We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Living with Bipolar Disorder: Cameron Esposito
Episode Date: June 5, 2025424. Living with Bipolar Disorder: Cameron Esposito Stand-up comedian, actor, writer and friend, Cameron Esposito joins us for a conversation about being diagnosed and living with bipolar disorder. ...-Cameron takes us inside a manic episode and shares what it really felt like-The beauty and heartbreak of loving someone with a mental illness-What it means to be a witness to your own pain and your life-How comedy changes on and off medication for Cameron Cameron Esposito is a standup comic, actor & writer. A nationally and internationally touring headliner, Cameron has released three specials, including the culture-shifting Rape Jokes, and three albums, the award-winning Same Sex Symbol amongst them. As an actor, Cameron has been seen on Netflix, Max, Prime Video, Hulu & many more, as well as in big budget movies & Sundance indies. Cameron is the author of the bestselling book, Save Yourself, about growing up very religious and very gay and hosted the long-running podcast, Queery.Cameron will be on tour with their next hour of standup in select cities this year before it debuts at Chicago’s famed Steppenwolf Theater in the fall. Cameron Esposito released their newest standup special, Four Pills—about being diagnosed with bipolar disorder at 40 – on comedy streaming service Dropout to broad acclaim; it was featured in Variety, the LA Times and People. 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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Oh my goodness, Cameron.
Okay, Pod Squad, you know our guest today.
We are here with Cameron Esposito.
Cameron Esposito is a standup comic, actor, and writer.
A nationally and internationally touring headliner,
Cameron has released three specials,
including the culture shifting rape jokes and three albums,
the award winning same sex symbol amongst them.
As an actor, Cameron has been seen on Netflix, Max,
Prime Video, Hulu, and many more, as
well as in big-budget movies and Sundance Indies.
Cameron is the author of the best-selling book Save Yourself—freaking love that book—about
growing up very religious and very gay and hosted the long-running podcast Query So Good.
Cameron Esposito released their newest stand-up special, Four Pills, about being diagnosed
with bipolar disorder at 40.
On Comedy Streaming Service dropout to broad acclaim, it was featured in Variety,
the LA Times, and People. So despite all of these fancy, fancy things,
Cameron is also our personal friend. Personal friend.
Yeah, and somebody who wears a sweatshirt. You know what I mean? Just to cash crew neck.
Which is what I do say to people when they say,
what can you tell me about Cameron?
And I say, well, they wear sweatshirts.
Yeah, that's right.
Good, thank God.
I mean, one of my top credits.
But thank you for reading all that.
It's always nice to hear, right?
When you're also slightly like humiliating.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's such an interesting thing.
Cause when somebody reads a bio of my life,
I should be like, fuck, that's amazing.
Look at me.
I've done stuff, but I'm always like,
yeah, thanks.
Yeah, of course.
Yeah, of course.
Of course.
What a nightmare.
Well, it's also like bios read as how many things did this person have to keep doing to try to feel worthy of their place on this planet?
The longer the bio is, the more desperate the God-sized hole is likely inside the person.
Well, I mean, for me, it's also like about cobbling together a living, you know, because
I've done creative work for my whole adult life and I've had success with diversifying
what I do so that I can, you know, support my family and support myself.
And I think maybe that that is something that's changed a lot in the last, well, like during
my time as an entertainer, people kind of used to do one thing, but that is something that's changed a lot in the last, well, like during my time as an entertainer,
people kind of used to do one thing,
but that's not what's expected,
as you both know as bestselling authors
and then also podcast hosts and everything else you are.
It's a different world.
For some reason, people think I know how to do
a bunch of stuff, but I don't with no training.
So that's fine, I'll do it.
Absolutely, I'll sign that contract
and figure it out as I go.
That's right.
That sounds romantic.
I think people used to have like,
you know, I think they used to go to acting school
or whatever.
I think they still do.
I think some people still do.
Do they?
I've heard that people go to writing school.
I think so.
They go to writing school, they learn how to write.
Yeah.
Yeah, they go to writing school,
they go to acting school, They go to acting school.
They go to directing school.
Yeah.
Or you just have bipolar disorder
and you're like, I can do anything I want.
Okay, speaking of.
Yes.
We had a funny text exchange the other day
where I told you I don't know anything
that's going on about your mental problems
because my mental problems are such
that they cause me to be very narcissistic in dealing with
my own mental disorders and keep me sometimes from looking outside. So a lot has been going on with
you. Here's what we know about this. And then we want you to tell us everything. Although we
did watch your special, which we absolutely loved and we will get to. Oh, thank you.
What I know is you went away to film a movie.
TV show.
A TV show.
Sorry, a TV show.
Yeah.
Very big TV show.
What was it called?
Everyone loved it.
What was it called?
It's called Million Little Things.
It's a big network drama.
It's on ABC.
You can watch it on Hulu now.
Right.
And you had a big part in this big fancy show.
And then you went away.
That's correct.
And some shit went down
and I don't even know what that shit was.
