We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Jane Fonda: How to Not Lose Yourself Right Now
Episode Date: April 14, 2026Today we’re sharing our electric conversation with Jane Fonda. This one feels especially right for this moment—because so many of us are asking the same questions Jane has been answering with her ...life: How do we keep aging without disappearing? How do we stay awake—to our bodies, to each other, to the truth—when everything feels so chaotic and overwhelming? Jane reminds us that getting older doesn’t mean getting quieter—it can mean getting whole. Not perfection, but integration. Not waiting until you have it all figured out—but showing up as you are and doing your part. - How she left her body as a child—and found her way back decades later - Why the goal isn’t perfection—it’s becoming whole - What she’s learned about love, power, and choosing herself - How she kept showing up through backlash, surveillance, and public attacks - Why you don’t have to be ready—you just have to begin About Jane: Jane Fonda is a two-time Academy Award-winning actor (Best Actress in 1971 for Klute and in 1978 for Coming Home), producer, author, activist, and fitness guru. Her career has spanned over 50 years, accumulating a body of film work that includes over 45 films and crucial work on behalf of political causes such as women’s rights, Native Americans, and the environment. She is a seven-time Golden Globe winner and was honored with the Cecil B. DeMille Award in 2021, Stanley Kubrick Excellence in Film Award as part of BAFTA’s Britannia Awards in 2019, AFI Life Achievement Award winner in 2014, and Honorary Palme d’Or honoree in 2007. Follow We Can Do Hard Things on: Instagram — https://www.instagram.com/wecandohardthings
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Content warning that in today's very special episode, we reference the existence of past sexual
abuse and ongoing eating disorder recovery. Please take care of yourself.
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things, everybody. Today, we are sharing our conversation,
our beautiful, funny, deep, healing, epic conversation with the epic, Jane effing,
Fonda. This conversation with Jane feels especially right for this moment because so many of us are
asking the same question she's been answering publicly with her life. How do we keep aging without
disappearing? How do we stay awake to our bodies, to each other, to the truth while our country
feels so chaotic and overwhelming? How do we stay brave, day after day, year after year?
year. Jane reminds us that getting older doesn't mean getting quieter. It means getting whaler,
getting braver, getting louder. She reminds us that the goal isn't perfection, it's alignment,
it's integration, it's matching your insides with your outsides. And that activism isn't something
you do once you have your life all sorted out. You just show up as you are. You join a movement
that moves you and you speak your mind.
In this conversation, Jane shares how she left her body as a child and spent decades finding
her way back home while also fighting again and again and yet again for democracy, for justice,
for the planet.
Jane Fonda is a human blueprint, an embodied courage in showing up.
And she is a lifeline for this moment.
Let's go.
Okay.
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. We're not doing a normal bio today because we don't have a normal person. So where we would normally read our guest bio, we're doing something different today because today we have the unbelievable honor of hosting Jane Effing Fonda, a singular human who has pushed six decades of our history forward fearlessly. It is our honor to share a glimpse right now into Ms. Fonda's seismic and sustained impact, Sissy Go.
Ms. Fonda was a pivotal voice on behalf of service members and activists to expose Nixon's deadly lies in Vietnam.
As the nation turned its back on Vietnam vets who gave everything, her film coming home forced America to see vets' experiences with compassion and ease their reentry into civilian life.
She fought beside Black Panthers, including for the release of Angela Davis, setting a standard to support them with love, money, and risk, for which she was rewarded with you.
of illegal FBI surveillance into the most intimate aspects of her life.
She was a vocal ally for the LGBTQ plus community when it was rare to be,
including during the White Night riots after the assassination of Harvey Milk.
She stood in solidarity with indigenous Americans for 50 years,
amplifying their work from Bernie White Bear's occupation to the 1970 Alcatraz Coalition to Standing Rock.
She started Jane Fonda's workout for the express purpose of funding the campaign for
economic democracy, funneling $17 million to that pivotal organization.
Through her founding work for 26 years with G-CAP, the only Georgia organization that has
doggedly focused on teen pregnancy prevention in her state, she has overseen her state's
teen pregnancy rate dropped by 72%.
This year, she launched the Jane Fonda Climate Pack and continues her work with Fire Drill Fridays,
hell-bent on ousting politicians who are on the tab of the fossil fuel industry.
Ms. Fonda has also won two Oscars and seven Golden Globes for films extolling empathy and progress,
like Clute in which she personalized the plight and power of sex workers, and nine to five,
which was based on our conversations with real office workers, amplifying their organizing efforts
and bringing their stories of sexual harassment and unequal pay to the mainstream.
Her evolution marked our nation's revolution. She is a woman who owns her brilliant light as
clearly as she owns her shadows. Thank you, Ms. Fonda, for a lifetime of hard things well-lived.
Damn. Oh, that's so beautiful. Thank you. Going to make me cry. Thank you.
