We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - The One Who Taught Glennon Friendship: Alex Hedison
Episode Date: June 25, 2024322. The One Who Taught Glennon Friendship: Alex Hedison  Today is a big day. Artist, actor, photographer, filmmaker, and dear bestie of Glennon and Abby, Alex Hedison is here! Alex is the person ...who Glennon credits with teaching her how to be a friend. HUGE! In this episode, they share how their friendship started, how they make it work, and Alex offers amazing life advice. It’s like being a fly on the wall in one of their hangouts. You will LOVE this chat between Alex, Glennon, Abby and Amanda! Discover: -The story of how Glennon and Abby became friends with Alex and her wife, Jodie Foster; -The literal fire that solidified their friendship; -How to never have an ick moment again after a social gathering; and -Why we MUST stress our relationships and what that means in action. About Alex: Alex Hedison is an internationally acclaimed photographer, artist, director, and actor. Hedison has exhibited in galleries in the US and abroad. Her most recent solo exhibitions include the opening of FRIEZE Seoul 2023; Von Lintel Gallery, Los Angeles; H Gallery Paris; Photo London; and Paris Photo. Her acting career spans numerous television roles, including a pivotal character in the cultural phenomenon, The L Word. A critical voice in both the artistic and LGBTQ+ community, Hedison directed the short documentary film ALOK, a thought-provoking short film that explores compassion as a catalyst for social transformation and inspires viewers to embrace personal freedom beyond the binaries that divide us. Produced by Natalie Shirinian, Elizabeth Baudouin (pronounced Bode-win), Meggan Lennon, and executive produced by Jodie Foster, ALOK was selected to premiere at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival. IG: @alexhedisonstudio 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)
Okay, we're jumping right in today. Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. Today we have one
of the most important people in our lives here. That is correct. And the pod squad knows
this person for many reasons.
One because of her work in the world.
Some of her work in the world that I consider most important is how she has taught me how
to be a friend.
Great contribution to society.
Thank you.
I think I should make it active teaching.
I don't think we're done teaching.
That's why do you know her?
Cause I talk about her nonstop on this pod
and her name is Alexandra Hedison.
I'm about to do her professional bio.
And then we're gonna get that over with
and dig into our friendship and who you are as a person.
Truly you are one of the most important people in my life,
Alexandra Hedison.
And I'm so grateful that you're here today.
Same, Zs.
I am so grateful.
First of all, you've never called me Alexandra,
so it's shocking to hear my full name.
It's as if my mother is in the room.
I know.
She is, I hope.
She is.
She is, for sure.
I'm just, I'm so excited to be here. I can't believe I'm here because I feel
like I'm watching the podcast and yet I'm talking to you as I'm watching the podcast.
So it's very confusing. It's disorienting, but I'm enjoying it because I feel like I'm
talking to you the whole time and you're not listening. Right. You don't respond to me when I comment. Amanda says nothing. I'm like Amanda you're right on point. You say nothing. You don't
acknowledge me as I'm walking my dog and talking to you. So today it's all happening the way I
imagined it. Oh I feel like we just took a break from each other to sleep. We were together last
night at dinner at your house with Ziggy and Jodi and Abby and me.
And we talked about this day.
Well, hold on a second.
Just in case you don't know who Alexandra Hedison is.
And I think I'm just gonna-
Please call me Alex, please.
Okay, but can I just call you Alexandra
in like the professional manner?
And then I'll switch to Alex after this bio.
Alexandra Hedison is an internationally acclaimed
photographer, artist, director, and actor.
Hedison has exhibited in galleries in the US and abroad.
Her most recent solo exhibitions include the opening
of Freeze Soul, 2023, von Lintel Gallery, Los Angeles,
H Gallery, Paris, Photo London, and Paris Photo.
Her acting career spans numerous television roles, including a pivotal character in the
cultural phenomenon, the L Word, which all the OG lesbians know and the newbies sometimes
embarrassingly admit that we didn't know, but it's a big deal. You're a big deal in the L word world.
Okay.