All I know is that for a while,
your partner who we love was staying at our home.
We were just tending to each other's hearts.
Fast forward, here we are.
So can you tell us your version of what went down
and explain to us?
Yeah, I mean, this is sort of what,
for folks who would like to have an experiential understanding
of a manic episode and what bipolar disorder is like,
this is what the special is about.
And it's also something that happened in my real life.
So about three years ago, so I did get this job,
I got this big job like four and a half years ago
or four years ago or something.
And it was very exciting.
I was hired to not just be on a network drama,
which was outside of my training and perceived skillset,
but also the character was meant to be like an attractive,
sort of sought out person. And you know, I had,
I've been on TV a bunch and there's like a comedic, I like the person that's like walking
through the background being like, or, you know, doing standup or being on a panel. So I was
expected to be funny. And I was expected to be a little funny in this show. Like there were funny
things written for me, but I was also expected to be able to, you know,
be emotionally present and cry and then hold space
of being somebody that, you know, ABC's owned by Disney.
So it was like Mickey Mouse is like,
you're attractive enough to be a queer person
with short hair on television.
I found that very overwhelming
because that's not necessarily feedback
that I'd gotten previously in my life.
And also this was during the pandemic and I was living in Vancouver,
so the borders were very difficult to pass. And I just am giving this whole
background because I was really isolated and noticed this increase in energy and ideas
and ideas and risky behaviors that persisted for like 18 months, which is an extended time to be in a state like that.
And yeah, my wife was staying with you, Katie, who we love, eventually, because I think it
just got really scary.
You know, it really got scary.
And after trying to talk to me about what was going on,
she eventually realized that she needed
to just take care of herself,
which I so respect what awesome behavior.
And also it gave me the motivation
to take myself to rehab.
And so, you know, we can kind of pick up the story there,
but rehab is the best.
And I got diagnosed with bipolar disorder
shortly afterward and am now medicated
and have been living with this new understanding
and also this like really positive shift.
And that also makes my job a little more difficult to do.
That's it.
Tell us about the diagnosis.
So one thing I love about the special
is you can feel it the way that it's filmed, the way that you do it.
You can actually feel.
The goal, the goal was achieved it sounds like.
I agree. I really think it's achieved.
I thought it was very cool. Very cool.
Feel the mania.
You can feel it.
And then the depressant.
Yeah. You go back and forth.
I was like, ah, ah, ah.
Yeah.
But can you explain to us what that feels like?
Like my dream for this episode would be
that somebody would be like, oh yeah,
like feel seen in this.
So tell us what it feels like
when they asked you what the checklist,
how does one know that one might have bipolar?
There's actually not that much
that you can read or digest about this experience, at least
that I could find.
You know, it's like there's like four things, right?
And so when I first was diagnosed, and this is special, but like I met with a psychiatrist,
got like 100% on the diagnostic test, which was a series of questions.
And I was like, okay, and we could talk more about what those specific symptoms are.
But the thing that I'll say that really stuck out to me
was the phrase goes through life as if driven by a motor.
And when I first read that,
I did not understand what that could possibly mean
because I've always just been living inside my own brain.
And I did know that in my life,
people had had a hard time keeping up with
me.
I didn't think that meant anything.
I think I thought, what is going on with everybody else?
Like, get on my level.
But being medicated, I feel that I'm having an experience that's a little bit closer to
what might be a normative set of brain chemicals. And I'm shocked to understand
the difference in energy and thought patterns. And this is just, the goal is not to be cured. So
like, it's not, I'm not going to have this massive change, but even just this understanding that
people can slow down.
I used to, for my whole life, I would use this phrase, I'm very calmed up.
I just didn't know how to describe it,
which nobody has ever said before,
but I'd be like, I'm just very calmed up.
And I think, you know, the thing that the goal
with a special, because I think when we talk
about mental illness, it's like so vague and there's so much distance.
And because, you know, I do this job that's words,
it's like, it's just a description.
But the really cool thing about being able to film it
that you're alluding to is that the special sort of starts
with some camera angles that we're used to,
a bit of something a little far away.
And then over time it progresses to these shots
that are like up the nose while I'm on stage,
which are meant to be like a little stressful or exciting.
And then it eventually cuts to me alone
wearing the same outfit, but it's all white
and the room is all white. And that's intercut with the showroom.
And it really is meant to show the audience,
like the stasis that somebody with bipolar disorder might be in.
And then what it feels like to get very excited and sort of be out of control.
And then the other side of that, which you're right is depressive,
but it's also medicated.
Because what I hope it feels like
is the performative part of myself has dropped out a bit.
And I'm kind of experiencing life with myself,
which was previously impossible for me to do actually.
What does it feel like to be propelled
by a motor all the time?
What is a day being propelled?
Is the motor mania and how does that manifest in a day?
What was it like for you?
I think sometimes it was mania and other times it was just like, you can be
somewhere on a spectrum between people who have more depressive tendency and
people who have a more energetic or manic tendency.
And I'm on the more energetic or manic tendency side of things.
