We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Sonya Renee Taylor: What If You Loved Your Body?

Episode Date: January 12, 2023

Following Glennon’s diagnosis, she, Abby, and Amanda go deep with Sonya Renee Taylor - author of The Body is Not an Apology – exploring the personal and global promise of Radical Self Love: 1. Ex...amining the way we talk to our bodies – and how to change negative self-dialogue. 2. How to shift from a relationship with our body based on dominance and control to a relationship based on trust.  3. The pitfalls of “body positivity.” 4. Recognizing this global moment we are in as a gift inviting us to collective Self Love.  5. The full life that is possible only if we stop believing our body is our enemy, and start seeing our body as a teammate.  About Sonya: Sonya Renee Taylor is a world-renowned activist, award-winning artist, transformational thought leader, author of six books including The New York Times best selling The Body is Not an Apology, and founder of the international movement and digital media and education company of the same name whose work has reached millions of people by exploring the intersections of identity, healing, and social justice using a radical self-love framework. She continues to speak, teach,write, create, and transform lives globally. IG: sonyareneetaylor To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Oh my god, oh my god. Awesome. Oh my god. Awesome. Oh my god. Awesome. Oh my god. Awesome.
Starting point is 00:00:15 Oh my god. Awesome. I feel so honored to be sharing this space with you. I am so thrilled that we get to hear from you and share you with our community. It's just an honor. You're just a genius and, yeah, enjoy. I've been very nervous all morning. I'm very proud of you. Yeah, we're going to start and then, okay, welcome. Welcome to everybody check your deep breath.
Starting point is 00:00:41 Yes, I was about to take it over here. Yes, everything's going take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath.
Starting point is 00:00:52 Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath.
Starting point is 00:01:00 Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. Yes, I was about to take a deep breath. I just need the people to understand that we've done hundreds of these episodes. And, Sonia, I can't tell you how excited, slash nervous, the three of us are, and it's just been kind of a shit show for the last 10 minutes with these two. What's the nervousness? Just respect. It's just a matter of respect. It's respect.
Starting point is 00:01:25 It's respect. It's like you're about to have lunch with Julia Child, and she's like, what can I make you? And you're like, well, skies, the fukin' limit, the possibilities are endless of what we could do in the next hour, and it's just amazing. Yeah. That's how it feels.
Starting point is 00:01:42 That's how it feels. Okay. So, Sonja, I've never sent Sarah Pticious love letters That's amazing. Yeah, that's how it feels. That's how it feels. Okay. So, Sonia, I've never sent syrup-titious love letters to a guest in preparation. Thank you for writing me back. I thought maybe you would show up after that, but thank you. So, Pod Squad, months ago, when I was preparing for so long to talk to you about what was going on in my life, my health
Starting point is 00:02:05 life, my mental health life, the diagnosis of the inter-exe. And I was so all of that. I knew I was going to tell you all in January. And then I felt like it was a very, very important decision about who would come talk to us next. And especially about bodies and freedom and self-love. So in my religious tradition, we always were told stories of profits that there would be everybody in the town
Starting point is 00:02:29 and they would be doing all the things and like scaring around and selling each other things and living their lives and then there would be these profits and they were living usually out in the wilderness farther away from the town. Like it's easy to let. I'm like, this is really so far. I'm tracking.
Starting point is 00:02:44 Right, and I don't know if it was because Like it's New Zealand. I like this really so far. I'm tracking. Yeah. Right. And I don't know if it was because they just couldn't stand the scurrying of the damn town of the hustle. So they left or they had to be far out. So they could see. So they had some perspective on the whole game. But anyway, these profits lived out in the wilderness
Starting point is 00:02:58 and they would just kind of yell back every once in a while. Like, no, no, no, you're missing it all. From a bathtub. You, um, no, no, no, you're missing it all from a bathtub. Yes. And so there are these people. And for, for this podcast, I feel like they're kind of like tent poles of what we do. I think of these people as like a loak about gender or ocean vong about masculinity and femininity, or Yaba about race, or colarthorrily about faith, or Trisha Hershey about rest, they're just these prophets who are like, I'm actually not doing your game,
Starting point is 00:03:34 but if you want me to let you know what I'm doing over here, you might sense some more freedom. So in choosing who would be talking to us about bodies, I just listened to so many voices and I'm so sensitive to this stuff right now that it always just feels a little bit out of tune, just a little bit out of tune.
Starting point is 00:03:53 And when I listen to Sonja Renee Taylor talk about body freedom and radical self-love, it just feels like perfect pitch. So somebody not from town, but this kind of prophetic voice that is calling us out of town and not just out of body shame culture or out of just like past all of it past body positivity culture towards what she calls radical self love. So Sonja Renee Taylor is a world renowned activist, award winning artist, transformational thought leader, author of six books, including The New York Times best selling the body is
Starting point is 00:04:30 not an apology. Just go get it now. And founder of the International Movement and Digital Media, an education company of the same name whose work has reached millions of people by exploring the intersections of identity, healing, and social justice using a radical self-love framework. Sonya continues to speak, teach, write, create, and transform lives globally from out of town. Sonya, thank you. Wow.
Starting point is 00:05:02 I'm not like, what am I supposed to do now? You're not supposed to do now? You don't do anything. You've got enough. Well, I just want to say first and foremost, that it is a tremendous honor to be in this conversation with you. I never take it for granted. Like, one, I have no, I never have any ideas
Starting point is 00:05:19 actually listening to anything I say. And as far as I know, I'm just talking in the wind from my bathtub, you know, like it really does. It doesn't necessarily land on me. I assume it's impacting because I assume I wouldn't be told to say it if it was not. But like once it's out of my face, it's not my business anymore. And so it's always just such a beautiful reflection to have folks be like, no, it's landing and it's helping. And so thank you for inviting me and thank you for including me and the names of all of those people who I love and whose work I follow. And yeah, I'm really grateful to be here.