A critical voice in both the artistic and LGBTQ plus
community, Hedison directed the short documentary film,
Eloke, a thought provoking short film that explores
compassion as a catalyst for social transformation
and inspires viewers to embrace personal freedom
beyond the binaries
that divide us.
Produced by Natalie Sherinian, Elizabeth Bodwin,
Megan Lennon, and executive produced by Jodie Foster,
Alok was selected to premiere
at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival,
and as we now know, just took the festival by storm.
Alexandra Hedison, you're so fancy.
She's now Alex.
We can go on to the Alex part of her.
Go to the Alex.
Okay.
I've even changed to Alex professionally.
I've stepped away from the full Alexandra.
I like the non-binary aspect of Alex.
It feels all encompassing to me where Alexandra reminds me of a way I was supposed to
be my whole life, the way that I was informed that I should behave, I should feel, I should act,
I should present. And Alex, there's a freedom in Alex. And so I've used that in my last two shows
and in the film, it says directed by Alex Hedison.
So you didn't know this, did you?
I didn't know that.
I think that what you just said was also one of the best ways
to describe you all encompassing.
I love that.
I love it when people just claim a name
because you know, like in most spiritual traditions,
when people find their truth, they get named something new.
They have like a new name.
And that's really cool that yours was just right there
hidden in your long good name.
Yeah.
And it's not something you're supposed to do.
You know, I've been showing my work for,
I don't know, 25 years. When you're established
as an artist, you don't just change your name. My name hasn't changed fully, but it's not the same
one that I've presented in the past. And it's funny because my French gallerist, I'm not so
sure that she's down with it. They're very traditional there. It's like, no, you're Alexandra.
I don't know.
Yeah, so it's going to be a negotiation
with her over time, I think.
Do you think that if you had grown up 30 years later,
that you would claim non-binary fully when you were younger?
Oh, 100%.
Yeah.
I claim a lot of things.
Like what? I think as I have,
I would say in the last few years,
I've woken up.
I've woken up.
And I'm aware more than ever
of the boxes I've placed myself into,
the ones that were introduced to me.
And then I consciously
stepped into and closed the lid in order to stay safe, in order to be liked, in order
to fit in, in order to whatever. And that is true even within the gay community, even
the queer community in relationships. This is how I'm supposed to do relationships. This
is how it's supposed to look. This is how a gay relationship is supposed to look.
And ultimately it was all modeled on a heteronormative idea,
which is modeled on a patriarchal idea.
And it doesn't really suit me.
The reason I don't go back and sort of claim names, claim new things, put myself in new
boxes is because I'm really curious about it all right now.
And I also recognize that in many ways I have over time become used to doing things a certain
way.
And I don't know that I would be able to hold the complexity or the trouble that
comes with redefining myself. I think that there are so many people now who are in relationships
where they're open to so many things from polyamory to they have a new language to talk about intimacy.
And it's so interesting. There's so much more possibility in it. And when you've lived a
certain way for a long time to engage differently than, for example, being monogamous, I don't know
that I'd be able to hold the complexity
and the difficulty that comes with everything else because I haven't practiced it.
You know, I really love what my life is.
But I am definitely troubling a lot of things.
And I have been for quite a few years now really pushing the boundaries that I've set
in place for myself.
I just love the phrase, you've been troubling a lot of things. Is that when this kind of stirring
you have in you pours over and affects the other people in your life? Because there's an internal
thing where you can decide, oh, I'm being something new, I'm feeling something new.
where you can decide, oh, I'm being something new, I'm feeling something new. And then,
for me, it usually stops right at the edges of myself, because the thing I'm not supposed to do is impact others or disturb the waters outside of me. I can be all wavy and tsunami inside of me,
but when it goes out, that's a bridge too far. So when you say you're troubling, are you allowing yourself to impact your ecosystems?
Yes.
Cool.
And I think for me, it might be the opposite.
I think that the most painful thing is going through the crisis that comes with awakening, the falling apart or demolition
or slow crumbling of a system that you have held in place and tended to for years.
And that can look like depression, that can look like anxiety, that can look like self-hate.