So, I mean, what life has looked like for me over the, I mean, when I first started as a comic,
the goal is like, you basically stay up all night
and then get up in the morning.
And all night you're running around doing like five shows.
I lived in Chicago at the time,
I would ride my bike everywhere with like a backpack on
and two bottles of Pepto Bismol
strapped into the water bottle pockets on either side
and like do five shows and then
get up in the morning and be a nanny and be really able to be present with kids because
again they're actually full of energy. Or right out of college I had two jobs, one working
professionally at a school, one working professionally in comedy and I worked 80 hours a week. Like
not 80 hours a week on my own, but like in community, you know,
at a theater and then at a school,
which requires so much energy.
And then later, as I started to go to bed earlier,
it meant getting up at like four or five in the morning
and having 97 ideas for, you know,
things I could do in my business.
And then when this like particular episode
was really intense, I was going to like two
or three hot yoga classes in a row.
Just to try to-
Calm up.
Yeah, just to try to calm down, right?
Just to try to be able to sit still.
That is extreme.
I don't know if you've ever done hot yoga,
but it's like meant to exhaust you.
Yes.
And I would do a class that was like yoga-based
and then I would do a class where it's yoga-based
and you're doing weights.
And then I would do a class where it's like yoga-based
and you're doing bar stuff.
I mean, that's too much.
It's like way too much.
Yeah, like in the yoga studio, were they like,
so two is probably our limit.
You know, I think that-
That's wild.
When you have different teachers, you know, and
like the, when the front desk staff turns over. It's kind of like how I used to go to
different convenience stores to buy my wine. So nobody knew that I was buying the same
bottles. But I mean, even that, it's not like I thought this was weird or like I was trying
to hide it necessarily. I think I was just trying to cope.
Yeah.
And I was also like doing things like smoking weed,
like anything that is a depressant
or anything that deescalates,
I was adding stacking on top of each other
and still like had almost no need to sleep.
It was wild.
It's like being stuck on a roller coaster.
It's like very fun at the beginning.
And then like, that's the thing,
going through life as if driven by a motor.
I think I felt like a passenger sometimes,
but I didn't know that.
Is that thought this is what we're all doing.
Right.
You know, I don't know.
I mean, earlier in your lives and behaviors
you've had, did you identify at the time that those behaviors were unusual? Were you able
to do that? When you said in the special that they gave you a list of symptoms and then
they were your personality, that is the experience that I had even just my recent anorexia diagnosis. Like when they sat across from the little Zoom
and read the list of symptoms,
I had a very, very sad destabling moment,
not just because I was being diagnosed with something,
but because I thought that all of those things
were what made me who I was.
I thought I made up those things,
that they were my personality.
And to have them just completely pathologized was a very strange experience.
I really related to that.
No, I just thought that was life.
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That is so helpful to me to understand.
You talk about this in the special, but like one of the crossovers I see between you and
mine is that we both had disorders whose symptoms are often celebrated by the particular culture
we're in.
Yes.
Okay?
So nobody says to me, you know what, you're just a little too thin, a too disciplined.
That's not something our culture is going to say until you're dead.
So for yours, having a million ideas, like having so much energy, being able to do 80
hours of work is in some ways a capitalistic dream.
Correct.
What was the negative feedback?
What is it like for somebody to be partnered
with a person who's stuck on a roller coaster
and not in charge of the movement?
What were you getting from your family, friends?
Yeah, I mean, yes, that is a big thing that is true
is that of all the mental illnesses,
bipolar disorder is the one where people will take these huge risks.
They'll become inventors. They'll go to space. They'll become politicians, really successful
musicians because the identification of risk is the lack of identification of risk is a part of
it, which is so interesting. So people that might take these risks
where other people are like,
I don't know how you could possibly start your own business
or have this kind of idea.
It's just not like have the same relationship to risk.
And you're right also to point out the,
I totally understand and relate to
in terms of eating disorder pathology
that this is something people love.
I mean, like look at fucking TikTok or whatever.
Like if you get trapped in the wrong algorithm,
you know, I also had a very active eating disorder
in my teens and TikTok knows that, you know,
cause that's based on like the amount of time
that you might pause on a particular video.
And I've had a couple of times where like my algorithm
went very far in the direction of like bodybuilders.
And I was like, oh, I am still like telling on myself
to a conglomerate corporation who might be whatever, you know
and that was really interesting to find out.
And you know, to answer your question about friends
and family, I think that one thing. And you know, to answer your question about friends and family,
I think that one thing that, you know,
my wife, Katie and I,
you saw some of the things that she was experiencing
during this time.
And I think like in terms of fear or worry or hurt,
you know, and pain.
And I think the big thing is that I wasn't there
for 18 months of our marriage.
I mean, a manic episode, you can forget what happened.
I mean, there's certainly things I remember,
you know, there's certainly things I was present for and just chemically not being present.
That's been, I think, the biggest thing to work through in our marriage is that she remembers
and lived through some things that I lived through in my body and mind.