Starting point is 00:05:59 One of the things that I think is such a promise and a hope of your message is that in a world of wherever one's trying to figure out what self-care is and how do I stop being so terribly uncomfortable in my body and my life. There's plenty of people selling us a there is no acquisition of skills and steps. It's more like an excavation back to our original intelligence and possibility that just got really paved over. So I wonder if you could tell us your reimagining of the oak tree from Marianne Williamson's quote about like how that pertains to us and the way we came into the world. The acorn. Yeah, the acorn doesn't have to be told to become an oak tree. It doesn't have to do
Starting point is 00:07:00 anything to become an oak tree. It simply needs to exist as itself inside of the conditions that are fertile for our trees. And I think part of what humanity, our societies, have done, is we are all these acorns with all of the wiring and encoding necessary to become oak trees. And we've created a world that is incompatible with our ability to grow into what we authentically and inherently are. And so part of what I'm always one asking us to do is first realize that is already in you, right? Like that, just like that acorn, we do not have to figure out how to radically love ourselves. We have to figure out what conditions have paved over the fertile ground that allows that thing that is naturally
Starting point is 00:07:50 in us to sprout, to grow, to continue to grow. Because it's not even that like we were in a quorn and then we like fell on some concrete and now we're never gonna grow exciting in that. It's like we were already a growing budding plant. And then somebody was like, you'd be better as a parking lot in a target. And at some point, enough people said,
Starting point is 00:08:18 you'd be better as a parking lot in a target. And we were like, you know what? Maybe they're right. Maybe whatever it was that I thought I was, maybe that's a lie, maybe that's not true at all. Maybe what's true is what I keep hearing, right? And even if I haven't raised that to consciousness, I think about it in the relationship of my blackness.
Starting point is 00:08:38 And I think about, it doesn't matter if anybody ever came up to me, although people have, and said, Saunya, your blackness is wrong. They would just have to keep showing me again and again and again by either not showing me at all, by making me invisible in the external world, or by offering me skin-light lightning cream, or by making jokes about dark skin people, or by creating entire media landscapes there in which I am absent. All of those things together are the message you should be a parking lot in a target. You should be a parking lot in a target.
Starting point is 00:09:21 And so then one day I'm like, oh, obviously, maybe I'm the one who's tripping. I should be a parking lot on a target, right? And then we begin to move our lives that way. And so the work that I am proposing is, what if we just remember that the other message is a lie? That's it. Right. It's like, what if we we remember that like there is no beautiful, vibrant, verdict place in the world that if we sat down and thought about it, we would decide should be a parking lot in the target. Nobody's like, you know what the Niagara Falls should be?
Starting point is 00:09:58 A parking lot in the target. Nobody except for target. Yeah. Yeah. Except for the person who benefits and profits. Yes. It's all about becoming a parking lot in a car. That's right.
Starting point is 00:10:12 It's not the only person who would say it. And so the only person who would say that you are somehow deficient and not enough in you to change and are not good enough inherently valuable enough in the beingness that you are today is someone who profits from you not believing that. Someone who profits from your failure to see your own magnificence.
Starting point is 00:10:33 And so we are suffering when we fail to see our own magnificence because some part of us know, because we are hearing the messages, we feel, I mean, anyone who's listening to this, if you don't feel this way, don't call us because we don't understand it. I believe everyone feels this way. We don't understand it. There's another podcast for you. The burden, the shame, the constant apologies that we are issuing for our life and our existence are when we are denying our
Starting point is 00:11:07 magnificence. And when we are reclaiming our magnificence, that's deeply uncomfortable too. So talk to us about choosing the right kind of hard in the situation and how we can taste it and smell it and know it's the right kind of hard. I always talk about this, Andy Lou Hamer quote, as the way that I I worry it to round the right kind of hard, I always talk about this Fannie Lou Hamer quote as the way that I worry into around the right kind of heart, which is she says, if I'm gonna fall, I'm gonna fall five feet, three inches toward my freedom. God. Right?
Starting point is 00:11:36 That's how I know it's the right kind of heart. It doesn't mean my knees ain't scraped up, it doesn't mean I didn't lose some skin, I might be bleeding, I might have broke something. And my closer toward my own revelation of my divinity than I was before I started. If so, then I'm doing the right kind of hard. I'm doing the hard and service of the reclamation of my liberation. A lot of people don't do this work because they're like, it's so hard, right?
Starting point is 00:11:59 Of course it's hard. It's hard to dig up the asphalt and mow down a building, right? Like we built structures, literal structures on top of our sense of inherent worthiness. And so it is laborious, it's tiring, it's sometimes just expensive. It's all of those things. Lonely, it's lonely. It's lonely. It can be frightening. It's all of those things.
Starting point is 00:12:25 But what I'm proposing is, is that anyway. Yes. You are lonely and frightened and fearful and exhausted right now, believing you're not enough. Yes I am. Yep. So, so if you're gonna be it anyway, if you wanna do that, fall five feet, whatever inches, six feet, whatever inches, fall toward your liberation.
Starting point is 00:12:52 What is radical self love? I'll tell you, there's a lot of towns people just selling shit and selling a lot of shit. My 16 year old came home and told me she wrote this thing about this in the news, in her school newspaper. She told me that when she was 13, she didn't even know that she was supposed to not love her cellulite until she saw a big thing
Starting point is 00:13:20 that on Instagram that said, love your cellulite, ladies, love your cellulite. And she was like, I don't know, I wasn't supposed to love your cellulite, ladies. Love your cellulite. And she was like, I don't know, I wasn't supposed to love my cellulite. It never occurred to me not to. Right. Exactly. What's the difference between the body positive
Starting point is 00:13:35 and radical self-love? Radical self-love to me, I always describe as it. Your inherent sense of enoughness. It is your inherent sense of divinity. It can't be externally gained. It can't be externally magnified. I say the same thing that decided that there should be daisies and butterflies and the River Nile and Sun rises also decided that there should be a song. And that's divine, right?
Starting point is 00:14:06 And if we can connect to that, if I can connect to the sense that the most stunning sun set I ever saw is made of the same material reality as my own beingness, how is that not miraculous? How is that not phenomenal? How does that not if we really let it in move us to awe and wonder, right? And make me never trip about what anybody else was said, like, I'm a sunset in these streets. Why would I be tripping with you about being a target, right? Yes. I'm gonna just keep going back to that
Starting point is 00:14:45 because I love that. It's this like material structure that we give a lot of money to. So go do things about things and be things. And be better. Make our house better. Make our face better. Make your house better.