It can look like a lot of things, negative voices, kind of a negative way that I have
spoken to myself, like, why are you thinking that? Why are you saying that? Judgment, self-judgment.
And allowing for it and creating space where I'm willing to listen to the parts of myself
that feel tremendously inconvenient and threatening and be able to hold space for those parts.
And once I do that, once I'm willing to cross those thresholds, then I can settle into a new acceptance of who I am or what
it is that I need.
And then going to my partner or saying out loud to friends, you know what, I'm Alex now.
It's Alex.
And you know, or whatever it is, even something that's more difficult.
It feels like at that point, I'm coming from love and I'm not coming from judgment.
At that point, I'm coming from a kind of harmony versus an inner turmoil,
which I'm then projecting to the person in front of me saying, I need this.
I need freedom.
Because I've kind of found the place of freedom in me.
And now I'm just sharing it
and inviting the person across from me to be free also.
I mean, shout out to all people our age.
I try to talk about this to my younger kids
because they are being raised.
This is always how generations work, right?
They're growing up in a world
where the language around gender is expansive,
the language around relationships is expansive,
race, whiteness, all of it.
It's like their roots are growing in a field.
And we, as open-minded people and curious people,
are listening to all of that language.
And our roots are starting to grow too,
but we're in fucking pots already.
Mm-hmm.
Here you go with the pots.
But I'm just saying, Alex, you know,
Alex uses metaphors, so we will talk about something
for a year before she tells me
what she's actually talking about. But we will talk for hours for a year before she tells me what she's actually talking about.
We will talk for hours a day and she'll say,
I'm a plant in a pot.
And a year later I'll be like,
okay, I just need to know what the fucking plant is.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I did, I think for months and months and months say,
I feel like my pot is breaking.
I'm in this pot and it's breaking.
And finally, you just looked at me,
you're like, you just gotta tell me what's the pot.
Yeah, I can't anymore.
I can't, what is the pot?
And the reason I do speak in metaphors,
but in something like that,
that's exactly what I'm talking about, Amanda,
that the hardest thing was for me to challenge
my own system.
For me to really listen and go,
I have outgrown this.
This does not work for me.
And to name it and then find a way through.
Does this mean I have to toss away my whole life?
Or does it mean that I am willing to,
that I must find the ways to be more in harmony, find the ways that
are easier, that feel more true to me.
So yes, sorry.
No, I just think you're like the best example of that.
There's a lot of us in that slice.
Like, yes, oh my God, the letters that I get from women who are married to men.
And then when they're 40, realize that they're bisexual
or they're like, what does one do with that?
It's different when you learn it young
and the language around it in the community.
And then you can build your life
based on what you know about yourself.
But then when the world awakens something in you
that was always there, but not accessible
because the language wasn't free enough.
And you have already built a life based on pots.
Just, I don't have any answers, but to all of you
who are in the, even whiteness, like waking up.
Oh, for sure, waking up.
Oh my God.
And then realizing, wait, how do I unplant myself?
Anyway. Unpot, how do I unplant myself? Anyway.
Unpot, you have to unpot.
See, this is where we get with the pots and plants,
and then we're talking about roots and shit,
and we don't remember what we're actually talking about.
Well, that's also another reason,
like why do we need to listen
to the most marginalized voices?
Because they are the ones who are calling out to all of us saying, wake up.
This doesn't work.
It's not just they over there.
It's not working.
The system doesn't work.
How are we all affected by it and how are we all contributing to it?
Yeah.
That's what a look does.
Dr. Yabablay, all these people, they're saying, I'm not saying learn about race, learn about gender because I'm stuck. I'm saying learn
about it because you're planting yourself in small pots and you're going to wake up
one day and you're going to feel suffocated. Right. And while you're doing it, you're suffocating me. I'm thriving in spite of you.
I'm Rachel Martin. After hosting Morning Edition for years, I know that the news can
wear you down. So we made a new podcast called Wild Card, where a special deck of cards
and a whole bunch of fascinating guests
help us sort out what makes life meaningful.