Oh, my God. Thank you. Abby and I were lucky enough to be at your 85th birthday very recently.
It was so beautiful. It was also a fundraiser to support G-CAP. We were so unbelievably moved to be there.
I was sure happy we're there. And your words,
I didn't think you were going to get up on stage and pay a tribute like that. They were so beautiful. Thank you so much.
Oh, my gosh. It was such an honor. I'm going to record the toast that I did for you for our pod squad. So don't worry, pod squad. You'll hear it. But first, we want to get into some beautiful hard things with you, Jane. We're going to start with this question, a really hard one. So your mom died by suicide when you were 12. And you say that at that moment when you found out,
that your mom had died, you left your body and you didn't come back for 50 years. I relate to this so deeply.
Can you talk to us about what you mean by when you talk about disembodiment?
My mother was sexually abused as an eight-year-old. I was sexually abused as a seven-year-old.
And I didn't know that for a long time. I had to go through a lot to kind of get back there.
and I think sexual trauma and abuse causes women, it happens to men too, but mostly women, to become disassociated from their bodies.
It's very easy to slip away from a relationship to your body, especially for women because so much importance is put on our body.
We're so judged by how we look, you know, so I think the disembodial.
The leaving my body happened much earlier than my mother's suicide when I was 12.
I know that I went through a whole lot of my early life wanting to be perfect because I thought
nobody's going to love me unless I'm perfect.
And so all the interesting complicated parts of myself moved out and took up residence alongside.
It was kind of like a double image.
And every now and then there would be somebody, Simone Sinioray, was one of them.
Theater critic Kenneth Tynan was another one.
There were certain people along the way who seemed to see the Jane Fonda that was over here and get interested in that.
And it was like, who is Simone talking to?
It's not me.
I'm not smart.
But she saw that other part.
So it was like this good girl, you know,
that's who presented herself.
It's who took men into the bedroom.
But all the interesting stuff was next door.
And I had to work really, really, really hard to bring myself back into myself,
you know, like a double image that's finally that's coming together.
And it's a work in progress.
You know, it doesn't, it's not like everything just goes away,
but you learn to manage it.
Yeah. Yeah. When I did your speech, I actually started crying on stage and I've never done that in 15 years of doing this job because I always stay completely disembodied. I don't ever mesh the two together. But I've been doing a lot of work lately trying to get embodied again. I've had any disorders my whole life. And I started crying on stage with you and that was the first time. And I got off stage, somebody said to me this, Jane, you see me.
very embodied up there.
And I was like,
I'm putting the two together.
How do you, because eating disorders does that too.
You used to struggle with bulimia,
all of the eating disorders, just like I have.
Was that a coping mechanism for disembodiment?
How do you see that now?
I think eating disorders happen in the presence of in authenticity.
If you're pretending to be someone you are,
If you're in a relationship that isn't 100% authentic, we're going to tend to
fill that empty space with something.
And for us, it was food.
It can be drugs.
It can be shopping.
It can be workaholes.
It can be all kinds of things.
But you fill up that hole created by inauthenticity.
And it took me a long, long time.
to understand that because of my early abuse and my mother's mental health challenges,
I never was able to really have a relationship be fully authentic.
And I've had three of them, and they've all been fascinating, wonderful men.
But it just didn't ever really, it was never democratic.
Yeah, you said that you were so courageous for the ideal.
of our democracy in our country, but you never once had a democratic marriage.
Oh, my God. If, you know, if that's what you're scared of, showing up fully for another
person, that's going to be terrifying. I mean, I've been under bombs. I've been shot at,
but if, earlier in my life, if a guy said to me, come on, Fonda, show up. Come on, who are you?
Show me who you really are. You know, I just wonder.
how many appropriate relationships came my way and I fled in terror because they were on a
demand that I show up. And most of my relationships were with men who couldn't show up themselves.
Yeah. And I blamed them, but it was really both of us. It was me.
Do you think it was that perfection, though? Because you also said with the eating disorder stuff
that I loved this because I relate to everything that you ever say. But you said most people blame
eating disorders on on moms. But for me, it was stuff my dad said. But did you learn that from your
dad that a girl was supposed to be so perfect in this way? And so that's, yeah, he was married five times.
And he would say to his wife, tell her to wear a bigger bathing suit or tell her not to wear a
bikini or tell her to wear a longer dress or she's too fat. I would hear those things or the
stepmothers would tell me those things. And, you know, so I just, I just,
thought, well, I want my father to love me, so I'll get really, really, really skinny.
And of course, that doesn't just stop with your father. It goes on into your, yeah.
When you said, I put my complicated self over here, my interesting and complicated self.