Starting point is 00:14:55 Make your face better. Make your, you look better at the job. All of these things and no one's ever been like, I would exchange this phenomenal sunrise for a target. No, right? And so radical self-love is our sense of our inherent divinity, that enoughness that cannot be exchanged for some capitalist made external reality. And body positivity to me, which is, you know, body positivity to me, which is, I don't know, you know, it's one of those things where I'm just like,
Starting point is 00:15:31 oh, capitalism's so great at being like, oh, I did, let's sell it. Yeah. But for me, it's always anything that doesn't acknowledge the existing power structures that doesn't acknowledge that there are people and bodies in the world that we've decided we do not feel positively about and have no intentions on changing that. Then we're not talking about the same thing. Like a body positivity that doesn't have a
Starting point is 00:16:03 politic that doesn't say I demand the marginalized bodies be treated positively, that I demand that disabled bodies be treated positively. And black and queer bodies and trans bodies be treated positively. If there is not a place of advocacy and effort to are creating a world where all bodies are not only treated positively, but for me, treated reverently, treated like we treat the most gorgeous sunrise, like we treat the most precious butterfly. We're not creating that world. Then what's body positivity for? You know? And the other piece that feels important to me is, I'm never just talking about
Starting point is 00:16:42 the corporal body. I'm never just talking about our physical beings, which are important in so much as we need them to traverse this planet. But we are also spiritual and emotional, a theory could be eggs. We also have those bodies as well. And if we are in a world that doesn't value the completeness of our entire beings, then again, what are we saying we're positive about?
Starting point is 00:17:07 I'm Jonathan M. Hevar. I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things. But I grew up working class. My parents were immigrants with factory jobs. And because of that, I think about class a lot. And I want to talk about it. That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy. And what did you all eat? You know, trailer food. I was like, Girl, we're not doing that anymore. You'll hear from people who told me awkward,
Starting point is 00:17:49 embarrassing, and strangely intimate things about what class means to them. She said, you know, for the house cleaner, I hide the tag on the $6 bread. And I just thought, don't you think she knows that you're wealthy? You're hiding the tags from yourself. Classy.
Starting point is 00:18:08 A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios. Available now. Wherever you get your podcasts. Something that just occurred to me, Sonia, is, you know, I was a professional athlete. I have spent my whole life thinking about my physical body. And something that was just completely life changing for me is this idea of where this little seed we can call it, the acorn comes from.
Starting point is 00:18:39 Let's say I actually start using this idea of radical self-love and live with that rather than all the ways that I myself have been training my body, working my body, thinking about my body, that's actually self-hate because all I'm doing is looking at something to change. Rather than breathing into it with a sort of positive perspective,
Starting point is 00:19:04 I've never one time in my life thought of that. Control is the opposite of love. We only control what we don't trust. And so I'm just saying we can trust what would that look like? Oh my god, I've never trusted myself. This is really so. And that is the piece of this work that is the spiritual work, that is the healing work.
Starting point is 00:19:24 Do I trust this vessel that has brought me here? Can I trust it? And when I'm in a relationship of trust, what do we do? How do we move then? But we can't even get there until we actually get to a place of saying, I talk about in the book, one of the tools that I give is like, you know, my body's not my enemy, right? And it's like, what does it mean to decide that my body and I are on the same team, right? It's not a thing I control. It's not a thing that has to do my bidding. And anytime we find ourselves in a way of thinking relationally about our bodies, that gets reflected in the ways in which marginalization
Starting point is 00:20:05 and inequity are set up in the external world is a great clue that we're outside of radical self-love. When I treat my body like a thing that has to do my bidding, where else do we see that? Where else does that dynamic play out? Oh, okay. All right. And all manner of inequity and injustice. And so the question is, am I in a just relationship with my body? Mm-hmm. Right? If I'm saying I wanna practice justice,
Starting point is 00:20:35 am I in a just relationship with my being right now today? Whoa. Are the dynamics of dominance, control, coercion, force, are all of those the way in which I'm in relationship with my thought. So is the, because everything you say is macro, everything is micro, it's true all the way through. So is the first level of force, coercion, control, the injustice we impose upon ourselves, is that through the thoughts? If we are an asphalt ground that is trying to remember its magnificence, do we start that work by raising to consciousness and deconstructing the thoughts that are the way that we are controlling ourselves, which is incidentally the way the
Starting point is 00:21:26 world is controlling us too. But like, can you talk about that? Like, when I have the, oh god, the love handles in the jeans, that I do an injury upon myself. How do I raise that up and think about it so I can remember? So part of it is this kind of conversation, right? It's like, oh, what's the dialogue that I am currently having with my beingness, with my body, with my identity? What's the current dialogue? And choosing to get into conversation about that,
Starting point is 00:21:56 what are the messages that I believe that I hear, that I say, how do I talk to myself every day? And then, from once that's raised to consciousness, and that's a practice, most of these things run default. They're going in the background. I call them the outside voice that we believe is the inside voice. We've been listening to it for such a long time. We just think it's art.
Starting point is 00:22:18 This conversation, oh, my hand, my left hand, is you think like, that's your thought. But it's not your thought. It's you now being a puppet for a larger external profiteering system. Who's like, oh, yes, please think our thoughts in your mind, because that works for us. We're born into a total immersion program. Yes.
Starting point is 00:22:40 So we start speaking the language and we're like, ah, this is my native tongue. No, it's not. No, absolutely. And that's really the question is like, can you retrieve your native tongue? And you can by starting to question the language you're currently speaking.
Starting point is 00:22:58 And so that's the first step to raising it to consciousnesses. Can I ask myself questions about the things I believe today? And this is oftentimes where people sort of hit their first major hurdle is, then I have to acknowledge that I have bought the lie. Yes. Right. And if I bought the lie, then I have a whole story about what it means for me to have bought the lie. Right. And I call this like meta shame in the book. Now I have shame for every shame. Yeah. Right. Now I'm ashamed because I bought the lie. And I call this like meta-shame in the book. Now I have shame for having shame. Yeah. Now I'm ashamed because I bought the lie
Starting point is 00:23:29 and that keeps me from actually tackling the other shame that is the manifestation of the lie I bought and then we're in a loop. Whereas if we come to it from curiosity and compassion, of course I bought the lie. Everybody sold it to me. An entire world from the time I emerged from whatever womb I emerged from. It's like here is the lie we expect for you to believe. Of course I bought it. Of course. And as an act of defiance and liberation, I do not have to keep listening
Starting point is 00:24:09 to it. I don't have to. That's the freedom. There's no shame in having gotten with everybody else God. But the freedom is recognizing that you don't have to keep it. It's not yours. And you don't have to keep it. Because there's a yours and you don't have to keep it. Because there's a moment I think where you figure out not only have I bought the lie, I'm having this moment. Not only have I bought the lie and lived with the lie, I was a victim of this and then I was complicit with this and now I am teaching this. Now I am modeling or continuing that like I'm a disciple of this. I'm a disciple and I'm making disciples.