It's part game show, part existential deep dive,
and it is seriously fun.
Join me on Wild Card wherever you get your podcasts,
only from NPR.
["Wild Card"]
Tell me, I want to hear the story from your perspective. Tell me about how we became friends.
I want to hear your version and then I want to tell my version.
Okay.
So, it was a very unusual beginning of a friendship for me.
I've never had anything like it.
I read on Tamed during the pandemic
and I didn't know your work before that.
I think it was even before the podcast
when you were doing little online things
and you were talking and you kind of introduced,
it was like you and Abby, we were in your house in Florida.
And like that you were connecting with people out loud.
It was Christmas and you'd say,
come into our house for Christmas.
And I was stunned by how open you were and vulnerable
and the way you were talking about things.
And it felt incredibly aligned to me.
And most of the time, I feel like there might be something someone's saying that I'm connecting
to, but it doesn't feel to me like what they're saying and the way they're living or what
they're doing, that they're aligned.
And it felt like everything was meeting with you
and with Abby, the balance of your relationship
and the humor, I just related to it so much.
And then you had a podcast where you said something like,
we've moved to LA and gosh, we need to find a dentist
for our kids.
And I thought, well, that's it.
That's enough now, because I kept at that point,
I was like, we need to be friends. Yeah. My pot has a dentist. Yes, exactly. Me. And by
the way, everyone else who was listening to your podcast going like, we need to be friends.
But I said this to a friend of mine who is a doer. Yes. My friend, Jamie Lee Curtis,
we were on a long walk in Idaho and I was talking to her about many things.
I said, I really feel like I wanna meet Abby and Glennon.
And then later I said to her, I know Jamie
and I called her and I said, by the way,
you do not need to call anyone or do something
or call an agent or, cause I know Jamie,
Jamie will, well, Jamie had already,
Jamie was like, too late.
I've already
texted someone or you're and like she sends me back a text where she's texted you. I don't know
how she got your number. She did it all within like two hours and she introduced us and then
I remember we finally connected. We decided a time to get together. And from the beginning,
I felt like you were inviting me to be as authentic
as I crave, as I want to be all the time,
just from the way the two of you presented yourselves.
So I'm not really a night person
and you guys really aren't night people.
So we decided to meet at seven in the morning.
We did, I was like, this is my girl, I found her.
And I had to tell Jodi.
Oh God.
That because I had talked about you guys already going like,
I feel like we need to be friends.
And I said, okay, here's the thing.
I talked to Jamie about Abby and Glennon and she's like, wait, you did what?
And wait, hang on, let me finish.
And she's already connected us.
She did.
She was so baffled by the whole thing because we're not really friends with people who are
in the public eye so much.
Right, right.
Especially Jodi.
Jodi was not having it. No. She's like, I don't understand. Like, who are in the public eye so much. Right, right. Especially Jodi. Jodi was not having it.
No, she's like, I don't understand.
Like, who are you?
You've reached out to someone who you know from a podcast,
like what is happening?
I said, I'm telling you, I have an instinct here.
And I said, so we're gonna meet them.
I think I said tomorrow.
She's like, what?
And I said, let me finish.
They live, and I told her where you lived, which
was a good distance from our house. I said, let me finish at 7am. So it was, she could
not even understand what was happening. And I said, I'm telling you right now that this
is what we're doing. It is happening and you have to trust me. And we went to your house
and then I'll let you take it from here.
Well, I wanna fill two things in from my perspective.
I received what I felt like was what people do
when they really want to adopt a dog.
Like they send a long letter about themselves
with pictures and how much, how loving they are.
I received a dog application from Jamie Lee Curtis about you.
Okay? And inside this letter, there were the most beautiful descriptions of who you are as a person.
Paragraphs and paragraphs about who you are, how you treat your friends, you and Jodi's marriage.
She wanted to show me images to back up this.
So she sent me pictures of you graduating from college
because you graduated from Antioch,
like a couple of years ago, you went back to college.
Yes, I went back to college during the pandemic
and I was a full-time student and graduated in 2021,
the same year as one of our sons, by the way.
