We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Secrets to a Joyful Life with Ina Garten
Episode Date: October 1, 2024350. Secrets to a Joyful Life with Ina Garten Ina Garten – the iconic Barefoot Contessa – shares her best life and business advice and her tips for how to host a successful dinner party. Plus, th...e details behind an unforgettable night with Abby, Ina, Taylor Swift, and beer pong; Discover: -Ina’s surefire way to silence the inner-critic; -Why satisfaction has everything to do with not settling; and -What the key to having a fun dinner party can teach us about life. About Ina: Ina Garten has hosted her Emmy and James Beard Award winning show, Barefoot Contessa, on the Food Network since 2002 and recently launched a new interview focused series, Be My Guest, with Food Network and discovery+. She has published thirteen cookbooks, including eleven #1 New York Times bestsellers. In 2015 Ina Garten was named one of Time Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People. She lives in East Hampton, New York with her husband, Jeffrey. Her new memoir Be Ready When the Luck Happens is available now. 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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Hi.
Hi.
What a pleasure to meet you.
I am Amanda.
Hi, Amanda.
So nice to see you.
I know Abby. Hi, Ina. And so nice to see you. I know, Abby.
Hi, Ina.
And let me just say, I can't believe you remembered that incident. I will always remember it,
but that you remembered it was amazing to me. And Glennon, it's so nice to meet you.
Thank you. It is such a delight and an honor to meet you. We've been so excited about today.
We've been talking about this for like six months, right?
Yes. Yes. Yes.
So here we are. Thank you. Today is the day that we are joined by Ina Garten. Ina Garten has hosted
her Emmy and James Beard award-winning show Barefoot Contessa on the Food Network. I'm like smile. I'm
so smiley. Get your shit together, Glennon, on the Food Network since 2002 and recently launched a new interview-focused
series, Be My Guest, with Food Network and Discovery+.
She has published 13 cookbooks, including 11 number one
New York Times bestsellers.
In 2015, Ina Garten was named one of Time Magazine's
100 Most Influential People. She lives in East Hampton, New York, was named one of Time Magazine's 100 most influential people.
She lives in East Hampton, New York with her husband,
Jeffrey, who we love.
Her new memoir, Be Ready When the Luck Happens,
is available today.
Ina, thank you so much for being here today.
It's so much fun to see all of you.
Where is everybody?
You guys are in California.
Yep, us too.
And Amanda, where are you?
I am right now across the Long Island Sound from you. Oh, you're in California? Yep, us too. And Amanda, where are you? I am right now across the Long Island Sound from you.
Oh, you're in Connecticut?
In Connecticut.
Yes.
Oh, great.
Okay.
So I'm waving to you over the bed.
Well, I'm in New York, so I'm closer than you think.
Nice.
Nice.
We wanted to start, I need to tell you, I know that my wife is the most wonderful person
in the world and since she's had such a beautiful,
interesting life, she likes to tell stories
about that beautiful, interesting life.
And so sometimes she tells the same stories
over and over again and it's just a thing we know
and love in our family.
And don't we all, I love those stories.
I'm always teeing Jeffrey up. Can you tell that story?
And he goes, you know the story, but I love to hear him tell it.
Oh, she's nicer than me. That's so nice. I'm like, don't tell it. We've already heard
it. Yeah. Okay. That's nice. I'm going to get some more. I know. Okay. That's the key
to 60 years together. Right? Exactly. Okay. Noted already. I'm sorry. I interrupted you. No, you should have. So recently
someone asked me of all the stories that Abby retells with the most frequency, what is the
story she tells with the most frequency? Okay. And I didn't even have to think about it. I said, it's the story about Ina Garten
and Taylor Swift and beer pong. And so when we read, because honestly, you know how folklore
happens and you hear stories over and over again, you're like, not even sure they're
true.
No pun intended.
True. I can tell you this happened.
Can you tell us the story?
I want to hear it from Abby's point of view.
Oh great.
Because I know my point of view.
Yeah, so this is in 2015.
The 1989 Taylor Swift tour was happening.
But that wasn't the important thing.
The important thing is that you just won.
Yeah, we had just won the World Cup.
And so we were kind of in, we were, our whole team is in New York City
to do ticker tape parade and to celebrate and do
like the car wash of all the news media outlets and so Taylor wash that's what we call it yeah
you just go now we've never heard it yeah you just go from each station network to the next
anyway so Taylor invited our whole team to come to her concert to celebrate and to also come on stage and celebrate.
And what did you think when that happened? That's a good question. I don't know. I was,
I was out of my mind. Let's just say that in terms of just celebrating the World Cup and
finally like accomplishing the goal. And of course to get the invite from Taylor,
the thing that impressed me the most about Taylor
was prior to the actual concert,
the folks that were gonna be going on stage
all had to go backstage.
And she does like a circle up with all of her dancers
and her band and everybody.
And she included our whole team in this circle.
It was like a huddle.
Of course she did.
And you wouldn't believe the kind of leadership
this woman was commanding.
I was like ready to go to battle.
I was ready to go fight for any, it was incredible.
She was incredible.
The concert was incredible.
And she was 25.
Oh, gosh.
I mean, how she had the presence and the grace
and the humility and the leadership at the
same time is just, let alone the talent, is always stunning to me.
I know.
She's a huge idol in our house.
One of the most beautiful things about this night is after the concert, she held this
little party.
I don't really remember how this happened, but it was like all the tour buses were like in circle. It was huge. It was all the equipment was brought in 16 wheelers. They made
an enormous circle around the parking lot and inside the circle she invited everybody that worked
with her and her friends and people that were there to be part of a party. After she did her
concert, she joined a party every night. It was just extraordinary.
Anyway, and that's where we were. We were in that circle. It was a huge circle around
a parking lot.
And you two had been connected how? Did you just win a World Cup?