And it made me think of with those marriages, it's almost like those people were allowed
to be complicated and interesting. But you,
were not in those marriages allowed to be your entire self. And it's fascinating to me because I'm thinking
about when your daughter said you're about to make the film of your life and your daughter said to you,
why don't you just get a chameleon, let it walk across the screen. Was she talking about the melding
into the people that you were married to?
Yeah.
I mean, I look at pictures of me through the various marriages and boyfriends,
and I look like a different person, each one, the way I dressed, the way I did.
You know, I just, I'm really good at, oh, you want me to be that kind of a woman.
Okay, I'll do that.
I'll do that.
I can become pretty much whatever a guy wants me to be.
be. And I did that for a long time. And then, you know, at a certain point, you then try to,
oh my God, I really love him. I want this to work, which means that I have to now become who I am.
And a couple of times, it's like he didn't want that. No. No. Yeah, you know how that goes.
And that's so brave, because you could have just not found
your wholeness, right? You could, you could have a big fear. My big fear is getting to the end of my life,
and I'm pretty close at 85, and having a lot of regrets. My dad died with a lot of regrets. Oh, my God,
I don't want that. We never know how we're going to die, but it's important to vision how you want to be.
I want to be in a bed, either I hope in my home and have people around me that love me. I have to
earn that, deserve that. And I want to feel that I've done my very best. And so that's what I
try to do. I'm aware of my failings and I try to get better, make it better, get better.
So I hang out with girlfriends who are better. They give me strength and put starch in my spine
and inspire me. And my girlfriends are just all so wonderful. And they all do hard things all the time.
I know. They do. One thing they do. One thing.
you said that just rocked me was when you were trying to make these decisions and you could
see yourself, but you knew you couldn't be who you needed to be in the relationship you're in.
And you said that you didn't leave your husband for another man. You left them for the idea.
Like the idea that you can reside in your own skin with all of your needs and ambitions and
then you don't have to exile yourself anymore. Exactly. Yeah. How could you recognize that self in
you if it had been so separate for so long. How did you feel it and know it? Well, I really started
coming together when I was married to Ted Turner. And we knew about a year in advance that the marriage
was going to end. And I had a lot of time to prepare. And one of the things that I did was
in preparing for my third act, for my 60th. I made that little movie about myself. I researched myself.
And one of the things that I discovered in doing that was that I'm brave.
And that I've always been brave.
Oh, who knew?
I didn't realize that.
I didn't know.
So that was good.
And then from there, there were two more years with Ted.
I started to feel, this is good, this is good what I'm doing.
You know, he said, you're going to come back.
You'll come back to me.
And I said, what makes you think so?
And he said, because I'm so interesting.
And he is an interesting person.
know. But I remember, oh, it was hard. We split up January 2nd of the year 2000. He has a little
private plane and he dropped me at the airport in Atlanta where I lived with him. And I had a rented
car waiting for me and I turned around and I saw the next woman getting on his plane. My seat was
still warm. Painful. Huh? And my daughter, Vanessa,
who had a one-year-old child.
She was in Paris with her father, my first husband,
who was dying of cancer,
and I asked if I could stay in her house.
And I remember, you know,
I left so many properties, vast vistas,
such a magnificent, huge life,
to move into my daughter's house
in a little room with no closet.
I had my golden retriever with me.
and there was such silence and I remember standing in the middle of the room and I could feel myself moving back into myself
and I said this is God I know that this is God now here's something really interesting I was writing a book about aging
and this notion of why I felt like it was God when I could feel
myself becoming re-embodied. And so I started reading books about the Bible, and it turns out
in most books, Jesus is quoted as saying to his disciples, you have to be perfect like our
father in heaven is perfect, which I just felt that can't be what he said. And then I read a book
that said, no, in Aramaic, which is the language that Jesus spoke, what he said was, you have to be
whole like our Lord in heaven is whole.
So Jesus knew that the goal of humanity is to become fully integrated, fully whole.
That's right.
Yeah.
I mean, it was like, wow, it's happening to me.
I can feel it.
And even though my heart was broken because I loved Ted so much, I knew that I'd made the right
decision.
Yeah.
And I remember Oprah decided it was her second issue of the O magazine and she wanted to interview
me for it.
She came to my daughter's house and she said, good God.
I mean, didn't he get a pet house?
I mean, what are you doing?
And I said, no, I'm being reborn.
And it's appropriate that I get reborn in the home of my firstborn.
Yeah.
It was the most beautiful time in my life.
I was 62.
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You know, when you told that story about the origin being whole and not perfect,
I was thinking about my whole journey, my final frontier, all of it, is this
embodying again, because I was gone too. I'm still gone-ish, but landing. And I always think
about the most repeated phrases in the Bible are do not be afraid and remember. And I always think
of remember as the opposite of dismember. Like remember can mean to recall an old idea, but remember
is also to come back together, right? And the members of your body. Yes. Like body, mind,
spirit in one and just live in this body that for so many of us wasn't safe. And very, very, very
Refusing to believe that and living inside of it is, I think, what the whole thing's about.