Which is the most beautiful thing. You wanted to reclaim that part of your life and of yourself,
and you wanted to learn about social justice in a deeper way.
I went to a school that is rooted. Every single course is rooted in social justice.
I needed to relearn and I needed to go from the ground up.
and social justice. I needed to relearn and I needed to go from the ground up.
And so when you were graduating, it was COVID. And so Jodi created a surprise graduation ceremony for you in the backyard with a marching band, a socially distanced marching band and robes and staffs.
I mean, the picture was of Jodie with a,
she looked like a wizard.
I don't even know.
She was wearing her, what are they called?
The things that you wear in your graduation.
A stole.
A stole.
Whatever the-
Yeah.
Harry Potter looking.
The robes are, this is,
I'm gonna wake up tomorrow morning and go,
I can't believe I couldn't remember
what it was called.
Yeah, so, and we're all marching around the neighborhood,
all of us, because she said to everyone,
anything that you graduated from in college, wear.
Yes, and so that was it.
Like, I was like, this is a good application.
It was a very good application.
Jamie is good at an application.
And so then the next thing I want to say is in my whole life, I will never forget what
Jodie looked like standing on our front porch carrying that orchid at 7 a.m. looking at
me like, lady, I don't want to be here either. All right? And then we sat down.
We were laughing about this last night at dinner
because I think one of the first things she said to me
was I don't do famous friends.
I don't like famous people
or something like that in general.
I was like, well, you're Jodie Foster.
I don't feel like we're famous.
We're not famous.
So, and then she goes, I mean,
if Alex would have invited me to like the house of a kindergarten teacher and a death doula, I don't feel like we're famous. We're not famous. So, and then she goes, I mean,
if Alex would have invited me to like the house
of a kindergarten teacher and a death doula,
I would have been there, but you two, you know.
And I was like, that's very specific.
Kindergarten teacher and a death doula.
So we sat down and what I remember
about that first meeting together is that we sat there for five hours,
the four of us, five hours.
And none of us wanted to pee.
We kept holding it.
And then we kept going, just don't say anything.
Well, I just had to pee.
Don't say anything while I'm gone.
I actually think about this every time I go in that bathroom, because at the time we had
just moved into the house
and we didn't have any blinds on the windows.
And it was like, you're going to pee.
And I felt so bad and Jodie came out and she's like,
you know, you don't have any blinds on the windows.
And I was like, yeah.
She did?
Yeah, and I'm like, I'm really sorry.
I probably should put a temporary one in there.
But every single time I go in there,
I think, I'm glad there's a blind in there now.
So we took care of it.
Yeah. Yeah.
So.
I never noticed.
Then we just were like, okay, we're doing this.
And I was scared because I...
Pod squad, you might remember this time as...
I just didn't really understand how to do friendship.
We were connecting and I felt like, oh, I think I'm supposed to text
her back. I think I'm supposed to call her back. Like it became a very intentional. Yeah, there was
an intentionality about it. I think that what you're trying to say though is we had just moved from
Florida and we have some lovely friends from Florida and we love you all so very much.
It was just harder to create and maintain friendships there because there were so much
political undertones inside of so many of those relationships.
And because we felt like we were seeing so clearly eye to eye, it was like one of the
first times that we felt like we were very aligned with friends that it felt like you
had this wanting to reach out.
Well, where are the red flags
that let me get the fuck out of here?
Yeah, it wasn't like in your head.
There was no red flags.
You were like, what is this feeling
that I want to know what's happening with them right now?
And I'm curious about them
and I wanna stay in touch with them.
I think that that was a confusing time for you
because it's always been kind of,
what should I be doing
to maintain a friendship rather than a want. Right. Performing a behavior. Yeah. Yeah.
One of the reasons that I think probably Alex was so attractive to you, Glennon, is because you
never needed friends just to have friends. You want friends who are additive to your life. And I've
heard people describe you, Alex, as you are not like a witness friend. You are a challenger friend.
You're not just passively, I'm here and I'm sitting by you, but I am like seeing you and I am noting
where you are not actually doing the thing that represents who you are.