To Taylor?
Yeah.
It's actually so sweet. Food Network Magazine, Miley Carpenter, who's the editor in chief,
decided that she was going to have an issue that was rock stars
and their favorite Food Network people. And Taylor chose me.
Aww.
Which was just so, it's just like, I mean, to be chosen by her is just, as you know,
Abby, it's just an incredible thing. And she came and we did a photo shoot together.
And I just decided, I didn't want to just stand there with her. I wanted to do something
with her and they could just get a picture of us having fun together. And I just decided I didn't want to just stand there with her. I wanted to do something with her. And they could just get a picture of us having fun together.
And I decided we would make a pavlova,
which just reminds me of Taylor Swift.
It's this gorgeous meringue creation
with whipped cream and fresh berry.
I do it with berries and raspberry sauce.
And we assembled the whole thing together.
We had the most wonderful time
and took two huge big serving spoons
and just dove right into it.
And it was just one of the great photo shoots
I've ever had in my life.
And of course, because you know how Taylor is,
she's just extraordinary.
And we ended up connecting.
That's how I connected with her originally.
Yeah.
And you're being humble because they reached out to Taylor
and said, who we want you in it, who do you want?
And she said, I want Aina because Aina is my hero.
So you are the hero of her.
And we're going to circle back to this because you're, I think it might be, you know, the
way we're talking about Taylor and her leadership and the way she does things and the fact that
you're her hero and you have always done things exactly your way,
even though everyone's telling you that's not the way to do it. And so did she. And I just think
there's a thread there. But circling back to beer and pop, where it all began. So here we are in the
middle of all these trucks. And what I remember is so loud. There was a band playing and there was
music. I know there was some kind of music.
It was really loud.
Yeah, so after the concert, my whole team,
we kind of usher into this little barricade
of 18-wheeler trucks.
And we're just having fun and there's like ping pong tables
and they've got solo cups to play beer pong.
And if you don't know this, beer pong is a game.
Their cups are put in a billiard form, like formation,
and you have a ping pong ball
and you're supposed to throw the ping pong ball into a cup.
And if you get the ping pong ball into the cup,
you have to drink the liquid in the cup.
So up you walk to the table.
This is in my memory.
So my team is there and you walk up and Ina,
I am a lover of food and I love to cook.
And so Barefoot Contessa,
you have been kind of a friend of mine
for a long time prior to actually meeting.
Oh my God.
The way that you present and cook food
and the way you talk about it,
and just like your
softness and your voice makes it so inviting to like actually want to entertain the idea of even trying to cook. So I just want to like lay that groundwork from my perspective. You have
really enabled like a real love of cooking in my life. So up Ina walks up barefoot Contessa walks with shoes on.
And, and you kind of just came up very curious,
like what are you all playing?
And I just said, oh my gosh, we're playing beer pong.
You know, I think I invited you to play
or somebody invited you to play.
I'm like, let's go.
I probably threw whoever was on the game, like one of my teammates off.
I'm like, you're off.
Ina's in.
Voted off the island.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Somebody else here.
We got the A team right now.
Exactly.
And you were drinking, I think, white wine in my memory.
And I was drinking beer and PS I'm sober.
I've been sober pretty much since then.
I think, but you were trying to figure out how to play the game.
And so I was explaining the rules to you and probably doing a terrible job.
And so what did I say? You can, you can quote me here.
So I'm going to tell you from my point of view. So there was obviously there was
beer pong. There was all kinds of things going on.
There was music and food and everybody was having a great time. And one of my friends said to me, who was with me, said,
let's go play beer pong. And I'm like, I've never played beer pong in my life. I don't even know
what it is. And she said, Oh, you'll be fine. You'll be fine. And dragged me over there. And
I'm standing there. I had a vague idea how you're supposed to do it. And, and you came over and I'm like, Oh my God,
you said to me, I'm going to be your advisor. And I'm like, Oh my God,
Abby Wombeck is my strategic advisor. This is so great. I was like, out of my mind,
I thought I'm going to nail it. And you said something because it was so loud. I couldn't
hear you. You screamed something. And I was like, what, what did you say? And you said,
get the fucking ball in the fucking cup.
That's your advice?
I just love that.
So much for strategic.
That's all you need to know.
That's not helpful actually.
Does that sound right Abby?
It's exactly right.
It's not, especially if it was loud.
I just got to throw a few fucks in there.
And it may be the story I've told the most too.
So I'm so glad you remembered it.
I thought I'm going to tell you this story and you're not even going to know who I am.
Oh no, I remember it.
It sounds good.
It was great.
And one of the other parts of the story that we're kind of omitting here,
but I think is really funny is Taylor walks up to our table and she says
Abby Wambach is playing beer pong with Ina Garten. This is like the most amazing thing I've ever seen
sort of thing. She was dumbfounded. I don't remember that. Yeah. I actually remember she must
have been with her brother because I remember Austin being there and going, am I watching Abby
Wambach and Ina Garten play beer pong?
Yeah, yeah.
So the two of them were...
Yeah, yeah.
Isn't that great?
It's like a fever dream.
Yeah, really.
It's like one of those dreams where nothing makes sense.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Anyway, it was a great night.
It was a great night.
It was really an extraordinary time.
It was the best.
It was really fun.
Bringing so many cool things together.
I love that story. When I got to that part of the book, I was like,
oh, this is amazing. It's true. Abby wasn't lying.
I think that's how we all were. We were like, oh, I think this story is actually true.
Yes. Yeah.
I might embellish a story here and there.
I'm glad they trust you.
But I am not a liar. I'm not a liar.
I love it. I love it. Well, that, thank you for blessing us with that story.