It's not like it was, you know, it was challenging on my end, but she like was there physically and spiritually in a different way.
And maybe that's true for sort of anybody that has a partner that might have any sort
of addictive issue, even somebody who's going through extreme grief. their experience of life is locked into a chemical brain altering experience that, I
mean, you mentioned narcissism earlier. It's like just this abject focus on self that I
think happens to so many of us. And then for the partner, it's like, well, okay, I guess
I'm just alone either temporarily or permanently in this marriage.
And so, or even just as if, you know, in this relationship, this
parental relationship, so how do I cope with that?
Do I still want this person in my life?
Am I willing to wait around?
Am I, you know, I think that's, I think that's a huge, huge question.
Do you relate to that?
I saw you have a reaction.
Yeah.
And it makes me feel for all of the people
who love anybody who struggles with mental health
in any way, because there's like the time
when it's all a mess and you're all dealing with it,
like it's a battleground.
And then maybe the person recovers
and the person who was there and witnessed all the mess
still walks amongst debris that the other person doesn't even know consciously exists.
Totally.
And that person loves and is so forgiving and so beautiful and knows that that person was quote, gone.
So can't blame the person for it.
And yet, that remains.
And that person holds it alone.
It's really incredible.
Everyone I've ever loved, I'm sure has experienced that.
Yeah, I mean, it's interesting because I've gone through,
just recently my brother passed away
like a year and a little bit ago
and I've been through recovery
and a lot of my experience
was so important to have a person in my life, like Glennon going through
this last year, of witnessing me. It's this weird thing that like I kind of know that
like I'm not all the way here. Like I'm partly in heaven. I'm partly trying to reach a different
realm in a way through this grief. And so
I can imagine when you get back to your house and Katie's, your wife has moved out. I can
imagine you'd be like, okay, I have to go and get help. I need this help in a way because
she was like your witness to this unfolding
in a lot of ways.
And I guess what I want to ask is like,
at the time you didn't know bipolar was the thing.
Maybe it was drugs and alcohol.
I don't know exactly what brought you to the rehab.
It's just like, you were like, something's not right.
That was it.
Okay.
I just knew something was not right. I could like feel it in my chest. I felt like I was going to. That was it. Okay. I just knew something was not right.
I could like feel it in my chest.
I felt like I was gonna have a heart attack.
And that's what it was.
I was like, this cannot be right.
Like this is not, this cannot be right.
But I also didn't think I needed to go to the hospital.
Yeah, and you know what I wanna add
to what you just said also is that life is lonely and
life is also powerful in this experience that we have, I think in any relationship where
I had this wild experience over the summer that I think you two are a little bit aware
of because I think you texted with Katie during this time, but I got super sick.
I got like this wild foot infection that turned into a whole body infection
and like almost killed me.
And when I was the sickest, I had a contagious infection.
So I had to be downstairs in our house alone.
And Katie and my mom, who was living with us at the time,
could come down with like gloves and masks on
and they couldn't really stay down there.
And I had that, it was like an incredibly freeing
spiritual experience actually,
because the witness to this was me.
Like I was the one who was there with me.
And I think I thought that like, you know,
it's this thing of like, we come into this world
and we leave this world alone.
I think that that loneliness,
it's like a huge fear of mine, right?
Abandon, alone.
And you know, I think what I realized is that I am such good company
and such a strong witness to my own experience.
And I think that's also true for anybody who loves,
I guess what I'm trying to say, Abby is like,
your brother dies, you are the,
like Glennon is the witness and also you are the witness,
like the sole witness, right?
Because we can't totally share that experience
with someone else. And the same thing like the soul witness, right? Because we can't totally share that experience with someone else.
And the same thing for eating disorder recovery,
someone can watch that and be there with you
and that growth can come in a relationship.
And also like at the end of the day, going to bed,
it's like this very powerful experience of,
wow, I was there with me.
I didn't know, I hadn't really tracked my life that way.
And it was like life changing,
actually, to be like, oh, wow, that is so cool. Because I get to carry that with me.
God. It's that moment in the special where you're like, people have always asked you how the hell
you stand up on a stage in front of all of these people. And you're like,
how the hell do you sit in a room by yourself?
Totally.
Yeah, I did not have access to that.
I did not have access to that.
I mean, literally look at the job I chose.
Like kind of like you said earlier,
I just chose a job where,
I mean, and I look at the time in my life
when I really started doing standup professionally,
because I had done improv.
And improv is like, I'm a goofy penguin.
You know, like it can be really fun, but you're really fun but you're not like having it's a different thing when I started doing stand-up
I had just come out my family was freaking out because I was raised so Catholic you know they
were really worried I was going to hell an actual place with fire you know and I had told like one
friend that went terribly.
And so then like the next thing I decided to do was like,
okay, well, what if I just tell hundreds
and thousands or thousands of people at the same time?
Like that like somebody's gonna be into this.
You know, and I also was so afraid
of that interpersonal rejection that I buffered myself.
You know, if you're on stage, you always get to win.