And I'm so I bet you just could tell that from the beginning, this person is going to
edify me and see me and not put up with any bullshit.
Yeah, and has so much wisdom.
Right, every time we leave,
I sometimes just feel like when I leave social situations,
I feel drained.
I feel like, I don't know.
Every time I left Alex's presence,
I felt like I learned something new.
I knew something new.
I had moments of like, oh, lighting up.
I felt like, oh, I understand why people want to be
with other people.
Because they feel fuller and better and challenged and,
I don't know.
Seen.
Yeah, seen.
And then you invited us to go away for a weekend.
That was pretty fast.
That was really fast.
That was really fast.
I do want to say that when we got in the car after that five hour breakfast,
Jodi was floored.
Oh, I mean, she was like, OK, I get it.
That was amazing.
And I really enjoy being right.
I'm going to be honest.
Yes. Don't we all? And I did say to her, I'm going to be honest. Yes. Don't we all?
And I did say to her, I did used to be a kindergarten teacher, if that counts.
Yes, that's right.
You did say I used to be a kindergarten teacher.
That's right.
And Abby's obsessed with that.
Same, same.
Yes.
That's right.
That's right.
Yeah.
Yeah, but then we went on a ski trip.
That's right.
Well, you and Jodi went ski trip.
Alex and I went on a sit trip. That's right. Well, you and Jodi went ski trip. Alex and I went on a sit trip.
Right. Yes. So we, Jodi and I go to Idaho. We love to ski and we invited you to come
with us. And again, Jamie, who has a house there, is like, well, you guys have to stay
in our house. Jamie said, no, you have to, you have to stay in our house. I said, Jamie, don't. She said, no, you have to. You have to stay in our house.
I said, okay.
And it was this little cabin in the woods and it was still during COVID.
So it's not like we went to Idaho, went to restaurants and we didn't go,
we didn't leave the cabin.
And this is early days, early days.
And I was really nervous.
Same first date nerves.
I mean, and by the way, first date, like first date and we're like
going on vacation together.
Like it was a lot and there was an incident.
There was an incident where I'm in the kitchen, the four of us are there
and I'm making tea, and they have an electric
teapot that looks like a nice old teapot that you put on the stove.
And it's very visual.
I like a visual cue.
It's an old teapot you put on the stove, and I put it on the stove, and I turn the flame
on and I'm chatting and I'm chatting.
And was it Abby who came in and said,
is that supposed to be on fire?
Yeah, because I was watching it.
I was watching you. You were watching me.
I was watching the teapot.
I just get so confused in the kitchen and it was a fancy kitchen.
And I thought, maybe this one's supposed to be on fire.
I did not even say anything to you.
And then Abby comes in like, um...
Something's wrong.
And I look at it and the teapot is on fire.
Oh, God. It was on fire.
And I took it off and I quickly, I lifted up with a pot holder
and I put it in the sink, which then it proceeds to not just,
I've not just burned the stove. I've now burned the sink. Right.
Beautiful kitchen in this house of my beloved friend, who's been so generous.
And I am stunned. Yeah, I'm just stunned.
And I think that all of you were you were very gentle with me.
And I believe there was laughter, but I did not laugh.
I did not laugh for a while.
But it was just like,
it epitomized how I was so excited by our friendship.
I was so excited for us all to be together.
It was so much fun.
And I kind of didn't know what to do with myself.
Yeah.
And so I attempted to burn down their kitchen.
And we all have sobriety in common.
So that should be mentioned because it felt like right away.
That's why everything felt to me so aligned and why it was so easy to say yes to go away
for a weekend.
There's just so many things that are already sorted
when you're all sober people.
Yeah, we're gonna go to bed early.
We're gonna wake up early.
We're gonna drink coffee and talk a lot.
We're not gonna have tea,
because that ship has sailed.
No, that ship has, no. There's a commitment to consciousness.
And there's a commitment to truth.
And that's, for me, why I love this podcast so much.
And I love your marriage so much. And I love your marriage so much.
And I love your sister.
And I love your whole team.