I want to ask you, so much of your book was just, oh, like it's such a delight and it's such an
inspiring, it just makes you want to be like greedy about life. Just going after everything
that is delicious in life. And
it was just such an invitation to do that. And you also have really, you're really honest
in the book about a lot of things that happened in your life that were not easy. And you had
a very relatable ritual with your dad where every day he would say, what did you accomplish
today? He did.
And the interesting thing about that is that if you said
something that also related to something you enjoy,
he would say that doesn't count.
Like it could only count as an accomplishment
if you hated what you were doing.
If it was what he thought I should be doing,
not what I thought I should be doing. not what I thought I should be doing.
So if I won a tennis tournament and I knit a fisherman knit sweater, my father would
go, no, no, no, that's not an accomplishment.
That's something you wanted to do.
But if I got an A in organic chemistry, that to him would be an accomplishment.
And I just, I didn't understand why what you love doing couldn't be an accomplishment.
Yes.
What is okay, because his idea accomplishment is like self-denial struggle.
Your whole life has seemed to be like proof of the opposite, that you can have
something, go after something you love and enjoy.
And in that pursuit, you have this like mountain of accomplishments and build
this empire.
So what how did you adopt that opposite life philosophy?
I think that we all need one person who truly sees us and believes in us.
And that wasn't my father. My father had a road map about what you should be doing with your life.
And nobody could deviate from it if it wasn't exactly
what he thought was the right thing to do.
It was all about appearances and accomplishments.
And then I met Jeffrey and Jeffrey saw who I am, knew what I love to do and said to me,
do what you love to do.
If you love it, you'll be really good at it.
And the point is that if you love it, you're going to do it a lot.
I don't have to force myself to go to work in the morning. I love to go to work in the morning. I
can't wait to go to work in the morning because I'm doing what I love to do. Whereas if I was,
you know, as I was working in the government originally, I hated working in the government.
Nothing ever happened. I was doing what my boss told me we should be doing, not what I thought
we should be doing. And it was, I wasn't risking anything.
It was just a safe job, which to me was just boring.
And so I think that's the difference.
My father's philosophy was rigid and for appearances,
and Jeffrey's philosophy was personal, do what you love.
And he always encouraged me, just try it.
Just try it and see how it works.
It's not about a goal, it's about enjoying the process and about figuring it out along
the way.
What a relief.
You know, it's what I always call it, jump in the pond, splash around, see what's good.
If you don't like it, get out of the pond, but at least you've tried it.
And then once you're in the pond, you can go, oh, that's really interesting over there.
I think I'm going to try over there. And you move in that direction.
And eventually you end up in a stream,
which as a friend of mine says,
the stream carries you along.
And you're not knocking against the riverbanks,
you're in a stream that's really where you belong.
And Jeffrey really set me in that direction,
which I am enormously grateful to him for.
When you try to make sense of your parents, which I don't know if you do that, but most
of, I guess, civilization does, do you think he denied himself throughout his life and
that's why he was trying to pass that down?
Where do you think that came from?
I think it was a very 50s view of the world.
I think it was Dr. Spock that you did what the parents told you to do, that they set
the rules rules and it
wasn't about the kids. It was about what you thought was appropriate. And my mother didn't
connect. So she only had rigid rules about what she should do as a parent and what I
should do as a child. There was no, what would you like to do today? Or what would you like
to have for dinner? Or there was none of that. It was, she decided what I wore to school, what I studied, when I studied,
everything was very rigid.
So I don't know really if my whole life
has been a rejection of that,
or I would have done this anyway,
I just had a false start with them.
I don't think they were bad people.
I think they just felt that we should do,
as kids, we should do what they wanted us to do.
And that's not how I work well.
If Jeffrey wants me to do something, he says, whatever you do, don't do that.
He knows I'll go do it immediately.
Yes.
Yeah, it's a secret weapon.
It's a secret weapon.
Like, definitely don't make the bad lova for me right now.
Exactly.
Definitely don't do that.
So you're figuring out as you go along, you are in this very responsible, very impressive, and for the time, like quite progressive situation where you are a married woman living in DC
working as an analyst for the nuclear energy budget.
It was for the Office of Management and Budget,
which is the group in the White House
that writes the budgets for all the agencies.
And I was working on nuclear energy budgets.
How crazy is that?
So, NBD, just a little nuclear energy budget, you know, non-consequential.
A starter job.
And a starter job, really.
Yeah.
I was a waitress.
It's a starter job.
Ford and Carter, you know, it's an entry.
Get your foot in the door.
So you're 30 years old.
You are?
I was 25.
Yeah.
You're 25?
Oh, when I was 30. When I was 30, I was 25. Yeah. You're 25? When I was 30. When I was 30. Right. So when you're 30,
you and Jeffrey, great DC jobs, you have never been to cooking school, you have never been to
the Hamptons, you don't have experience in retail, and you look on the back of the New York Times,
and there's a tiny little ad. Tiny, tiny little ad.
Tiny little baby ad.
No reasonable person would answer.
And it is advertising a 400 square foot specialty food store in West Hampton, New York, which
is very far away from DC.
Tell us what happens.
Well, I saw this ad for a business for sale and I thought, God, that sounds like fun.
They used to have businesses for sale in the New York Times where they would advertise
like dry cleaners in the Bronx.
There was an ad for a frozen yogurt shop.
Nobody had ever heard of frozen yogurt.
That probably had no future at all.
I saw this ad for a specialty food store and I thought, well, that sounds like fun.
And so I went home and I said to Jeffrey,
I really need a new life.
This government stuff is you, it's not me.
And he said, just pick something you love to do.
Just pick something and don't worry about
whether you make money, just choose something.
And I said, well, I saw this ad for a business for sale
and I just think it'd be really fun to work in
a specialty food store.
And he said, let's go look at it.
I don't know if he thought he was humoring me or if he just thought that's what I should
be doing.
So we drove up the next weekend, we looked at the store.