Starting point is 00:24:59 Yeah, but we all are. But I think that's the thing is again's again, it's like, oh, I'm in this exceptional space where I've done something extra bad. No, you are still doing the same thing everyone has done. What your discipleship is, three million listeners, or the four people that live in your house. The expectation of the system of body-shame and body terrorism is that you pass it on.
Starting point is 00:25:21 Mm-hmm. That's the expectation. If you didn't pass it on, then how would we build more targets and more arguments? Again, there's no failure that we've been indoctrinated into this system. It is by design. What's the gift of this moment right now
Starting point is 00:25:38 is that we've been born into a time unlike any other time before where we have the tools and mechanisms to add a massive scale Dispaired the lie. That's the gift. There is no other point in history where a black queer woman and All y'all wonderful white folks be on a zoom get ready to talk to all over many millions people listen to your podcast to interrupt This story that has gone on for centuries. We are in a moment of gift to talk to all over many millions of people listen to your podcast to interrupt this story that has gone on for centuries. We are in a moment of gift, right? That hasn't existed before. So it's actually, you know, I'm like, yes, of course, we all got it. And something,
Starting point is 00:26:18 something in the ether said, this is the perfect time for us to all get off that train. That feels good. It feels good to me. It feels so good. Okay. So what is the fear, the deep fear that is for someone saying, if I listen to that, if I acknowledge that's a lie, not only am I ashamed because I've been duped, but what happens to me? What is the fear that will become of us
Starting point is 00:26:53 if we step outside of the bounds that we have been so careful to try to stay inside of for so long? If we stop hating ourselves, if we stop controlling ourselves, what are we so afraid will happen? Yeah. We'll lose the perks. Exactly. We'll lose the perks that we got, right? Because here's what's happening is we're holding two things at the same time, like you said, Glenn, and we're holding both a victimization by this system,
Starting point is 00:27:21 and we're also holding a complicity and a proselytizing of the system at the exact same time, right? And so what that means when I talk about it in terms of like a ladder of bottom hierarchy is we are neither at the top of the ladder nor are we at the bottom. And the entire goal of the system is to figure out how to ascend as high as possible while recognizing that most of us live in bodies that will never exist at the top. But as long as there are people below us, then we know we're better than something.
Starting point is 00:27:52 Even if that's not conscious, at least I'm not down there, right? Inside of this experience of comparison that we live in. And so the fear is, whatever I got at eight, I'm going to drop to room three. That's right. If I denounce the ways in which white supremacist delusion has indoctrinated me, that I'm going to lose the parts that whiteness gives me. And I don't want to acknowledge all the parts that whiteness gives me.
Starting point is 00:28:20 Because then that makes me a bad person. Yes. So it's a really beautiful. So just go hold on for deal life at ring eight. I'm a close man, I'm a full dog, and bring nobody shakes me off, right? Whereas, but what I'm, what I think I'm always offering, or certainly what I believe for myself is,
Starting point is 00:28:40 the latter is only real, because we keep trying to ascend it. The latter is as real as our investment in it is. And you will absolutely lose something, right? Like you'll lose a target. No, absolutely lose a target. And maybe there were some nice candles and throw rods and pillows in there. Maybe there was a great face cream that you really love.
Starting point is 00:29:00 They're really worth it. It's hopes, hopes. And you will indeed, and those things will be gone from that particular place. But what you get in exchange, what you get in exchange is, in some ways is beyond anything you can imagine. Because you can think about really gorgeous stunning sunset
Starting point is 00:29:22 you've seen, right? But you really can't know it until you're in. Like the wonder and all of it isn't fully present until you're standing there watching that giant orb of flame and fire and heat and gas descend over horizon and you're like, and then expand across an entire skyline. And you're like, oh my God, this is so much greater than anything I could have ever imagined.
Starting point is 00:29:50 So the challenge is that we are offering inside of radical self love. A thing that sometimes people are like, I can't even imagine it. So why would I go there? But what I'm proposing is where you are is unsustainable. It's not gonna last anyway. So you can be thrown off the ladder or you could be going ahead and climb off yourself. Either way, it goes.
Starting point is 00:30:13 I think we're looking around every single day and seeing that we are inside of an untenable system, a system that cannot sustain itself at all and only can sustain itself by swallowing more of us. Yeah. And so, if I can practice, and this is why radical self-love, I think, is such a beautiful space of practice, what is the unknown but probable beauty
Starting point is 00:30:43 that I can live into every single day in a small way, that expands my capacity to hold the unknown probable magnificence of a collective future. How do I practice liberation inside of myself in such a way that when we arrive at that collective sunrise, we could have never imagined we not even thinking about a target. Yes, it's like what you're saying. It's like there's like an illusion of safety that we have been sold our whole lives.
Starting point is 00:31:16 And you're like, by this, look this way. And then if you do it, then you are gonna be safe here in this body as a person. Yes, it's power. It's the shitty consolation prize. We are so desperately clinging to a shitty consolation prize because we do not believe we are either worthy or will ever stand a chance of getting the main event. So it is the shitty store bought steak that the cheetah is afraid to let go of. Even though they're're gonna be running around
Starting point is 00:31:47 on the open windows. Yes, exactly. And so that's why this place of imagining is so perfect. Like I don't think that it is a coincidence, that the most revolutionary people that we've heard from on this podcast, like Glennon was saying, the Trisha Hershey's, the Ocean Vong's, the Locke,
Starting point is 00:32:04 you are poets at the heart of you. It's like Shelley said where the poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world because it's this idea that this imaginative practice is so inextricably linked to activism that you have to activate that imagination. That is the thing you're inviting us to do. We are already imagining, right? We are living inside of imagination right now. It just happens that we're living inside of the imagination of white cis heterosexual, powerful white supremacist delusional patriarchy.
Starting point is 00:32:41 We have been inside of that imagination for a really long time. And so the invitation is, what would it look like to live inside of some other imaginations? What would it look like to decide, oh, that amount, we've tried that imagination. Oh, you know, that bit up. And what else is out there? What else is possible, right? So if we start because a lot of people are like, I can't imagine it. I'm like, you can't. You are living in an imagination right now.