It's what the whole thing is about. That's right. If we did that, if we lived authentically as embodied men and women, there would be no climate crisis. There would be no racism. There would be no patriarchy. It's all part of a poison that's been in our species for thousands of years. But I'm hopeful.
I believe that we can change it.
Yes, you do believe it and you're working toward it.
It's wild to me that when you were 60 and decided that I, in order to understand myself
and not have regrets, I need to know who I am, which means I need to know my history.
I need to find out who I am and know my parents' history and know who they were.
And so that part of remembering, like not being afraid to look at your life and pull the pieces
together. Right, exactly. And same with our universe. We are dismembered from our history and where we are
as a country and a world because we are not remembering. We are not looking at our history and where
we are. We've forgotten that we're all part of the same dust molecules from the stars. We're part of
the animals and the rocks and the trees and that's the reality.
It's hard for people to grasp that.
Speaking of hard to grasp, you spent decades working on myriad campaigns for so many people.
And there were always the people who were hell-bent on trying to take you out, the detractors.
And they had a very large voice.
There was administrations behind them.
It was big.
How in the world, even notwithstanding all of that, you would apologize?
when you needed to, but you would always fall forward in any, after everyone, you would keep
showing up. You would keep doing your work. How did you find the strength to do that? And then what
would you say to folks now who are so terrified to take a step because they know they're going to
make a mistake and that all the people will come rushing to take them out? I think one very important
thing is if you want to be an activist, don't do it alone. Be part of a movement. I've always been
part of a movement. So there's always been support around me and love at the worst of the
controversy. There were always people with me who knew what was in my heart and knew why I was doing
what I'd do, knew the mistakes that I'd made, but we were in it together. For survival, that's
really, really important. The other thing is, people expected me to be scared away. Oh, God,
look at white privileged, Henry Fonda's daughter, you know, we'll give her a little hard time and she'll
disappear. Fuck you, man. Yeah. You're not going to, you're not going to scare me. I'm going to show you.
You know, I just refuse to play into that, that preconception that they had. I was going to show
them that I'm tough. And I am. I'm really, I don't know, sometimes I think I'm missing a gene,
because things don't upset me as much as they upset other people. But also, I always knew what was in my
heart. You know, I could make mistakes, but I knew why I did. And so I could. I
could keep going and I wasn't going to let them get me down. Jane, how and why? Like there's all of
these people, all of these colleagues of yours throughout time, like you're the one who got into
these fights, stay in these fights. Like what is it about you? Where do we- You know what there's others.
There's been lots of others too. I'll tell you partly because I've thought a lot about it.
See, growing up, right, what was my dad doing? He was making grapes of wrath.
He was making young Abe Lincoln.
He was making the wrong man.
He was making 12 angry men.
And I always knew those are the roles that he loves.
Those roles represent the values that he respects and admire.
I want some of that.
And so I wasn't really conscious then.
But I think it was like fertilizer that was being sprinkled on my soul.
So that when the Vietnam War surfaced,
and I began to realize what it really was.
That fertilizer allowed the sprouts to start growing, the sprouts of activism.
Do you have a time when you remember deciding to not live to please your dad?
Was there like a fork in the road where you were like, uh?
I don't know if any of us have stopped.
No, I have it.
So let me know.
Does it happen around 84?
I'm still crossing my feet.
fingers. I don't know. I mean, I don't know. I always wanted to please him. I think, you know,
I just, I didn't always know how to talk to him, but, and I miss him so much. And I would so
love to talk to him now. But I just think we, we grow up and we can get over it. Yeah, we grow up and
you see the parents' frailty. It's so important to try to see your parents as human beings. You know,
beings when I was preparing to turn 60, which to me was the beginning of my third act,
you know, I decided and it speaks to, you know, to what you said, Amanda, that in order to know
where I wanted to go in my third act, I had to know where I'd been. And so I really, I did very
intense research for a year about my life. And there was a lot, you know, there was a stacks of
FBI files in case I forgot what I was doing on that day. And my father made a lot of home movies.
And there were a lot of interviews. I mean, there was a lot of interviews. I mean, there was a
lot of material. I thought in order to do this research, I have to find out really, who were my
parents? Who really were they? And they were dead. So it was hard. But I did a lot of research,
and that's when I found out, because my mother killed herself in an institution, I got a hold of
the medical records. And that's when I found out that she had been sexually abused as a girl.
And explained, interestingly, when I started G-CAP, I was noticing that all these girls, 15 and
younger, all of them had been sexually abused. These girls who were pregnant or parenting,
if they were young, they'd all been sexually abused. And I began to study that. So when I read
the medical records of my mother, I was like a lay expert. I knew a lot about what happens to a young
girl or boy when he or she is sexually abused. And so what? I knew exactly why my mother had been the
way she was. And I was able to forgive her. And you knew that it had nothing to do with you.