You kick people out. You're always funnier. You know, if you're on stage, you always get to win. You kick people out.
You're always funnier.
You're literally amplified.
Everybody else is supposed to shut up.
You know, it's like the best plan.
If you're like, don't reject me, you know?
And so I love that I chose this job that like saved my life.
And now medicated and older and, you know,
in this beautiful marriage with supportive friends, I get to
do the opposite, which is, yeah, like talk to people without microphones.
I mean, we're talking to microphones now, but if we weren't, that'd be okay too.
Yes.
How is that going?
It was so, my favorite part of the whole special is you discussing how you chose to be medicated, which has meant
that you are present with yourself, but you believe is making you not as good of a comic
or harder for you. Tell us all about that. It's fascinating.
Yeah. Thanks for asking about that. It's interesting. I feel like I'm just a different comic and I would be interested to hear sort of your experience with this as well, both of you.
Well, I mean, for me, the medication that I take, it causes brain fog and cognitive
delays and that is weird. It's a weird experience. I'll be talking about something I'll be mid
sentence. I have no idea what the fuck I was talking about,
which is actually a difficult symptom to have
if you're a standup comic.
Fair.
And also I have found that audiences are okay with it.
Like I will have notes.
I will just openly ask, what was I talking about?
And then people will want to jump in
and it's kind of a fun thing.
It's like Madlib,
we're building it together because I know what to say next. I know how to interact with the audience
but I can't do it by myself the same way that I used to. And I even have had the experience of
like sitting on a stool now as opposed to pacing the stage. People like this transformation.
Like, people like this transformation. I suppose maybe, like any artist,
I could just treat it as evolution.
But it is fucking hard when something you've been doing
for 20 years is just now different.
I mean, did, in terms of the podcast,
I mean, I guess maybe there's two moments,
transitioning from being a writer
to a podcaster. You know, I don't know how that felt to you or transitioning from experiencing
life one way, getting this new diagnosis, and then you're talking about your life in
a different way.
Oh, I relate almost precisely to what you're saying, because for me, it's been a little
bit different in that mine has been
from going to being completely dissociated all the time.
That's how I survived public life in any way.
I was never present, ever.
I memorized things.
I mean, when we first met,
Abby walked into the little gym we had,
where I was, I had written down all the answers
to everything anyone would ever ask me
on the Untamed year long, every TV show, every whatever tour.
I wrote it all down.
Then I read every single answer.
Now please understand also the ums
and the moments where I would pretend I was in the moment.
Wow.
Okay.
Memorize them.
Oh, then I would read them into a phone.
And then I would get on the elliptical for hours with my own voice in my head,
memorizing these things over and over again.
So by the time I had to hit a stage or a TV show or anything, I was not there.
I sent a talking doll on and I would pull the string
and she would say the things.
And so that is how I protected myself.
I was an incredibly sensitive, very introverted person
who had to become a hologram of herself.
And so I just became a hologram.
Wow.
So what also helped me with that was all my medication.
So I have had the absolute reverse experience of you.
I have had to unmedicate myself.
Because of my unmedicated being, I cry all the time now.
I am unable to perform, which makes a segment or a minute, I can't do it.
I can't not be embodied,
which makes me much less successful at marketing myself.
Makes me much less to nail a talking point,
to nail a thing.
I can't nail anything anymore.
I mean, I will beg to differ on that front.
But I can be human.
I can be human.
Like every time I'm watching a movie and I start crying
or I'm in a, I feel like the Tin Man from Wizard of Oz.
I'm like, oh, I have a heart.
Oh my God.
This is so interesting.
I mean, look at our little sneaky ways.
Good job.
Cause I was on tour with you.
I saw you take questions.
So good job.
Sneaky.
Good job with those ums.
Yeah, yeah.
Sneaker Rooney. For me, you know, as you're saying, it was such an opposite
experience. Because I, for me, I think what I've had in my life is like
eternal presence on stage. Because there's so much stimulation from an
audience from lights from the requirement to speak for an hour
and give people their money's worth, it's like perfect.
It's like a perfect thing.
And there's like some loss there
because that's the thing I can't,
I can do it in a different way.
I can have this presence where I'm being vulnerable, right?
But the magical chemical presence is limited
by my mood stabilizers.
And yeah, again, it's like, I love a coping mechanism
that lands us in the right place and helps us survive
until we hopefully heal that a little bit.
But like, what a fucking genius move.
This is why musicians and comics that have this brain chemistry
then put themselves in this position, because it's like, it feels right.
It's like the only time it was like, you're like so locked in.
Like, actually, what I'm saying is, do not give me any questions in advance.
Don't literally never.
I mean, have never gone on stage with things written down
in full sentences, not one time I write on stage.
So like eventually everything's memorized,
but I don't start with jokes that I've rewritten.
That's never been true.
But like, what is that presence?
Is that you?
That's the thing.
That's what I'm trying to get at.
And what this special is like-
I see what you're saying.
Morphing this idea of like,
okay, but like, who is Cameron?
Because presence to me means,
and that's just what it means to me right now.