Because there's this commitment to,
to love and truth and being aligned.
And everything you do lines up.
So it was such a surprise for me to actually be with you in person, both of you.
And to know like, Oh my God, they're exactly the same way in their house
as they are on the podcast.
There's no presentation.
And that was really big for me because I think in many ways in my fear, I become curated.
Even that we're doing this podcast and we're in my studio.
And there is going to be a clip that we're in my studio.
Like I've never shown the inside of my studio.
Ever.
Not a corner of it.
And it's not like, what am I hiding?
I mean, I've shown it where I have studio visits with people one on one, but I'm
just saying like online, I don't have, I've shown it where I have studio visits with people one-on-one, but I'm just saying like online.
I don't have, I don't reveal myself.
I don't want to say exposed, but I don't reveal myself.
And you all are very, there's an openness.
So our friendship started from a commitment to truthfulness
and love and honesty and transparency.
So even like when you were talking about texting,
like, do I have to text back? I think that first breakfast, I said, here's the thing.
You don't ever have to text back. Let's talk about like the rules. And I think we did that
in Sun Valley too, with the post-mortem. So that is one thing that you have taught me and we have worked on is like over-communicating.
Like communicating what do we need from each other, what do we expect from each other,
what are ways we can help our friendship.
Like things we can put in place.
Like for example, we've talked about this on the pod before, but can you explain to
us, you suggested we have a post-mortem.
I think in the beginning, it was after every long date.
We went to brunch and we got in the car and Alex and Jodie were in the back seat.
Or no, Alex was driving. I was in the front seat.
And Alex, you said, I really think that we should talk about, because what was
coming up for you is all the things that you were a little bit worried about that maybe
you said that maybe didn't sit right or you just wanted to clear the air sort of thing.
And it was such a good idea.
Yeah. You said, let's just do that. You know how we're going to go home and overthink everything
we said wrong or did wrong or wish we said, why don't we just do that now?
Right.
Let's just talk about everything.
And then we sat down at breakfast.
Is that something you had done before or you just...
No.
Okay.
No, I just was, I was just aware that it was a big leap that we took.
And I wanted there to be space to express the things that we were doubting or that I
knew that I would go home and go, why didn't I burn the teapot?
Or maybe I should have done this or I hope they didn't think.
And I wanted there to be room for all of that to be able to say it out loud.
Like is there anything that I wish I hadn't done or that I wish I'd been more considerate of or that I'm wondering if you think, why not be curious
about it and bring it into the room? And that was a really great moment, I think for all
of us.
It was, that was the strengthening moment. And at first I was like, I don't think there's
anything and then I'm like, just started saying stuff.
And it was like the most vulnerable that we'd gotten. And then we ended up sitting there for like two hours and just,
it was a very beautiful exercise.
Yeah. Yeah.
It's like shining a light.
The thing that you're like, well, let's just stay with the tour and hope nobody noticed that.
There's no need to go back and review the hat, but it stays with you.
And instead shining a light and being like, there's this really awkward thing.
And I think that you're going to think that maybe I think that way and I don't.
So let's bring it out. That's beautiful.
Yeah. You know, like when you're at the end of the night, you've gone to a dinner
party and you're walking around the bedroom, you're taking off your jewelry,
you're brushing your teeth and you're downloading and processing what, you're taking off your jewelry, you're brushing your teeth, and you're downloading and processing
what happened that night with your partner.
We just wanted to do that with each other.
Right.
Out in the open.
But also, I think I grew up presenting myself in friendships.
And then later in private, or with my partner saying,
I can't believe they did this.
Or I mean, how weird when they said that,
what do you think they meant by it?
I don't know.
We'd go back and forth and then you make assumptions
and then you build protections
or then you start to divest from the relationship.
And with my close friendships,
I bring it all into the room.
And it doesn't necessarily mean they're heavy conversations.
It's just curiosity, like, oh, when you did that, what was that?
Or I think the other day with you guys, I was talking about something.
I was talking about the death of my parents.
And I was talking about it in a way that was not very connected.