It was tiny, there was nobody in it.
It was a town that was basically closed for the winter.
It was the beginning of April.
There was nobody
around. And I walked in that store and they were baking chocolate chip cookies. And I
thought, okay, this is where I need to be. I just, I have no idea why. And we made a
very low offer thinking, you know, she'll come back, we'll negotiate. We drove back
to Washington. I thought, we'll think about this.
And then as you know, on Monday morning, she called me in my office and said, thank you
very much.
I accept your offer.
And I just remember thinking, oh, I think I just bought a specialty food store.
I mean, it just happened like that.
It was just crazy.
And two months later, I found myself behind the counter of a store that I owned that I
didn't know anything about.
And I mean, I did it in a rational and slightly rational way.
I made a deal with her that she would stay with me for a month to teach me how to run
the store, which I thought would at least give me some grounding.
That's smart.
Very smart.
I mean, part of me thought, how can I possibly leave this great job in Washington, all my
friends, my husband, and just pick myself up and move to this place I've never been
before to do a business I've never been in before? And part of me just went, I have a
low threshold of boredom and I was done with my job and I thought, okay, I just have to
jump off a cliff and I'll figure it out.
And little did I know that it'd be like the beginning of a path to where I am today talking
to you.
I'm sitting here thinking, wow, your courage and willingness to trust your impulses and your desires is so huge to your entire trajectory.
And also the ability to live in a space where it's like, don't worry if you make money.
Do you have any advice for people who are like, God, I'm craving to go after what I
want, but I'm not in the position to be able to be like not having to worry about making
money or is there any room for like building some of that want into our daily lives if we're not
able to choose something dramatic?
I think everybody can have, everybody has an idea about something that would be great
to do. But we stand on the side of the pond going, oh, it's too cold. There could be things
in there. I don't know. There are these unknowns, and we talk ourselves out of it.
And it could be as simple as a hobby.
We just go, well, you know, I remember Jeffrey saying,
you know, I'm 20 years old, 25 years old,
I'm never gonna learn how to,
it's too late to learn how to play the piano,
which seemed too scary to him.
And yet, you're not.
I mean, I think when you're a kid,
you do stuff that you think that you can fail at
and learn.
It'll take time to learn.
But as an adult, you don't do that anymore.
You don't take chances because the failure is too scary.
I think I was just incredibly bored.
And I'm amazed at looking back now at the courage I had to do what I had to do, because
what was in my head was what my mother always told me.
You think it's a good idea, but it'll turn out badly. And I had to overcome that,
that message that I got over and over and over again to do something that was out of the norm.
And yet I was able to do it. I just was incredibly compelled to find something I love doing.
And this is what Cecily helped you identify, right?
Yes, exactly.
That that voice in my head was my mother's, not mine.
Yeah.
And she taught me to replace it with my...
That was many years later.
Right.
That was 10 years later.
I realized that I had to replace that voice.
And that voice is never going to go away.
That voice is always with me. But I always have to remind myself, no, that's not your voice. Everything you've
done, I tell myself has turned out better than I could have imagined. And my mother's
voice says it's going to turn out badly. It doesn't. I just have to reiterate that over
and over again, because we're stuck with what was put in there when we were really small.
You still hear that voice in your head?
And then what do you do?
Do you just say like, hi mom?
No, I say something else beside my mom.
You know what I do?
It's funny, because I have this little,
I think when I was about 13 or 14,
my father said, nobody will ever love you.
And I walk up Madison Avenue and somebody just
leans in and says, I love you. And it happens all the time, which is so lovely. And I always
say to myself, he was wrong. So I just have this kind of like, oh, wrong again. They were
wrong. I just have this little cosmic joke with myself that they had a view of who I
was that was just completely wrong. And I've replaced it with who I am.
And, you know, when something good happens, I always go,
wrong.
That's so sweet because it's not like based in bitterness.
Like your response to this doesn't have any kind of bitterness
coated into it because I could find myself being in a family
where I felt like I had to prove my worth
and to try to win love,
I can sometimes find myself getting into the bitterness
track. So it's so beautiful to just notice when they were
wrong, rather than associating it with any like kind of,
I'm doing this in spite of you, bitterness kind of thing.
It's really beautiful.
It's freedom.
Thank you.
I mean, I can go on a rant about my mother. Sure, who can't? Can't we all? Oh, you're so unique in that.
Jeffrey always says, if he wants to think about something while we're having a conversation,
he would always say, so what would your mother think about that? And he knows I'm off to
the races. He's buying himself some time. Exactly. That's actually a good thing.
You're right, it's not bitter.
It's almost ironic.
Yeah.
You know, there's this wonderful quote that I talk about in the book that is attributed
to George Lucas.
We're all living in cages with a door wide open.
And I think it's so beautiful because we have the ability to get out of that cage.
But a lot of us are afraid to because it's what we know.
And I think my parents lived in cages and I just feel really good that I got out of
that cage.
I just want to flag as an excellent psychological activity, Jeffrey's question.
If you're trying to make a big decision, it's probably a good idea to ask yourself,
okay, what would my mother or my father or whoever whoever voices you're trying to escape, think of this?
Then you can get that out.
Then you can ask yourself, what do I think of this?
That's really good.
Because sometimes the voice feels like what you think.
That's right.
But if you can get it out as this is what she would say,
then you can be free to then bring yourself, right?
Oh yeah.
Yeah, that's cool.
Very cool.
So your dad thinks you're never gonna be loved.
And here you are 60 years later,
still with Jeffrey, 60 years.
This is a love story for the ages.
The internet loves y'all.
You are like, hashtag, what are they?
Hashtag couple goals?
Is this what, this is everywhere?
And I have loved y'all for a long time.