Had nothing to do with me. That's the value of finding out who your parents are because you'll
probably find out it didn't have anything to do with me. It was because that happened to them.
Oh, and then you can have compassion and forgiveness. There's a generational trauma,
even if a daughter, for example, hasn't been the shadow of her mother's abuse can affect her life.
And it's one reason why it's really important to talk to our parents, especially our mothers,
to find out of something like that happened to them.
Yeah, absolutely.
You have to talk to them separately.
Oh, separately from each other.
Oh, yeah.
Wow, that's a really good point.
Well, we're so different.
We do hard things like admit.
Yes.
Men don't do that.
Jane, why is that?
Well, because that's the way they're raised to detach from their heart.
I don't know if you heard, but at that night at the G-CAP, I said, we're going to start programming for boys.
Yeah.
The difference between women friendships and men friendships.
Men friendships are two guys sitting side by side looking forward saying, oh, my God, look at that car.
I want, oh, my God.
Look at him.
Got football.
It's out there.
Yes.
They're sharing, nothing wrong with it necessarily, but they're sharing things outside of themselves.
What do women do?
Oh my God, I'm feeling so bad. I need some help from you. We ask for help.
Yeah.
We sit opposite each other and we look into each other's eyes.
We show up emotionally for each other and allow ourselves to be vulnerable.
It's such a great gift and men don't have it and I feel so sorry for them because they don't.
So it's important to have empathy for men. I have a lot of empathy for men.
Yeah, we're all disembodied. They're disembodied.
They're dismembered from heart, from internal.
And we're cut off from our voice.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Which is different.
Do you know what?
The voice, it doesn't go away.
It just goes underground.
And then we have to learn as we grow up to bring it back up again.
Yeah, this freaked me out in one of your books.
You talked about how after you became more embodied, your voice changed and dropped.
Jane, for the last like five episodes since I read that, I've been trying to talk with your country.
because people make fun of my voice and it's so high, and I think that's what it is.
It is.
It is.
Was it on purpose?
Did you lower your voice on purpose?
Yeah.
How does this happen?
No, no, no.
You know, it occurred to me when I read Carol Gilligan, the feminist psychologist, her book called In a Different Voice,
when she talks about how girls, especially girls who are disembodied, especially girls who've been sexually
traumatized, the voice goes up into the head because it doesn't reveal anything. You're not going to know
what I'm feeling. It's way up here. As you begin to connect to your core self, the voice drops.
And what I discovered, it started to happen with me when I made Clute because Clute was a film
where for the first time, I think I really, I went to my core. I touched my core self. And
became a feminist, and my voice dropped.
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looking at yourself crying in the mirror and saying, oh, that's how I look crying. I should use this on
stage and you would always say, I'm searching for what is real in there? Is there somebody real in there?
Who is that? When you get to your embodied self, when you get to your realist self, who is real Jane Fonda?
I guess I'm a brave, strong, persistent, curious woman who wants to make things better is who I am.
for sure.
Make it better.
Where are you happiest now?
Like what are the moments that you're the happiest?
Well, I'm always happy when I'm high on a mountain.
You know, nature to me is my soul, my religion.
So hiking, being in the mountains, being in a forest is my happy place.
I like being in bed.
Yeah.
Nature.
I have a great bed.
I love my bed.
You know, I'm happy.
most of the time.
Isn't that weird?
It's wonderful.
I know.
I didn't used to be that way.
I come from a long line of major depressives,
but I've learned to be content.
Are there any tricks for that?
No, it takes a lot of work.
No, there's no shortcuts or tricks.
It's that investigating your life.
It's called doing a life review.
It's meditation.
It's therapy, if you can afford it,
it's a good therapist. It's girlfriends. I mean, it can be all kinds of things. But it all comes
from a desire to be intentional about how you live. See, there's one way to live. You're in a canoe
and a river and you have no ore and so you're just taken where the current takes you. Or agency,
you have an oar. I am going to go over to this. You control to the extent that any of us,
us control anything, which we don't really, but you have agency over what you do with your life.
And that can only happen if you're really intentional about who you want to be and where you want to
go.
You know, this is interesting because so when you talk about the chameleon and you just became
whoever for your husbands, so sister and I were talking about this after reading one of your
books.
And sister said this thing that I thought was so interesting.
She said the narrative seems to be that you matched yourself to each husband.
and you did that. But what if, instead of viewing you as passively assuming your husband's identity,
what if you actively selected the men that were perfectly and strategically aligned with your
personal and political objectives? Yeah, that's what I did. Like, you're a mastermind.