Starting point is 00:33:10 So what would it look like to reclaim that power to raise it to consciousness and to then be like, all right, well, I'm inside of an imagination. Let's start moving things out. This is why games like The Sims or whatever, they're fun. It's like, oh, different couch. What would happen if you take a different couch in? Just to start playing with that idea,
Starting point is 00:33:31 I think is a place to expand that muscle of imagination in each of us. Because the Whiten male cis imagination also said, okay, this is how we imagine white women will work on this wrong. This is where they go. And this is the bidding they'll do for us. My therapist was talking to me about that Fiji study where there was no TVs on the island. And then they brought TVs to the island and after three months, 50% of the girls had eating diet disorders. And what's fascinating to me about that study
Starting point is 00:34:03 is when they started asking the girls, why are you dieting, why are you purging? It wasn't about beauty per se, they said, because it looks like all of the women who are thinner or smaller are in more powerful positions on the TV. Okay. It's all about status and power.
Starting point is 00:34:22 So when I'm thinking about recovering, I'm thinking about recovering in like Sonya's imagination, right? And what that would require me to do is step off the ladder completely. And what that makes me do is look at what benefits I'm getting from controlling myself, from staying thin. It's not beauty anymore. I'm married to Abby.
Starting point is 00:34:44 She doesn't give a fuck. Sex is great, like all of these things. It's not beauty anymore. I married to Abby. She doesn't give a fuck. Sex is great. Like all of these things. It's not that. So then I have to look at what perks am I getting from not having any wrinkles in my forehead, from not having any gray roots, from wearing this certain thing and its power.
Starting point is 00:35:00 It's a... There you go. So stepping off, it's like white feminism is the latter. It's white feminism is body positivity. It's a little taste of the real thing with no necessary destruction of the thing. Yes. And it's an imaginary power.
Starting point is 00:35:18 Again, right? It's an option. It's a power inside of a fixed imagination. Yes. And if we've decided that that, because it's so funny, I hope you don't mind if I mention this really quickly in the letter that you wrote me. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:31 Where you were liking, by the way, I've touched just had those thoughts, right? Yes. I was like, I'm ready. I'm ready. As soon as the shit wears off, I'm ready. I'm ready. It's so time to look like I'm not
Starting point is 00:35:41 asking a question now. Yeah, question. I thought to myself,, literally the question you just posed was the question that came up to me. It's like, what does that give you that you believe you need that you don't already have? But what's interesting is that your answer is a lot, right? It gives me power, except you already have power. So then the question becomes power where and for what? Right? Every question has another question that it wants to ask because the truth of the matter is
Starting point is 00:36:11 you have a massive platform you have huge reach of a beautiful family of people who love you. So you have power. So the question is what kind of power and for what? And then then we get to the parts we don't want to tell ourselves. Power to keep us in a system that I know is murderous and brutal and harms the people that I say I love. You're right. And what does it mean for me to have to contend with that? And again, can I contend with that, not from a place of blame or shame?
Starting point is 00:36:40 But of course, this is just the deeper layer. This is that subterranean floor that they laid before they laid the foundation for the pavement and the target, right? It's like, oh, I mean, the fact that you're there means you are starting to get really, really close to dismantling it. When you're ready to tell yourself that truth, I have power. So this is a different kind of power and it's a power inside of this system. And do I really want to keep that right? That's where we get to start grappling.
Starting point is 00:37:14 That's it. I also do not think that it is a coincidence at all that you started as a sexual health educator. I truly believe that that is one of the reasons why you in this moment are the person we need to be talking to. Can you talk to us about that story of where that started? To me, it was so poignant that it came to impotry. And then it came to in a very specific conversation with a woman about what she believed she had a right to and what she believed she did not have a right to when it came to a sexual exchange And to me it feels like if the body is not an apology is the target
Starting point is 00:38:12 There's this bullseye that is there about The way we perform not having needs the way we perform Even pretending that our needs are met the way we perform, even pretending that our needs are met, the way we perform our desire and sexuality and the freedom and the fear of that freedom. It's all in there. So for the three people who don't know that story, can you? I could hear it, I could hear it a thousand more times. Yeah. So, you know, the inception of this idea of the body is non-rapology came from a conversation with a friend who was sharing with me that she was afraid she might have an unintended pregnancy.
Starting point is 00:38:52 And I'm a nosy friend. I'm just nosy. And I also had some background in sexuality health. There used to be a teen pregnancy prevention educator as a teenager and worked around HIV and AIDS and sex worker rights and all kinds of things. So a lot of experience in that realm which also made me ask more sort of pointed questions than perhaps most people might and I asked this person I asked my friend why she wasn't using condoms with this casual partner and She shared in such an incredibly vulnerable way,
Starting point is 00:39:27 just told the truth, you know, like just told the truth. She had cerebral palsy and she was like, my disability already makes it really difficult and stuff. And I just didn't, you know, like I just didn't even feel like entitled, like to just add another layer of things to the conversation. And my response, which I'm very clear to at this point in my life was through me, not of me. I was just given a thing to say. And the thing was your body is not an apology. It's not a thing you offered to someone to say sorry for my disability. And what struck me in that moment was that this thing that came through me was also very clearly for me. And that I was instantly just dropped into the millions of ways I had given my body away as apology.
Starting point is 00:40:18 And I think that sexuality is one of those places where we can see, like if we really just sit and look, we're like, oh, yeah, I definitely, you know, I definitely screwed you on some apology stuff. I can list the things that I've done with my body that were like, am I good enough now? Am I worthy now? Am I enough now, right? And this moment where she shared this, there was the intersection of that bartering that we do around sexuality and desirability to obtain our worthiness. And it's intersection with disability and it's intersection with this interracial conversation where I and I was just like, oh, there's all whole matrix of things operating that lead us to this position of apology
Starting point is 00:41:06 around our beingness. And for some people it'll be easy for them to see it in their relationship with food. For some people to be easy to see it in their relationship with food. For some people to be easy to see it in their relationship at work. For some people would be easy to see it in their relationships around sex and desire. And so the question is where does life want to direct me first? That's the most visible place where does life want to direct me first? That's the most visible place where I can see apology happening. And then as I begin to dissect and inquire and get introspective around that area, then you're like, oh, it's a whole wet. It wasn't just a like a one thing. It's a way of being that I've been indoctrinated into the world to be.