And after reading your book, I love you even more because you were so brave to talk about
your separation and your separation gave me, it made it so deep and real and it made me respect you so much
because during a time when I don't think women were doing that a lot and even now, like you
took time away because you needed proof that things would be different. You needed something
to hold on to. What was it and how did you know? What did you need?
Well, I think I went from my parents' house
to Jeffrey's house at a time when women were wives.
We had roles, men had roles, women had roles,
and we were expected to follow them.
And of course, Jeffrey, being of the time,
expected that too.
And I just always fought against that kind of cage.
It's funny, it was scary at the time when I said I just needed fought against that kind of cage.
It's funny, it was scary at the time when I said I just needed time on my own.
But when I look back now, I think it's even scarier
because when I think about what I could have missed,
if that hadn't turned out well, it's frightening to me.
But he was so kind and he said,
if you feel like you need to be on your own,
you need to be on your own.
And he even supported that, which made me think, am I crazy?
But we figured it out.
We figured it out and we came back together, changed, both of us.
And I think the rest of our life would have been very different if I hadn't done it.
And I think we're both happier.
Isn't it true though, that you could have missed the other way too?
Like if you hadn't been brave enough to challenge it,
you might not have the relationship with Jeffrey that you have now.
No, I wouldn't.
You wouldn't.
And I was changed by it and he was changed by it. So I would not have had the relationship.
You know, it's like a little piece of sand in an oyster. If something's bothering you,
you don't fix it. It just gets bigger and bigger and bigger and it just damages the
relationship. It comes out in different ways ways and I think we were very honest with
each other and we figured it out which is wonderful. What do you feel like you
figured out? I figured out who we were. I mean Jeffrey said to me that he was in
the State Department. He worked for the Secretary of State doing policy work and
writing issue papers. he felt that because
he was the husband that he didn't have the freedom to travel as much as he wanted to
with the State Department.
And he figured out that, and I said to him, no, you need to do what you want to do.
And just because we're husband and wife doesn't mean you can't do whatever you want to do.
We'll figure it out.
And, I mean, there were years when he lived in Tokyo and we figured it out.
We went back and forth between Tokyo and East Hampton as unlikely as that
sounds, but we figured it out.
He just has this view of the world that we just, each of us has to decide what
we want to do and we have to figure out how to do both of them.
It's not like we do what you want to do or we do what I want to do.
We have to do both things and we'll
just work out the details. And I think we got out of traditional roles that we were supposed to play
and it was, it's really satisfying. Satisfying. This is something we've talked about.
You're another thing your dad used to say is you'll never be satisfied. And I wrote to you about
this because that's the last thing my ex-husband said when he walked out the door was you'll never
be satisfied. I mean, if you look at someone who's gives up a really, really good DC job
to buy a little shop a lot of states away or who risks a really good marriage to take a separation,
one view is that someone who will never be satisfied.
What do you make of that?
What a good question.
Casting women as unsatisfiable.
I think what my father was talking about
and maybe your ex-husband is we didn't want
what they wanted us to have. It wasn't that I wasn't
satisfied with things. I wasn't satisfied with what they wanted. That's right. I'm always satisfied
with doing what I want to do. And I think that may have changed now. I don't know. I don't know
about other people's relationships, but I think that's what they were talking about. Does that
sound right to you, Amanda? It does. It's, you won't settle for what I'm offering
is what you will never be satisfied. Yeah, exactly. How about we have bigger ideas than you do?
It's so true. And we want to use our creativity and our ambition and our drive to do what we want
to do, not what a guy wants us to do or anybody.
It doesn't matter who it is. We want to do what we want to do. And we've created the structure
so that we can do that. And that's what's satisfying is to challenge ourselves.
Yeah. It almost makes you understand a little bit. I feel like we were all raised,
we were all little girls who maybe our parents sensed
in us a biggerness than what they thought was available to us in the world. If you're raising
a little Ina and you are a rigid person who's looking at the world and thinks there's only a
handful of things available to your daughter and you sense in her a bigness and a desire and a big life force, you might spend all of your time telling her,
you will never be loved if you stay like this. You will never be satisfied if you stay like this.
You can't do what you want. You have to do what... Like, it's almost like understandable when you're
sensing a big spirit inside a structure that is very limited for her.
It's really helpful.
That's really smart. I never saw it that way, but I think you're absolutely right.
Me too.
Because I always thought I tamped it down, but you're right. You'll never be loved if
you continue to try and do too much. Yeah, that's really smart.
I know. That was kind of healing for me also. Like, yeah, that's right.
It's fear.
It's scared.
Like parents with a big energy girl would be like, oh shit.
And also remember, I mean, in all fairness, we were really, I certainly was a transitional
generation.
I was in the beginning of, I mean, Gloria Steinem was writing when, you know, Ms. Magazine
came out when I was that age.
And there were movies then like Jill Kleberg
as an unmarried woman, is that what the name of the movie was?
So women were really trying to break out of the mold
at the time.
But you know, most people still lived in the 50s
and that was their world.
And they thought if my brother was brought up to be a doctor
and I was brought up to be a wife,
even though I had to have a great education, I had to do all the same things,
but at the end of the day, their goal was that I'd be a wife.
And that's not a goal.
That's not...
I mean, it's nice to be married to somebody you love, but it's not a goal. Have you always known what you want?
It seems like all of this beautiful thing that you're able to build is based on this
very underrated skill of
clarity of knowing what you want.
Because you're like, I want to go for what I want.
But what do you think it takes to know what you want?
Because I think if you ask a lot of women, what do you want, that would be a baffling
question.
I think that's a really important question.
And the answer varies.
I mean, I remember somebody,
a therapist saying to me, what do you think would be fun? Because I didn't have any,
I wasn't having any fun and I remember saying to her very clearly, a convertible and I mean here
I am, I think 40 years later, I still have a convertible. So I could identify those things
very clearly. But other things, when I sold Barefoot Contessa and set up an
office for myself having no idea what I was going to do next and actually thinking it
might be that my best career was behind me, I thought maybe I would never figure out what
to do next.