Changes all the time.
But it means I'm just gonna decide
that however I am in this moment is good enough
and that there's no performance tied to it.
So what's the difference between stage presence, this magic you're talking about, and like
the presence you feel when you're sitting with a good friend and you're not proving
anything to anyone and you're not performing.
And can you not perform and feel alive?
Sure.
I mean, I think something that really helps me is like going to the gym, things like that,
in terms of getting some of that locked in.
I think when I'm with friends, I actually just kind of feel relaxed most often, which
is weird.
I don't really know how to process that experience.
And so I'm like laughing and stuff and like having a good time.
And in terms of like making life worth living, I think that, you know, it's odd, right?
Because I don't think of my brain as separate from me.
Like this is, those chemicals are me.
Everybody has chemicals that are them.
And it's, this relaxed feeling is, I think what life is.
It's just that I get access to this other,
I mean, it's drugs.
We all do drugs.
We don't know what we're doing, right?
When we have like a really amazing meal
or like even capsaicin,
which is like the active ingredient in hot sauce
is like actually addictive.
Like it lights up our addiction centers
and then you need more and more hot sauce.
Hilarious, right?
I did not know that.
Yeah, true. I'm actually in withdrawal right now. I love hot sauce. I knowious, right? I did not know that. Yeah, true.
I'm actually in withdrawal right now.
I love hot sauce.
I know, I do too.
I'm in withdrawal right now.
We don't have sriracha,
and the last two lunches that I've had have been like.
This is recovery, you're in.
Yeah, it's like, I don't know that I need to remove
all that from my life, right?
And the chemical thing of relaxation and downtime
is beautiful.
It's just that like that hyper-presence thing.
I think it's actually also spiritual to be honest,
like all the chemicals,
because I say in the special that mania releases
in the brain the same chemicals as cocaine.
So I don't know.
Like I said, my medication doesn't cure that experience.
So that will just always be part of my life.
And I don't really know what other people are doing.
Right.
I don't know. I want to touch something that you talked about, that there might be a loss of the performer
that you used to be.
And how are you handling that now in the place you're in?
I mean, what would you call the place that you're in right now?
Because are you in recovery?
Yeah, I mean, I guess I would just say I'm receiving appropriate and helpful mental health
care and medicated.
You know, I'd say things like that.
I guess, you know, I mean, again, this is a symptom of bipolar disorder, but it is so
hard.
You know, shifting like it is so hard.
Shifting like that is so hard.
And I like when things are hard.
So when I think about my life,
I must've signed like a contract
before my little soul was sent down here
because I have been afforded a lot of opportunities
for learning and I happen to be open to that.
Not always at first, maybe kicking and screaming,
but also like, fuck yeah.
I mean, I just, I don't know.
I guess I move in that direction
and then the next thing unfolds.
Does that make sense?
Yep.
That's how we live our life.
Yeah.
It really is.
Kicking and screaming and then like, oh, oh.
I always think about that.
I'm like, I am either in a very remedial group or a very advanced group.
One or the other is the batch I'm from.
I don't know.
I signed some sort of contract with the universe.
I believe that.
And I love it.
I wonder what will happen the next time I'm here.
It's like, I'll just be like, this time I get a break.
You know what I mean?
Like the next time I'm away,
I don't want to learn anything.
I want one job.
I want to marry young, you know,
like Steve and Kristen forever.
I don't know, maybe that's what will happen.
But yeah, this time around, I chose like hurdles. That's the, that's the track and field specialty that I currently have.
So do you still want to keep going hard?
Like in different ways, I just have a brain that wants to learn again, like it, this is
just like chemically what's happening. So like for instance, I'm gardening a lot right
now and poor Katie is like about to lose her fucking mind. She just to tell me like, we're not allowed to talk about gardening after this time of night because I, I've been like
identifying all the plants that are around our house or in our neighborhood. And then I plant
stuff and they're like, stare at it. One of our neighbors doesn't love us so much. And I think
part of the reason is that they think I'm looking in their house often, but I'm really just looking at their garden.
And I realized I had to move on.
Move along.
That's the thing about bipolar too, right?
Is like having these big interests that soak you up completely.
What else? Give us another little, you might be bipolar if.
Okay, sure. So some of the symptoms I've had that are very funny.
Yeah, so too much confidence.
So do you notice you're way more confident
than some of your friends?
Huh, I wonder.
Religious fervor is one.
So have you started your own cult?
And then like, again, business risk.
Are you trying to go to space
and also take over the government
through your friendship with the president?
Just something to wonder about.
And charisma is one,
you get some feedback about having a lot of charisma.
How much do you sleep? Three hours? Then you get up, you put a lot of charisma. How much do you sleep?
Three hours?
Then you get up, you put a headlamp on, you go garden.
Again, I think my neighbors are like,
what is going on over there?
Whatever.
So yeah, those are some of the symptoms for me.
And God, what other?
Oh, I mean, another one that is very, very other, oh, I mean,
another one that is very, very common is hypersexuality,
which we don't talk about a lot and again,
is rewarded in this culture.