I wanted to know what it meant to be a woman. And so I married Roger Vadim, who before me had been
married to Catherine Deneuve and Bridget Bardot and made the movie with Bridget Bardo. And made the movie with
Bridget called God-created woman. I didn't know that it was going to be a female impersonator,
but that's what that was about. And then Tom Hayden, he's going to show me how to be an activist,
and he did. That was a good choice. And then Ted, it was about the outdoors, about nature,
and being taken care of. I'd always supported everybody. It was nice to be taken care of. Yeah. Yeah.
It felt good. It scared me at first, but I remember the first time that Ted and I went to a
hotel. And the porter came with the luggage and I went to my wallet to tip him and Ted got there
first and I got scared. And that's where I realized, oh my God, my being the one that had the financial
strength in the marriage gave me power. And I don't have that now. And I got scared. I got used to it
pretty quick. I got to it. So metabolize that fear pretty quickly.
quickly. In terms of your marriages, do you think at this point in your life, you got what you
needed out of them and you're like, I don't need any more marriage? Is that ever something that
you like ever considered since divorcing Ted? Oh, honey. Oh, yeah. Oh, it's over. I don't need
any more marriage. You know, I mean, I had some major boyfriends. And no, I'm alone now and so happy.
I wouldn't want to be in a relationship now.
I'm girlfriends.
Your girlfriends.
What does that look like?
Do you hang out on the weekends?
Like, what do you do with your girlfriends?
Didn't Fire Dr. Fridays start with you hanging out with some girlfriends?
Yeah.
Can you tell us that story?
I was really depressed because I knew I wasn't doing enough about the climate.
And my friend Naomi Klein had just written a new book about the climate crisis.
And I had the galleys.
And Rosanna Arquette and Catherine Keener and I drove up to Big Sur for the Labor Day.
weekend and I read Naomi Klein's book and I knew exactly what I had to do. I said to my to Catherine
and to Rosanna, I'm going to move to D.C. for I wanted to go for a year. I called Annie Leonard,
who's the director of Greenpeace and I said, I want to come to D.C. I'm going to live in a tent
for a year opposite to the White House and I'm going to raise a ruckus. I'm a little worried about
word of poop because I have camped at 24,000 feet. I mean, I have camped in the wilderness a lot.
And you know what to do with your poop, but in a city. Oh. And she said, well, I don't think you
have to worry about it because it's illegal now. You cannot do that. Thank God. So that's when we shifted
to Fire Drill Fridays. And what did your friends say when you said, I know what I have to do? Because they
were probably thinking, you know, post something on social media.
And you said, no, move to D.C.
We look at maps together and, well, maybe you could be there and we'll come with you and,
you know, all of that.
And then I went and I made an appointment with Ted Sarandos who runs Netflix.
And I said, Ted, I want to move to D.C. for a year.
And I need you to let me out of my contract with Grace and Frankie.
Oh.
And he said, that's so great, Jane, but I can't do that.
I mean, I signed the comments.
So I went for four and a half months and then COVID hit.
It's so beautiful to think about you as a kid.
You were always in the woods.
Nature really always has been.
Yeah.
Would you say the place you feel most embodied?
Yeah.
And now you're working to save the earth.
Talk to us about climate change.
Can you just give us your heart about it?
Oh, gosh.
Well, you know, I grew up in California in the 40s.
and there was never any smog.
You could swim safely in the ocean.
It was so beautiful.
I've swum with sea turtles in the world.
I've swum over the most beautiful coral reefs,
including the Great Barrier reefs.
I've hiked in the most beautiful forests.
I've hiked a much of peach.
I've done all these things.
They're not going to be there for my grandkids.
The coral reefs are dying.
The forests are dying.
The ocean is dying.
Now, the ocean is dying.
ocean is where we get oxygen. Little things called plankton. Phytoplankton in the ocean is what provides us with
oxygen and it's dying because of acidification because of burning fossil fuels and heating up. You know,
we had like 700 whales washed up on the beach dead and many of them had like 80 pounds of plastic in their stomachs.
in the forests that give us the rest of the oxygen, they're going.
I mean, it's the things that are being destroyed by us breaks my heart.
And I've read the science, and there's going to be pandemics coming.
There's going to be, you know, extreme weather events coming.
There's going to be hundreds of millions of refugees that need to find a place where they can live safely.
What are we going to do?
We have to cut our fossil fuel burning in half in seven years.
I mean, it's not easy to do it.
And we're going in the wrong direction.
So that's what I want to feel when I'm on my deathbed.
I want to say I did everything I possibly could so that this incredible planet of which we are an integral part is saved for the young people that are coming up.
I remember two and a half years ago, it was like a lot.
112 here in Los Angeles.
And because of the fires, the sky was brown, orange.
Then I read that birds were falling dead out of the sky.
Birds falling dead out of the sky.
I grew up with nightingales and meadow larks and songbirds, and they're gone.
And they're gone.
And the insects are gone.