Starting point is 00:41:46 But yeah, I think sexuality is one of those places where that's really reflective for us. Can be if we wanna look at it. And doesn't it reflect also in the promise, like the shitty consolation of that sexual exchange versus the promise of like if we can actually get to the place where we are, that is part of our magnificence. Like our birthright to have desire as a way of accessing the world
Starting point is 00:42:15 goes out in concentric circles of our right to enjoy food and look at our bodies and say, that is beautiful and wonderful. And also it's deeply connected to this political system where we are so apologetic about our own desire that we act we as to a political system that punishes our desire by divesting us of our autonomy over our own bodies. Exactly. I mean, all of it is again, like, I heard what you said, I mean, it was like, desire is one of the accesses of actual power, of real power, right? Like the actual power of the choice to create or not to create, right? The choice to harness so much energy and to have that explode in orgasm. You know,
Starting point is 00:43:08 what is the big bang if not like the cause most having an orgasm? Damn. How incredible powerful is that, right? Yes. And so that's of course, if we saw if we understood that level of power, then we would understand why there are so many systems that would desire us to squelch that. That would be like, actually, no, you don't get to be in charge of your body at all. Here are all the ways your body is wrong. Here's all the ways in which you're failing. And we really need you to believe that because if you stop believing that, you might be another big thing. And then our alluc repower is immediately disintegrated. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:49 Is that what the acorn says when it starts growing? And that when it's not picked over? Yeah. I want, I need, I prefer, I feel like, is that the growing of the acorn? I don't think it says anything though. It just is. It is.
Starting point is 00:44:04 And from that isness comes action. It doesn't have to think I want water. It's just like my entity pulls water towards me because water is what is compatible with my growth. And I think that's part of the challenge, which I think about inside of this idea like what we want and our thinking about it is we have to acknowledge our thinking is so conditioned. I'll give you a really funny example.
Starting point is 00:44:31 So I've been traveling the planet since April. I've been on some wild pilgrimage, Sir Jordan, think that I'm still trying to understand. And at one point I was in Greece. I was supposed to be in Greece for 10 days. I was in Greece. I was supposed to be in Greece for 10 days. I was in Greece for 34 days at some stranger's house. I thought I was going to be there for three days. Like just wild, wild, wildness. And I'm finally leaving.
Starting point is 00:44:55 And in my mind, I was like, oh yeah, I'm going to Kenya. And then I'm going to Thailand and Vietnam and Bali. And then I'm going back to New Zealand. That's my plan. And I was doing this meditation, a meditation for shadow work or something like that. And in the meditation, like a visit, go visit my little Sonja.
Starting point is 00:45:15 And I don't say anything to her, I just observe where she is, what's happening, and it takes me back to this really root memory. And then, you know, once I observe and it's been some time in it, I go up to her and I ask her what she wants. A little Sonya said, I wanna go home. Oh.
Starting point is 00:45:32 And I was like, oh, I'll be your home. You know, we are home. It was really sweet and tender and beautiful that I'd practiced it a lot. And little Sonya was like, no, chick. I wanna play trip to Pittsburgh and I wanna it a lot. And little saw he was like, no, chick. I want a play trip to Pittsburgh, and I want a hoagie. Like, you're so funny.
Starting point is 00:45:50 Thanks for all your fluffy, duffy, bear pies, meekies. Oh my God. I mean, I want to go home. Take my ass home. I'm in my house. I see a bunch of things. I'm sick of it.
Starting point is 00:46:02 And it was this phenomenal moment of awareness where I was like, right, there's Sonya, the adult who's been indoctrinated into so many things, including like how fabulous me, all of this wonderlust and how much greater inside I'm going to have, traveling around the world. And that's what I'm supposed to do. Yes. But the seed of the core of me, the core of me that didn't need to think or do anything was like, no, that need didn't come from my head. That need came from my soul, from my center, from the smallest parts of my truth. And so sometimes the
Starting point is 00:46:42 work is to not be in our head at all. We'll handle answers't answer is there. I mean, we've tried them. The answer is in the center of it's in your gut. It's inside the deepest quietest, usually most disavowed parts of ourselves. And that part isn't thinking. It's not thinking. I love not thinking. I love what you just said to about this idea of just letting what is good come to you like that acorn rather than I mean, I'm a recovering addict and that behavior is me reaching out and trying to grab something. So this idea of getting courageous enough to not just want, but let what you're intuition and what your deep soul needs come to you rather than going and grabbing it. But that's trust too.
Starting point is 00:47:34 I trust it's going to come. Jesus. I trust it's going to come. And of course, inside of a construction of, you know, capital scarcity and lack, We have all reason not to think it's gonna come. Because as long as we're in that imagination, we're right. Yeah. As long as you are inside of the imagination
Starting point is 00:47:54 of scarcity and individualism and power over and lack and competition and comparison, if that's where you live, you're gonna get exactly what that has to offer. And that's why I'm like, the divestment is a practice. Oh, I see, I'm living in scarcity right now. What would it mean in this moment to just practice something different? And it's going to be scary. It's going to be terrifying. And yes, you might lose what that imagination would offer you, but never without gain over here, never without it.
Starting point is 00:48:30 I wanna share another little example of this funny thing. So I was doing my finances a couple of weeks ago looking at my sort of year end and all this stuff. And you know, black women historically, it's like have a five, you know, it was like $500 net worth or something like that. Something abysmal and horrible. I was looking at this net work graph and my budgeting software and it's flatline, flatline,
Starting point is 00:48:59 flatline for years. Then it spiked a little bit in 2019 and spiked a little bit more in 2020 and then it had a really drastic drop at the beginning of 2021 like back down to where I was and then and then it quadrupled and I was like bro what happened? It's like one of this change and, oh, in 2021, I paid my taxes. Now, this seems ridiculous in the sense that like, you know, like, I mean, I have opinions about the tax system. But this isn't about the tax system.
