women that do all that research. And I just, I find it in Christ the Tippet
Starting point is 00:59:29 in people that have that better in touch. I find it there, but nature is my main thing. I was raised Methodist though, and so I have this construct that I still adhere to quite a bit and cling to. I mean, I still have a relationship with my Jesus, you know, who is, I guess non-binary, maybe, and just call Jesus. I don't know. I just, I have a Southern built-in filter that's like a Southern thing where you go to church three days a week, but at all
Starting point is 01:00:02 the time you're interpreting it your own way in order to gather what you need to be strong. I loved I loved I loved youth group. I love Friday night skating. I love Bible. I love Wednesday night supper. It's all like I love it. I never don't love it, but I was taught some pretty bad things as well, but the good stuff has stayed with me but the good stuff has stayed with me equally. So I'm still kind of a churchy person sometimes. And I hope the Methodists can get their shit together and start welcoming gay people into the true Methodist church. I think curiosity is a divine thing. You know, I think our spirit,
Starting point is 01:00:41 I think our great mystery and our God, whoever that is, whatever that is, what energy it is, reveals itself in our curiosity. So that's the beautiful thing that we have and common with animals, too. Dogs are curious, people are curious, answer curious, whatever. Curiosity binds us together. And then my partner know, my partner carries, she always, whenever things really bad happen or someone's having a really hard time, she always, she says like something that's really comforting. I don't know if it's true, but it's comforting. She always says, remember they have their higher power. You know, everyone hides their higher power. Those kids that
Starting point is 01:01:21 died, they have their higher power, power, you know, In other words, we see what's in front of us in our little, who felt world, you know, what we only have. But we don't see this bigger thing of the souls of those kids or all this stuff. And it's not comforting when you lose somebody, but it's the wisdom of like that, as Emily says, you know, the long view and like just letting that comfort you sometimes, you know sometimes is okay, even in the face of really hard stuff. You too, I think the themes of this hour and the themes of my life, which have been
Starting point is 01:01:58 freedom in faith, freedom in sexuality, freedom in sobriety. You too have been my community in freeing myself in all three of those areas. And I know that you don't know me as well, because I know you. But you've walked me to freedom in all three of those areas. And I will be grateful for you forever. I will continue to listen to you every single day of those areas. And I will be grateful for you forever. I will continue to listen to you every single day of my life. And we love you. We love you very much. You've brought so much love and joy into our lives. Yeah, the best. The same way about y'all. Yeah. The same exact way. Just you're just like your lights in the world and you're so human, your
Starting point is 01:02:47 fallibilities and your vulnerabilities, but you just keep shining y'all's lights and it's moving to me. It's not my fault I less as I feel moved. You know, it's like thank you for that. Yeah, thanks for all the work you'll do. I mean, y'all are, yeah, y'all are mentors to a lot of people. And you do a lot of great work. And it's, I'm thankful for it. I really am. I too.
Starting point is 01:03:13 Thank you, both. And I just forgot that we also have a pod squad listening. So also, thank you, pod squad. I literally forgot that. We need to wrap it up. OK, OK, bye. We'll be back next time. Bye.
Starting point is 01:03:26 I love you. Bye. Bye. Bye. We can do hard things, is produced in partnership with cadence 13 Studios. Be sure to rate, review, and follow the show on Apple podcasts, Odyssey, or wherever you get your podcasts,
Starting point is 01:03:43 especially be sure to rate and review the podcast if you really liked it. If you didn't, don't worry about it. It's fine. you

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