You notice when you drive, there's not a lot of crushed insects anymore on the windshield.
There is in Italy because they don't spray.
way we do. We're destroying life on the planet. And I think that there's a way to stop it and to save it.
And so that's what I'm devoting my life to. I do believe what I said earlier that all these things
are connected. So it's a very profound change that we have to go through. Yeah. We need to remember
our bodies. We need to come back to our bodies. And we need to remember, we need to stop being
dismembered as a one human family. We come back together as kin, as one human family. And we
We need to be also reunited with our environment.
You don't have to like, I'm going to be someone who now concentrates on reintegrating my body.
You can do that while you're being an activist.
One doesn't preclude the other.
You know, you don't have to only be that thing.
And we do make a mistake when we say, oh, I have to get my shit together.
I have to be personally before I show up for the world.
We don't have time for that.
We don't have time. You have to do that while you're doing the other.
Yeah, and that's more of what you were saying before. Like, I have to be perfect before I can whatever.
And we've never been that and we're never going to be that. We just have to show up as ourselves.
That's right. You know, we're human beings. We're flawed. And it's a toxic desire to want to be.
It will be nothing but disappointed. I also love what you're doing with the Jane Vonda Climate Pack because it goes to the table where
it's like Hamilton room where it happened.
The room where it happens.
You're getting in the room
and instead of saying,
oh, I wish these rascals wouldn't take this money,
you're saying, well, two can play at that game
and we're coming after folks
who are getting elected based on fossil fuel money.
Can you talk to us about what you're doing?
You know, these two prongs.
One is Fire Drill Fridays,
whose goal is to take people
who are concerned about the climate
and turn them into activists.
that's grassroots and we need millions and millions and millions of them.
But we kept seeing the important legislation isn't passing
because all these damn elected officials are getting money from the fossil fuel industry.
So I should start a pack that brings fossil fuels into the electoral arena
that targets the people who are taking that money, call them out on it,
and then try to get elected the people who say, no, I'm working for the people.
I'm not working for big oil or big corporations.
They're mostly women, mostly women of color, mostly young, and they're all over this country.
And, you know, we're not a pack that's rich enough to deal with the presidential or Senate level.
So it's all down ballot.
Oh, my God, but down ballot is where everything's happening.
Yes, it is.
It's amazing.
I have met the most amazing, brave people who have run for office and most of them won all over the country, and they're the future.
It's like we always think about activism as, you know, that Desmond Tutu quote, that you can only pull people out of the river for so long till you have to go upstream to look who's pushing them in.
Fire Joe Friday is like, we're getting people out of the river.
Like on, this is like grassroots right now.
And then the pack is looking up river and confronting the people who are causing everybody to fall in the river in the first place.
I like that.
I like that.
I'll use that.
I'm going to steal that from you.
Please do.
Do it.
Well, it's Desmond Tutu.
but via,
Via, Lenin Doyle.
Yeah.
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Pod Squad, listen to what Jane said.
She did not say, I have to fix the climate.
She said, on my death, but I want to know that I did everything I could.
It's different.
So we don't not start just because.
it feels too overwhelming because it is not our job to do everything. It is just our job to do our thing.
Yeah. And everybody can do something. And the most important thing is join an organization so you're not
alone. So you're with other people. Yeah. And everybody listening who's a parent who has kids,
I mean, we're all raising kids who are looking at the climate change. Like, what the hell are all of you
all doing? That's right. So important for our kids to see us showing up, not ignoring what they're going
a face in their generation. Yeah. It's so freaking inspiring, Jane. Thank you. Thank you.
We're going into a new year here. Do you have any ideas or habits or anything that you're
leaving behind in 2022? Are you thinking in that way at all yet? Well, I have to get better at not
being afraid of conflict, which probably sounds weird coming from me. Yes, it does. But I don't like
conflicts, so I stay away from it, which means that I don't often talk things out.
the way I should. So I want to try to get more used to talking things out so they don't fester.
Yes. In one of your books, I'm remembering this line where you said, I'm afraid of intimacy.
Intimacy is what's in here. It's easier to be out there. So are you, because this might be familiar to me,
are you good at conflict out there? Like big conflict, public conflict and less good at interrelational
conflict? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Behind the closed doors.
Let there be no conflict.
That's why I'm a chameleon or I used to be to avoid conflict.
Okay.
So, Jane Fonda.
Oh, he wants me to be a bimbo.
I can be a bimbo.
Oh, it's so damn good.
Okay, so is that your hard thing?
I'm in my final frontier, which now that you probably think that's hilarious,
because I'm probably going to have six more final frontiers in the next decades.
Right.
But I'm in doing the work right now of my life.
which is this body shit, and this is my final frontier that I'm in right now.
Would you say your public frontier right now is the planet?
Yeah, and I just, I don't want to, I want to go out feeling that my grandkids will be okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, I do know.