So that can just kind of mean, like,
are you like presenting yourself in a sexy way
more often than most people?
Do you have a high sex drive
that everybody you're in relationship with comments on?
Things like that.
If you're going to space
and you're taking over the world
through your relationship with the president
and you also have 24,000 children.
Oh, fuck!
I forgot about that detail.
And by the way, I will just say, I'm not, you know,
we don't call somebody, but this
particular person has said that it was said to him that he should get checked out for
this thing.
He said that publicly.
So then when he said that I said, huh, well, huh, hmm, huh.
But there are also so many people that are open about this that, you know, you can like look
at the creativity or at least I can and I really like, Chappell Rhone is really open about this and,
you know, the creativity, but also the like exhaustion that she talks about around public
appearance, things like that. You know, that hyper presence can really take a toll. I also find that
I have like auditory sensitivity. So it's like hard for me to be in like planes
are a fucking nightmare for me.
So thank God I chose a job where I have to constantly be on the road.
Why is it like that weird hum that gets you?
Remember in the special when she said during the movie,
she has to get up like 12 times to investigate a noise that's like six streets away?
Also, like, can I tell you, this is the honest truth,
and you're not going to believe this,
but like, you know the headphones
that they pass out on a plane, right?
They're like not the headphones people bring.
And then people use them
for the in-flight entertainment system.
Do you find that you can hear everybody's headphones?
No.
Like I'm talking about, are you ever on a plane
and you go, what is somebody watching
20 aisles back from me?
Wow.
And you can't stop paying attention to it?
No.
Wow.
Because I didn't think-
That's great.
That's terrible.
So it's like helpful.
I take a little extra medication now and wear sunglasses and like a low hat and noise canceling
headphones and that helps me to be in an environment like that.
That's incredible.
But it speaks to the other thing you're talking about, which is like, it's not
there's something spiritual about it, too.
I'm not saying that it's real.
Like this hyper presence that's connected to everybody else's hyper presence.
This thing you're breathing through the roots and then the other people in their
trunks, which you just have to watch. There's more going on. There's something going on here. You're breathing through the roots and then the other people in their trunks,
which you just have to watch the special.
There's more going on.
There's something going on.
Yeah.
But it's real.
Absolutely, I absolutely think that that is true.
Well, you know, obviously you both know that I
am so interested in philosophy and spirituality
and organized religion from like a study perspective.
And it was said to me when I was an undergrad theology major
that God is between, you know,
there's no like God without between.
And that also is something that really stuck with me.
And again, just in terms of some of the opportunities
I feel like this too many brain chemicals has afforded me.
One is, again, if you're having hyper presence
and you're really feeling that between in such a real way,
that is spiritual, it's very cool.
It's why people meditate.
It's like why we even go to group fitness classes
and all that stuff.
There's so much to community
and I feel like that's something that this has afforded me
is like just a little extra
awareness of that experience.
And again, sometimes it's too much.
And then when I'm like murder everybody
for their extremely low headphones
that they're listening to.
But yeah, I mean, is that possibly what we're all doing here
is attempting to be connected?
Yes.
I'm curious because like,
was it hard for you to accept this diagnosis?
Or was it a relief?
Yeah.
That one.
Yes, you were like, oh, this is,
cause you're like, I know this moment very well,
which is like something's wrong.
I don't know what it is.
And then somebody hands you what it is
and it makes you feel such a relief that somehow feels
like oh it's not just all my fault it's a thing. The all my fault thing is pretty intense right
because there are some decisions that I've made in my life that had some pretty big consequences
on other people and what I can do is take responsibility for those decisions and stay medicated and stay with supports
that I don't make risky choices
that scare the shit out of other people or hurt them.
So that's one thing is like attempt,
because guilt and shame, that doesn't really help anybody.
Nobody that I feel guilty toward is like,
oh, thank God now I have this like person
who has an albatross
around their neck that will make eye contact with me.
You know, I think we can, well, at least for me,
I've just been attempting to turn that into
being a mature adult and taking responsibility.
The fuck was I talking about?
Was the other question?
What, that it was a relief?
That it was a relief to get the diagnosis.
Oh God, it was such a relief.
I've had this experience two times in my life
when I realized that I was queer.
And then when I got this diagnosis,
where it was just like, oh my God,
finally some like help and understanding.
Prior to this, I did know there was like something.
I was like, am I on the autism spectrum?
I just didn't know what it was.
But yeah, this has just been, it's like been so awesome.
Also because, well, I guess the final thing I'll say
is that it also gives me some relief in like
the things in my life where I couldn't keep something going
that somebody else, like I got too excited about a job
and then that excitement didn't necessarily help that job
or I couldn't handle the particularities
of a particular friendship.
And so then that friendship went away.
And I think when I look back at my life,
I also think, oh, stuff was like kind of hard for me.
And then I can have a little bit more, it just helps.
That's great.
The special is gonna help a lot of people
and it's the good kind of help,
which doesn't feel like help.