You're 51 at this time.
I was 50, 51.
50, 51.
Okay.
And then I didn't know what to do. Jeffrey said to me, you love the food business, just do it a different way.
And I thought, well, people had asked me to do a cookbook.
I didn't think it would be interesting.
But I thought, well, at least it would be something to do.
And I'll do that while I figure out what to do next.
But one of the things that I do is I'm doing something I tend to swing for the fences.
So I got a proposal accepted.
I thought, well, let me just see if I can
do this as well as I can do it. I hired my own publicist. I hired my own photographer.
I just hired people myself so that I could make the decisions. I didn't have a publishing company
telling me how to write a book or telling me how to photograph it. I just wanted to do it my way.
And it was a very expensive decision, but Jeffrey was totally behind it.
And it worked out really well.
So I didn't think I knew what I wanted to do next.
I just started doing something and tried to figure out how I could make it enjoyable and fun.
So that's more of a process.
And it's everything in between.
You don't always know exactly what it is, but just start.
Just start doing something that would be interesting and that will lead to
something else that's interesting and that leads to something else. But when I
look back as I said, I'm amazed how brave I was about doing something that I had
no idea whether I could do it or whether it would be interesting, but it just kind
of tweaked my interest. And I like solving problems. So having it something very difficult,
as you all know, we can do hard things. And those are the things that are really satisfying
that make your life. It's not the easy things.
And one of the hard things you had to do throughout this and that you had such clarity with with
all of your projects, like you were heading into unknown territory,
you'd never done a cookbook at 50,
you had not made a TV show,
and you're going into these new industries
and the people are telling you, we're the experts,
this is what we do for a living, you do it this way.
Over and over they're telling you the book,
they designed the book for you,
they said, no, this is the way to do it,
and it didn't feel right.
The same way they wanna do the TV show,
it didn't feel right, The same way they want to do the TV show it didn't feel right and you kept pushing against it
and they said it's gonna be a disaster. Not so much. Turned out to be pretty good.
It turned out okay. Tell us about that because that is scary. When you don't
know anything about an industry other than knowing yourself, how do you
navigate that?
I have to tell you, I don't know where it comes from.
When I started writing a cookbook,
having never written one,
and I always think if I had gone to the bookstore
and seen how many cookbooks there are,
I would have thought you're out of your mind.
But I just wanted to write the cookbook
that I wanted to write.
Maybe it's from my childhood.
Maybe I was always this way, you know, nature versus nurture,
who knows?
I just hate somebody telling me what to do.
I absolutely hate it.
And so when I started the process, I thought I'm going to write a cookbook, but I'm going
to write the cookbook I want to write.
And I don't want anybody telling me how to do it.
And so I did it on my own terms.
And when somebody tried to tell me something, it's not that I would say, no, I'm not doing it. And so I did it on my own terms. And when somebody tried to tell me something,
it's not that I would say, no, I'm not doing it. I would, like my editor wanted the design
to look like a certain thing. And I said, look, it's not about whether you win or I
win. Let's find a design where we're both happy. And he just refused to let go control
of it. So I found somebody who said to him, just get out of her way, let her do it.
My second editor, after I worked with her for a year,
I said to her, I wasn't so difficult to work with, was I?
Because I'm sure my first editor thought
it was just impossible.
And she said, you were absolutely great.
And the one thing I needed to know is,
when your obsessions kick in, just get out of the way.
And I loved that about her.
So, I mean, she got it.
She got that I
needed to make my own decisions.
You're talking about negotiating with your editor. If there's a way for you to get what
you want and me to get what I want. You are a ridiculous business woman. I mean, this
is something that like everyone loves you as a human, as a voice, as a cook. I'm obsessed
with you as a business woman. And I feel like part of your clarity of knowing what you want
hones your ability to know what other people want, which makes you negotiating magic. Like
you were able to figure out things and settle lawsuits and cases that like entire law firms of people
couldn't see their way through because you're able to see a way through.
Can you please for the love of God teach us your magic of how do you, because this is
a revolutionary kind of, I would venture to say a woman centered way of like, I can figure
out how to win without you losing.
I have to give my father a lot of credit in this. When I was a kid, the only thing that we would
talk about is he liked to do real estate deals and my mother hated it. So he would call me into a
study and say, talk this deal through with me. And I think it came from him. I don't think I made
this up, but I really believe it is when you're negotiating with somebody, figure out first what they want and figure out how to get what you want and
what they want at the same time.
So everybody walks away feeling like they won.
And it's so often not about money.
It's about something else entirely.
But in business deals, it's very successful.
How do you practically do that?
Because you've gotten people to sell you things that were absolutely 100% not for sale.
How do you actually, do you say to the person, what do you need?
What do you want?
Or do you just put yourself in their shoes and imagine it?
Or do you develop a relationship and find out that way?
How do you know what they want?
And tell us a story about that. I'm thinking about two different deals that I did. and imagine it, or do you develop a relationship and find out that way? Like, how do you know what they want and need?
And tell us a story about that.
I'm thinking about two different deals that I did.
One, where the seller told me what he wanted.
He wanted to sell the property in five years.
And I needed to buy it today,
because I needed to build a barn there where I could work.
So I knew what he needed, and I knew what I needed.
And I figured out three options for him
so he could choose whichever worked best for him.
And that worked.
And I just was kind of hunting around for what would,
while we were talking,
I was hunting around for what would appeal to him.
And it turned out that he said,
one of my options was I buy it from you today
for 10% more than the value of the property."
And he said, actually, that works for me.
And so we did that.
And so I got him what he needed, he got me what I needed, and everybody walked away feeling
like they'd won, which is the way I want negotiations to be.