Starting point is 00:49:36 This is about, there was something I owed, regardless of how I agree with it or whatever else. There was something I owed and I paid it. And the paying of it in that moment looked like I'd lost most of everything. But my obedience to the possibility of my integrity, I pay what I owe. I trust that the release of this will net something
Starting point is 00:50:04 greater than its loss In a year and a half quadrupled anything I'd ever had That's the practice of trust That no, I might not see it in that moment But it always comes back because I decided I was living in a different imagination And an imagination where the US government can't take all my money and I just stay broke forever. I don't believe in that imagination. I live in the imagination where I have more than enough resource
Starting point is 00:50:32 to take care of that which it is that I owe and to still live in overflow. And just because it don't look like it at that moment doesn't mean it's not true. It's good. Just hold on, hold on. The return is coming. When you talk about radical self love, you're listening to Little Sonia who just weren't really seriously just wants a hoagie and for you to go home and stuff being
Starting point is 00:51:09 so educated about all this travel and shit. I'm hearing you talk about living in our imagination and our body and not living in our mind and I'm thinking about and my religious tradition I was raised in. there was such an emphasis for us to not believe that our bodies were us. It was everything was, oh no, no, no, you are not your body. Your body is just a vessel. You can't trust your body. Your body has evil tendencies. You're just a concerted effort to separate us from our body.
Starting point is 00:51:42 They would say, you are a soul. You have a body. And I'm trying to understand the damage that that does, not just because we don't trust our own bodies, but then it is so easy for us to hurt other bodies, to dismiss other bodies. If the body is not who we are, if the body is not holy, then all actually the same forces who taught us that are killing, are crusading, are whatever. It's a great message, right? It's a great message of you desire to control a large number of bodies. It's to tell the people in them, double't go that body. Like what an amazing thing to be able to tell enslaved Africans, your body doesn't matter.
Starting point is 00:52:31 You'll get your reward in heaven. Great, it's a wonderful way for me to continue to utilize your body for my profit and not have you be embodied enough to decide in a collective mass scale to uprise. Yeah, Right? Like, the intention of that message is disconnection. The intention of that message is disconnection.
Starting point is 00:52:52 Often thinking about the sort of connections between various religious doctrines and this idea of radical self love. But here's the thing that immediately just came to me was inside of the Christian tradition. If the body didn't matter Jesus would have never had to die on the cross. Oh, yes If the body didn't matter then he'd be like, hey, I'm all y'all sins are forgiven
Starting point is 00:53:15 Because I say it so take care of it in the next life Yeah, right. We'll take care of it in the next life The body his body was his representation of love I love you so much that this thing that is so precious that we all know is so precious His body, his body was his representation of love. I love you so much that this thing that is so precious, that we all know is so precious, that it matters that I'm choosing to give it up. It doesn't matter that I was choosing to give it up
Starting point is 00:53:37 if the body doesn't matter if it's not an essential part of our understanding of our value and magnificence in the world. Otherwise, the sacrifice of Christ makes nothing in the physical form. We know that's not true. We just let people tell us a different story and that story makes us pliable. It makes us manipulable. It makes us wonderful consumers and robots in service of these systems of oppression and injustice. And so the healing of that, the opposite of that is loving. And when we love ourselves, I've read 70 million times the part in your book where you talk about,
Starting point is 00:54:16 don't just get rid of this body shame because it's hurting you. Get rid of it because it's hurting everybody. It's hurting everybody. So how, Sanya is the return or uncovering a radical self-love. How is my liberation from this shit I'm in right now, anorexia, which has got to be the fucking opposite of every single thing that you talk about. How is my liberation tied to your liberation? And how
Starting point is 00:54:45 is the disability activist tied to your liberation? And how is all of our liberation tied to each others? Right. So there's the metaversion of that, which is that we are not separate that I am using. That's the that's the high spiritual level that everybody's like, yeah, yeah, that's nice, but it's really not a lot. Like it's really the truth is that we are actually one giant organism. And we know we're one giant organism. Because right now we're one giant organism fucking up the planet, right? As an entire B.A. we are creating harm collectively in the realm in which we are existing. The systems are life. So there's that level. Right? But the more sort of intricate nuanced level of it is you, every way in which you believe the system reinforces it.
Starting point is 00:55:33 And the system that tells Glennon your power lies in how you can control your body and make it do what it is that you say. And that is how you ascend and achieve greater power in this ladder. I am on that ladder too, because we're all on that ladder. And as long as you are cashing in on your piece of power, you are mandating that I remain below you. Because in that ladder, my body is less than your body. My fat, black, queer body is never going to be as valuable
Starting point is 00:56:06 in that ladder as a thin white cis woman's body. And so if you're like, nope, I'm going to send another ladder, then you are ensuring that it's almost impossible for me to actually ever catch you, which means to decide that inequity is the order of the world and will remain in place. Oh, fuck, that's so good. So you're worried that was the answer, Sonja. that inequity is the order of the world and will remain in place. Oh, fuck, that's so good.
Starting point is 00:56:27 So you're worried that was the answer, Sonia. I was really worried. You're put it in your head. You put so much down! It's you're here. You're here, like I will press you down. And what I want people to get is, no matter where you are on the ladder,
Starting point is 00:56:41 someone is below you. That's right. There is someone in this world that has a body that is deemed less valuable than you get. And every time you are like, I'm going to take another step, you are ensuring that they stay low to, that they stay lower than you. They have to. And so until you get off that ladder, we will continue to have a world of inequity where your body is valued more than my body.
Starting point is 00:57:07 So if we say we're about justice, if we say we're about equality, if we say we want marginalization done away with, then we have got to do away with marginalization inside of ourselves. We have to. We have to get off the ladder. We can't say I really want a world where all bodies are valued equally, but I got to figure out how to make my body better. Yes. Those don't go together.
Starting point is 00:57:30 That's a contradiction. And if that all sounds like too theoretical to folks, like you don't actually think someone's on a letter, how do you think we end up in a world where the schools your kids go to have all the books and after school activities they need. And the kids in Flint, Michigan had poison water for four years and have the highest levels of lead now that they've had since 2016. Or if a black baby boy is born today, one in four of them will end up in prison. That is because we have desensitized
Starting point is 00:58:13 so much to the divinity of bodies that we in our heads are not up in arms about that. We know that one in four boys are going to end up in jail. We know the folks in Flint don't have water and we just carry on with life. Cause we're on that ladder. As we're on the ladder, right? There was a period of time four or five years ago where we'd literally had hundreds, thousands of children, babies sleeping in cages under 10 foot.
Starting point is 00:58:43 There were babies washing up dead ashore because their families were trying to flee. And we closed our borders. Somebody's body is more valuable. And it clearly wasn't that. We know that the power systems are committed to remaining entrenched regardless of whoever's body might be on the line.