I'm not going to be around to see them, you know, reach middle life.
But I just, I want them to be okay.
So I'll do whatever I can to help that happen.
We appreciate that on behalf of all the grandkids.
And if you could impart any kind of wisdom on those grandchildren of yours, what would be what would you want them to know?
You can be anything you want to be.
Figure out what your dream is, what your passion is, what would make you happy.
Forget about rich.
What will satisfy you and then go for it.
Yeah.
And what you've done, it seems, is constantly forever go towards the thing that breaks your heart.
I have?
Yeah.
Really?
Every decade.
I mean, Vietnam, racism, misogyny, the teenagers in Georgia with the G-CAP, you said that we do, we teach what we want to know.
And your passion became, you know, pushing off teen pregnancy so that girls can have a chance.
aren't these all things that kind of tore at your heart and so you rush towards them?
Yeah, I guess that's true.
Yeah.
I mean, when something feels really wrong to me, I sort of feel like this is narcissism probably,
that I'm going to make that go away.
And I think it's my responsibility to end that war.
It's my responsibility to turn around the climate crisis.
I feel like all the responsibility is on me.
And so I can't stop.
I just have to keep going and working as hard as I can.
I also sleep nine hours a night.
Good for you.
If only more had that mindset, we could actually get some shit done.
So that to me is not narcissism.
That is just mothering.
It's mothering.
It's mothering the world.
It's a good, yeah.
It's mothering the world.
Thank you, Abby.
Jane Fond.
for fuck's sake.
We love you.
God.
Thank you.
I love you too.
Oh my God.
Thank you for this.
You both moved me so much when you came to Georgia and we talked together and really
it meant a lot to me.
Same to us.
Yeah.
We're in your corner forever.
And so many people love your show.
They do.
Unexpected.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They really do.
We also agree that it's unexpected.
We love doing it.
It's because we get to have such amazing.
people like you on who have you have lived. It feels like a thousand lives, but you have taught us
so many freaking lessons, Jane Fonda. Thank you for being on with us. I appreciate you're having
me. I really appreciate it. I hope we can stay friends. Yes. Please. Yes, yes. All right, Pod Squad.
We love you. Okay, Pod Squad, before we go, we want to give the toast again that Abby and I gave
to Jane Fonda at her 85th birthday party for you.
Take it away, love bug.
Okay, so I just have to set the scene a little.
Okay, set the stage.
So there we were where we were on stage.
Jane was to our left.
There was lots of people in the crowd.
Yes.
And it was a beautiful tent.
It's a gorgeous tent.
And this is what we said.
Where did you poo?
No.
There was a tent in the yard of a house.
Yeah.
Connected.
There was toilets inside.
You got me to do this?
Go.
Okay, great.
Hello, everybody.
I'm Abby Wambach, and this is my wife, Glennon Doyle.
See, Jane is my wife's hero.
So I'm going to start this toast while she does the breathing exercises.
She's been practicing with her therapist in anticipation of this exact moment.
Glennon breathes.
Glennon and I have three teenagers.
So we are very, very tired.
This morning at the airport and a long line for coffee.
I looked at tonight's itinerary and saw that this party ends at 10 p.m.
I said hopefully to my wife, Jane's turning 85, right?
Certainly she won't want to stay up till 10 p.m. right?
And time stopped as my wife glared at me with the fire of a thousand burning suns.
And this is what she said.
I said, let me make something perfectly clear.
Jane Fonda has spent her life making 50 films, winning Oscars and Emmys and Golden Globes,
healing trauma, breaking generational patterns, reducing the rate of teenage pregnancy,
working tirelessly for the liberation of women, indigenous people, and all marginalized people,
oh, ending wars, and also saving our planet from apocalypse.
So I'm pretty sure she can stay up till 10 p.m.
Furthermore, if Jane Fonda asks us to stay up till February, we will stay up till February, Wamba.
And then, a lady behind us in line tapped me on the shoulder.
And I turned around, and she looked me in the eye, and she said,
I love Jane Fonda.
And I looked right back at her, and I said, I do too.
And she squeezed my arm and chills ran down my spine.
Because I realized that two women saying, I love Jane Fonda to each other, means something much more than I love Jane Fonda.
It's like a secret code that means I love justice.
I love truth.
I love fiery women who risk it all for both.
It means I want to be like that. I want to wake up in the morning and rush straight toward the most
dangerous, complicated battles of our times to save us all. To say I love Jane Fonda is to say,
I stand on the side of goodness and courage and the people and the earth and revolution.
Happy birthday to the woman who lives her life in such a way that her name has become a close.
clarion call, an ethos in itself, a battle cry. Let us offer a birthday toast with that
battle cry. I love Jane Fonda. And we love you too, Pod Squad. See you next time.
We Can Do Hard Things is an independent production brought to you by Treat Media. We make art for
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