It feels like entertainment, good fun.
It doesn't feel like help.
You nailed it.
Thank God, thank God.
It's accidental help.
It's like you got a big candy bar
and somebody just sneaked a teeny bit of broccoli
in that you can't even taste.
That's it, you know, like that's the thing, right?
Why do we have humor?
What is the point of comedy?
And it is definitely to like just inject a little bit
of knowledge and understanding in some other bullshit
that hopefully is giggles, do some giggles.
Well, more than anything in that docket
made me happy to hear that you're laughing,
that you're like literally having a good old time,
like good old chuckle every once in a while.
You're laughing, I'm crying.
This has gotta be the right direction.
It's the best.
Yeah, it's the best.
Well, I guess that's what I'm saying,
like by feeling a little more relaxed.
I don't know if that's what you're also describing.
I don't know.
I just also, I look, go into every room
and be either trying to punch everybody
or seduce everybody or top everybody
or make everybody laugh.
It was just like, dude, come on, man.
So now, sometimes I laugh at other people.
You're with, you're between, you're doing the thing.
You are among.
Also laughter is a sign of submission.
Like even in our monkey mind,
when primates are submitting, they show their teeth.
And when we're laughing, we're like just, yeah,
we're allowing that we're gonna be with,
we're like allowing somebody else to be funny.
We're crying, again, submitting to feelings.
And like, do I need to be the boss all the time?
Maybe.
But I don't think that's helpful to me.
Yeah.
So good.
We love you.
Can I ask you one more question?
Please.
What does it feel like to cry?
Well, for me, it has always felt like
I had like a dam inside me.
Like I could feel something welling up,
but then there was like this wall that shut it back down,
which I appreciate it.
Like when you say a thing you need until you don't need it,
for me, it's usually I have a thing
that is a survival technique for me
that eventually tries to kill me.
Like that's what it is.
Yeah man, for real.
And if it didn't actually try to murder me,
like if someone didn't sit me down and say,
you're about to die, I would never get rid of it.
So I have been lucky enough. Absolutely.
So we call it maladaptive.
To have those moments several times in my life
where a professional has said, so here's the thing.
The thing you're using to save your life is the murderer.
It's my favorite thing about this realm of my recovery.
I feel like when I cry now,
like in front of my kids, like they can't believe it.
It just happens all the time and they've,
they've been my kids for my whole life and
they've never seen it. And so it makes me feel seen. It makes me feel like, oh, I see
crying is the way that other people get to see our insides and what moves us and what
moves us is who we are. So nobody was ever allowed to see who I was because nobody ever knew what was moving me.
So it feels like there's a part of me that thinks,
oh, nobody's known me until now
because they can see on my face and my body
what is moving me from the inside,
which is a lot of things it turns out.
Right.
So it's exciting.
It's a version of being with myself, I guess.
I love that.
Abby, are you good at crying?
Yes.
Yeah, I can cry.
I mean, I can't cry like on the spot,
but when something feels sad or joyful or wonderful,
the tears are just, I'm the crybaby of the family.
But Glennon, it's been really interesting to watch
because like from my perspective,
when she started crying, I was like, oh my god, what is like the world is ending.
Something is really wrong in there. But it was just like she was just having a moment.
So we've all got used to it. It's good to know you.
Yeah, I hear you. I mean, this is I love that. I'm so happy for you, Glennon. And you know,
I'll say that it's just really too much, right?, this is, I love that. I'm so happy for you, Glennon. And you know, I'll say that,
it's just really too much, right?
Cause this is my second marriage.
I loved my ex-spouse so much and we're friends now,
and also we're both comedians.
And so we connected by like basically having like a frown on,
but like being extremely funny back and forth.
And what an awesome gift, right?
Like for somebody that was being understood only that way at that time, on but like being extremely funny back and forth. And what an awesome gift, right? Like
for somebody that was being understood only that way at that time, I feel so much gratitude for
that. And it's like a public experience. And then one thing that I just wasn't able to do is like
have a private experience the same way. And so that's really, you know, what is different in my marriage now a lot because of my availability.
And like, we laugh so much at home.
Did you know you can make jokes at home?
Who is even listening?
There's not even an audience, it's not even recorded.
We're goofing around.
It's just the two of us, our dog in here, nobody else.
What a waste, Karen.
What a fricking waste.
What am I supposed to do with this? How do I sell this? Yeah, yeah. What is this, Cameron. What a frickin' waste! What am I supposed to do with this?
How do I sell this?
Yeah, yeah.
What is this, happiness?
What is the monetary reward?
All righty.
Okay, everybody, go see the special and we'll talk about it offline, because you're going
to want to talk about it.
We love you, Pod Squad.
Cameron, thanks for this.
Yeah.
I absolutely loved this.
Thank you so much. What a beautiful interview, and thanks for everything thanks for this. I absolutely loved this.
Thank you so much.
What a beautiful interview.
And thanks for everything you've shared.
You're the best.
You're the best.
See you next time, Pod Squad.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
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