Starting point is 00:59:08 I was never more clear that the United States was committed to power over regardless of anything when they kill all and babies in Sandy Hook, little white children. And they were like, I'm loving prayers, loving light. And we don't plan to change one thing that would give us less power over the collective. That's right. Those bodies were less valuable.
Starting point is 00:59:38 That's the hierarchy that we're all participating in as long as we are, even on an individual level, trying to figure out how to ascend inside of that imagination. So if we are not seeing the holiness and the preciousness of our own bodies, it is harder for us to see it in others and we continue to allow this to happen. Or we can say we see it in that. I mean, people are all the time like, oh no, I see everyone's found absolutely.
Starting point is 01:00:09 But they always, they don't practice it in ourselves, which is to say, yeah, I said it, but do I really believe it? Do I believe it at the level of practice? Do I believe it? And if I believe it for everybody else, this is what I say all the time, right? Like so many times people are activists are like,
Starting point is 01:00:24 you know, we all want to get, we want to get everybody free, we want to get everybody else. This is the other time, right? Like so many times people activists are like, you know, we all want to get we want to get everybody free. We want to get everybody free. And I'm like, if we all got free and you got left behind, we did it all get free. That's right. So if everybody lives in a world where their their bodies are valued as magnificent and divine and you are still the one person who's like, no, I only when I, you know, cash in in this way or that way or the other way, then we didn't actually get there. But that's an ethos, as I say it, I was like, that's an ethos that is outside of the construction of individualism. Yes. Yes. That is an ethos that demands that I believe that our liberation is bound up together
Starting point is 01:01:09 by the lots and sets, right? And so even to not believe that again, like, no, it doesn't matter if I don't make it, is another way to be like, oh, that's how I'm still about into the old imagination, right? Because that is the real truth is that you don't need to love that person just because they're divine. You don't need to want them off the ladder
Starting point is 01:01:32 just because you don't want your foot on their head. Like you need to love that person because you know that your actual liberation, your freedom is inextricably linked with theirs because as- Extricably linked with theirs because it's strictly linked. Yeah. And you can't see more obvious than the last decade of our politics to know that any time
Starting point is 01:01:53 you pull on a thread. And I think this is one of those places like in politics where we were like, really? You know, we were like, you're still voting for Trump? Why ladies? What's going on? Right? Right, women.
Starting point is 01:02:10 Great. Thank you for being aligned with our agenda because our agenda is actually to force you to birth more children so that why people don't lose their majority of population. So regardless of what you want, you have now been inscribed in our particular political arm. That's right. Whether you mean particular political arm. That's right.
Starting point is 01:02:25 Whether you mean to or not. That's what happens when you stay connected to that imagination is, it's coming for you next. It's always coming for you next because it's only power is in domination. It's only power is in controlling everything. And so if you think you're not going to end up under the control of it, you are lying to yourself. In those white women voters think that their whiteness is going to protect them and it's never been.
Starting point is 01:02:52 It hasn't happened. Sandy Hook proved that wasn't the case. Right. I was like, why will I protect you? It's like the end of the day. Whiteness is still just a tool for domination. That's right. Right.
Starting point is 01:03:03 Like the only reason whiteness came into existence was because there needed to be a narrative that made sense for why this group of people could dominate, steal, oppress, and the hold and bondage another group of people. Well, then we got to figure out what's different. All right, well, what's different? Skin.
Starting point is 01:03:22 Cool. Well, then one of these skins has got to be better than the other skin. And that's literally the creation of whiteness as a category, came as a justification for enslavement. But its purpose wasn't like, oh, whiteness is so great. Its purpose was power and control. And if somebody wants power and control,
Starting point is 01:03:43 they will use any narrative to get it. And so whatever identity you hold, if there is a person above you on the ladder who is invested in power and control, they will use any aspect of your identity to re-inscribe the ladder. And it's always sold as inherent. It was sold as an inherent superiority,
Starting point is 01:04:05 but that was the concocted plan. And to go back to the only thing that's inherent is the thing you come into the world with, is the acorn. That is the only thing that's inherent. Everything else is made up. Yes. That's why it's the only thing we can trust.
Starting point is 01:04:21 So we have, so on your Natale are two extra minutes and that is unacceptable. So I'm having a joyful time. Okay. Okay. I need to just end by thanking you deeply because you are so special and the energy that you have given to us in the last hour is such a freaking gift not just to us, but to the millions of who are going to be listening. And I cannot
Starting point is 01:04:45 think of a better way for so many people to start this year than spending this hour with you. I have goosebumps to head because I just think that is the best thing that we could give people the beginning of this year, is this conversation and you for an hour. And so now I just want you to get back in the bathtub and refill. Well, it's really been a deep joy and I just thank you all for, like I said, wanting to have this conversation for letting me ideate with you. And, you know, I want to say to you, Glennon, that I struggle with addiction as well for many, many years. And I know how hard it is to let go, right? To be like, oh, I could release that. And there is something else that will come that is far greater. And I just want to tell you that I promise there is. I just want
Starting point is 01:05:46 to tell you that I know there is. I know, I know, I know that there is something. You wouldn't be called to do what it is that you were doing in the world. You all wouldn't have been called to have the reach and experience that you have if it wasn't because there is something so incredibly powerful, so big banged and what the world has for you when you let go of that last piece of power inside of an old imagination. Yeah. Yeah, I'm just going to think about your tax return for the next. Just do this. I love this.
Starting point is 01:06:23 That is my guess. But it's getting ready to go here. I'll disagree. It's it. I love this. That is my... But it's getting ready to go here. All this great. It's like a sand shot. It is. It is. Oh.
Starting point is 01:06:32 You know. I would like to not just think Sonia, but thank God for Sonia. Yeah. Thank you for whoever is sending her these messages. And the rest of you, Pod Squad, I've never sent this before,
Starting point is 01:06:45 but you are welcome. Not even thanking you, Pod Squad, today, saying you are welcome for that. And we will see you next time on We Can Do Hard Things. We can do hard things, is produced in partnership with Cadence 13 Studios. Be sure to rate, review, and follow the show on Apple Podcasts, Odyssey, or wherever you get your podcasts, especially be sure to rate and review the podcast if you really liked it. If you didn't, don't worry about it. It's fine.

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