I don't want people feeling like they got used or they got a raw deal or they got manipulated
into something.
I want people to feel good about it.
There was another where I was buying a building
and the man was asking for a lot of money.
He was a real estate investor.
So my idea is that he wanted to feel like he made a good investment
when he bought it three years before and then he made a lot of money on it.
I didn't have any money at all.
So I didn't know how I was going to buy this building.
So I made him a deal where I said yes to his price, but I would pay him in five
years and that he would give me a mortgage for the five years until I could go to
the bank and borrow the money and pay him off.
So he got what he wanted, which is that he could tell his friends, I sold this
building for so much money and I got what I wanted, which is that he could tell his friends, I sold this building for so much money.
And I got what I wanted, which is I could buy a building with no money.
It worked out great.
So, I mean, you have to be creative about how you talk to somebody, find out what they're interested in, what's important to them, and then figure out what you want.
And there's very often a solution. I mean, what a realtor once said to me,
make an offer, make a low offer. It doesn't matter if you don't have the money to buy something, make a low offer. What are they going to do? Call the police?
And it was such a great thing to remember. And every once in a while I make a low offer on
something that I either don't think is worth what they're asking or I don't have the money for it.
And every once in a while it works. And they say yes,
because they just want to sell the property.
Cool.
And I think like long-term too,
I firmly believe in that kind of way of negotiating
where if everybody feels like they're walking away,
a little bit of winter,
that is universally like,
you're sending out into the universe that kind of energy.
And so that's the energy
that's going to keep coming back to you. It's like this
karmic force. And I believe this is partly why more women need to be in leadership positions,
because the more we have women having this kind of mentality, the more peace we will bring,
the more unity we can bring to a very divided situation we might find ourselves in.
So I just love it.
And I'm gonna start doing this.
We're gonna start doing this.
It's the opposite of how I do things.
I know.
Hey!
I love you.
How does it change how you do things?
Like what was the negotiation that didn't work out
that you think might've been different?
Oh shoot.
I don't know about an example right now,
but I think I tend to go into any like negotiation or argument with a very
defensive, fearful. Oh, that's very interesting. Like, um,
protective. This is, it feels like a zero sum game.
And this is changing. I'm afraid I'm going to get screwed. Yeah.
This is changing for me now.
I can feel myself going into that energy more,
but I think it's about the voices in my head too, that are not mine.
But I'm just starting to figure that out.
If we go into a negotiation and we're a little insecure,
we feel that we're going to end up being one down from the person we're
negotiating with. And very often you don't want to be.
And I think the best deals that I've made are the ones where I don't really care if
it comes out fine, if it doesn't come out it's fine too.
That's a key.
That's your energy right now.
That is a key.
It's not feeling like it's life or death or that your identity or your whatever is tied
up into it.
The best situations I've been in recently are ones where I'm like, this would be great
if it works.
And if it doesn't work, there's great stuff about that too.
And that's sort of a very powerful position, I think.
How many times have you negotiated to buy an apartment
or a house or something like that, and you didn't get it?
And then when you did get something, you thought,
oh, thank God that deal didn't happen.
So I always feel if a deal falls through,
I always think, okay, I'm gonna find out what's next
and it's gonna be better. And I going to be really grateful that it fell through.
I come from evangelical Christianity and our dogma is basically if it rhymes, it's true.
And so we always said rejection is God's protection. And like that one might be true. I think is
often true. I heard a rock star say it recently as no just means new opportunities, which doesn't
rhyme so that's probably not true and Jesus would not approve.
But that has played out as very true in my life.
I spent so much time thinking about your book.
You go from this rigidity where your mom thought that like food was strictly for sustenance.
It's kind of like your dad's.
You can't enjoy things that are achievements.
And if there was any kind of joy associated with food,
it almost like negated the nutrition.
It cannot be both.
It's just that one thing.
And then you came to food with this idea of like,
you're expressing love through it.
But also what I think is so freaking cool, and I've been thinking about this from my
life perspective, is that like, your recipes are not about, they're about the food, but
they're really about the party.
They're like, yes, because if you, you can make something impressive, you can spend all
your energy and be totally stressed out
and have something impressive.
But then when you present the thing that's impressive,
you have nothing left of you to give,
which I feel like is the way I've lived my life.
I'm trying so hard to be impressive
and present a dish that's beautiful
that I have missed out on the opportunity
to connect with my company and to actually be at the party. Like tell us, tell us about, I feel like your whole life and all
of your food is that. Just how do we be at the party better? What I did when I wrote Barefoot
Contessa Parties was talk about what works and what doesn't work. And I mean, I just love to do
dinner parties. I love to invite people over. I love that connection.
And I love to cook for people.
I love to cook for people I love, I should say.
Yeah.
I started to look at what I do and why I do it.
And I realized that you can make a perfectly delicious meal
that everybody will appreciate and feel taken care of
and nourished and connected with.
And the more low key the meal is and the less
exhausted you are, the better the party is. Because people just subliminally feel uncomfortable if
they feel like you've worked yourself to the bone. And as Nora Efron once wrote, I'm just
paraphrasing, if you answer the door and you're like exhausted and your hair's on fire, people
feel terrible. They don't want to feel like you've like given everything to make dinner for them.
They want to feel like it's a good restaurant.
They greeted at the door.
You're happy to see them have a drink.
Let's sit down.
Let's talk.
Not like I can't talk to you now because I have something in the oven.
I realized the parties that were the best where everything's made in advance or
served at room temperature, it's simple. It's delicious. And you're happy to be with the people that were the best, where everything's made in advance or served at room temperature.
It's simple, it's delicious, and you're happy to be with the people that you love.
And that's really it.
The master of this was a cookbook writer, Lee Bailey, who lived in Bridgehampton and
had a wonderful store called Bailey Huebner at the old Omri Bendel.
And he would sit with his guests in the living room having a lovely time, having a drink,
having little tomatoes if they were in season, very simple hors d'oeuvres.
And then everybody would move to the kitchen and he would make dinner while they were in
the kitchen, the finishing touches.
And it was Southern, it was simple, it was fun, and everybody just loved being there.
So I realized the Julia Child's make something that takes four days
for dinner is really actually counterproductive. So why do it anymore? Let's do something simple.
Make a roast chicken. People are just delighted to have something delicious and to sit around,
you know, small round, I like small parties, small round table with six people and just
have a wonderful time.
It's so true even in our house,
even when I'm cooking dinner
and sometimes when I'm like trying to time it correctly.
And it's hard.
Yeah, and I can be very particular with time
and then I can get a little bit triggered
and a little bit short.
And so this one-
Chippy, we call it chippy, I know.
It's getting chippy in there.
And so Glennon will start to just make herself busy so she doesn't feel bad. Like, so she
starts to unload the dishwasher or fill the dishwasher, set the table.
Or just walk around looking annoyed. I found that that works too well.
Just picking up things and putting them down.
Yeah. If I just look upset, that's helpful, I think.
I mean, I do this professionally, and Jeffrey knows,
if he starts talking to me 15 minutes before people get there,
I'm like, don't talk to me.
That's comforting.
So he knows to get out of the way.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's because, you know what?
Cooking's stressful.
I've been doing it my whole life.
I've been in the food business.
I've written cookbooks.
It's still stressful, because you order a chicken that's,
you know, you want a four pound
chicken and what you get is a two and a half pound chicken. And all of a sudden the whole thing is
the timing is off, the quantities are off, everything, or the carrots taste different in
August than they do in January. And you have to make adjustments along the way. So it's hard.
I really appreciate how hard it is. I just feel like it's such a beautiful way because when you're talking about the dinner
party, I'm thinking about my parenting and my relationships because it's like the proof
of love is not in evidencing your self-sacrifice.
That's interesting.
It's in the shared experience.
That's good. When you front and center your sacrifice,
trying to show that that's your love,
it just makes people feel bad.
But when you sit down calmly with them.
They just love you.
Yes.
They just love you, that's it, yeah.
We've all had bad dinner parties
and we've all learned from them.
And you know what?
It's not the end of the world.
You just kind of get up, you brush yourself off and you do it again and you learn from it. But it It's not the end of the world. You just kind of get up, you brush yourself off and you do it again. And you learn from it.
But it's kind of the end of the world. If you run your entire life like a bad dinner
party, it is the end of the world. If you martyr yourself and in an attempt to impress,
you lose yourself and you present to the world nothing but a harried martyr thinking that that is going to earn you love and it never does.
That is kind of the end of the world. Right? Just to bring it down. Just a joyful conversation.
Well, it's the end of the world if you realize it. It will be the end of that way of the world.
Yes, begin again.
And you begin again like Aina just said. You just dust yourself off and you can start anew.
And I know we have to end,
I just, I can't stop thinking about something
that Aina said in the very beginning of this,
that this whole life, this whole beautiful, gorgeous life
that Aina is living and teaching us all
and inviting us all into,
started when she saw this teeny little teeny advertisement
in a newspaper and she thought this thought,
God, that looks like fun.
Pod squad, what is the thing?
That you just go, God, that looks like fun.
I know the world tells you that's not the thing
you're supposed to follow, but is that
our voice?
Or somebody else's?
If we didn't, if Ina had done the self-sacrificing thing that her dad told her was associated
with accomplishments, we would have no Ina.
And she would never have learned how to play beer pong.
That's for sure.
Not a once would she have learned beer pong.
And that's the real tragedy.
All's well that ends well.
That's right.
Be ready when the luck happens.
It's a damn delight.
It will make you think that the silly little thing
that your heart desires might turn into an empire of joy.
You wanna read it. It made me so happy and
made me have a little bit more of a crush on you and a crush on me. Oh, which I think
is the best thing.
That's the best thing ever. Thank you. So happy to see all of you. Thank you so much.
It was just what a great time. Thank you so much for being here. I hope to see you all
soon. Yes. Me too. And also thank you, Taylor. Thank you, Taylor. Thank you so much for being here. And I hope we see you all soon. Yes.
Me too.
And also thank you, Taylor.
Thank you, Taylor.
Thank you for introducing us.
Our two stories, us two telling this one story
will never end, the story that keeps on getting.
Oh, I know, trust me.
I know that'll never happen again.
Okay.
And I love that we both have the same story.
Usually stories kind of veer off in another direction.
We have exactly the same story. Love. Usually stories kind of veer off in another direction. We have exactly the same story.
Love you.
Love all three of you.
Love you too.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
Bye Pod Squad.
If this podcast means something to you, it would mean so much to us.
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We Can Do Hard Things is created and hosted
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and this show is produced by Lauren Legrasso,
Alison Schott, Dina Kleiner, and Bill Schultz.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandi Carlisle. I made sure I got what's mine
And I continue to believe
That I'm the one for me
And because I'm mine, I walk the line
Cause we're adventurers and heartbreaks on map
A final destination we lack
We stopped asking directions
To places they've never been We're looking for the right place to be We're looking for the right place to be
We're looking for the right place to be
We're looking for the right place to be
We're looking for the right place to be
We're looking for the right place to be
We're looking for the right place to be The joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do our thing
I hit rock bottom, it felt like a brand new start
I'm not the problem, sometimes things fall apart
And I continue to believe
The best people are free and it took some time but I'm finally fine
And heartbreaks on that final destination we lack We've stopped asking directions to places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do our thing This was an adventure, and heartbreaks on back We might get lost but we're okay now
We've stopped asking directions
To places they've never been
And to be loved we need to belong
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things