I was talking about it very quickly and without emotion and it didn't sit well with me.
I just didn't like it and I brought it up to you later.
And for you it was fine, but I was really curious, did that sit wrong?
For me it sat wrong.
It was fine for you, but for me I just needed to acknowledge like I was really disconnected
when I was saying that and this is important, and I want to be able to slow down
and be truthful about how I feel about it. And it's such a beautiful opportunity because
it feels like what you said, even from the beginning of this conversation, is that it's
really important for you to be in your alignment or in your knowing or in your being. And every time, and this is something
that I've learned so much from you, Alex,
is like every time you feel like you are out of alignment
or out of your knowing or out of integrity,
even one step, not even very far,
you bring it to our attention.
And what I have learned is it's not all about
maintaining a beautiful relationship between
the four of us.
It's about you maintaining the relationship with yourself so that you can keep coming
to this relationship and this friendship in alignment.
That's exactly right.
Because whether we are close friends for one more year or 40 years, it's neither here nor there.
It's exactly right, Abby.
It's being in alignment.
If I can come from a place where I feel that how I'm feeling and what I'm saying match,
then the way I approach my friendships is from a place of love.
It's from a place of connection.
There's so much possibility and whatever will be will be.
How did you hone that?
That is a skill that is incredibly hard to identify.
I think sometimes we feel like nervous or jittery
or we leave and we just say, I feel ick,
but it's very hard to identify. I am not
aligned, attuned in this moment, or I can see the trigger that caused me to say that sarcastic thing
when really I wanted to say a sincere thing about the way I felt. How did you hone that skill? I
think that's a very specific skill to know when you are one degree off or right on.
And you have taught me as a follow up to that question,
because you have taught me more about that.
That's embodiment too.
Yes.
Like when you're the one who keeps teaching me,
I say, well, this happened and then I blah, blah, blah.
And you say, well, did you say anything in the moment?
You've taught me to say like, I feel weird
in the moment staying aligned.
How did you learn that skill?
That's such a good question.
There are a few ways.
Sobriety for me was the first step
to becoming aware of how I was actually feeling.
How long have you been sober?
For 18 years.
Okay.
I think for me and for a lot of people,
alcohol was actually not the problem.
It was again, a metaphor,
but I felt like I was in this broken down house
that I was trying to keep erect
and there were cracks in the walls
and I kept going through the house
and caulking up the cracks and then painting over.
And the alcohol and drugs were just the caulk.
It was just the paint.
It was just trying to make it look as if everything was okay.
And the house needed to be rebuilt from the ground up.
Yeah. And the house needed to be rebuilt from the ground up.
So sobriety has given me the ability
to connect with how I'm feeling and what
all the other issues are that are keeping me
from being embodied, being aligned, being conscious,
being vulnerable, being able to connect with others,
being aware, being kind, being empathetic. Sobriety has allowed me to feel and to love
myself and others. And so many times that's painful because life is tremendously painful and glorious and surprising and shocking and upsetting and wonderful.
So sobriety was the first part of it. started on a journey, on a conscious journey, where I would seek out the teachers who would
help me with whatever the issue was that was keeping me from connection.
So I had an incredible therapist named Beverly Berg who passed away just a few years ago.
She was amazing.
And she was so, she was, she thought really outside the box. She was not
like anyone I had ever met. And when I talked to her about something like, well, you know,
I was uncomfortable with this person or this friend because they do this or she would say
to me, I don't understand. So how long were you listening to them talk
before you said something?
I don't know.
It was probably like a half an hour.
I didn't say anything.
So you're okay with just sitting
and being uncomfortable for that long.
So you're gonna privilege them over yourself.
You're gonna privilege this idea
of how you're supposed to be over
actually acknowledging your own
feelings.
So, yes, Beverly, we are.
She absolutely.
Yeah.
Because I don't want to ruffle any feathers.
I thought that was called life.
Yeah.
What do you mean?
What do you mean?
Like, what are you talking about?
How am I?
And I had to find the language because when I first became willing to speak out loud,
it would go like this.
I don't understand what you're saying. I'm bored speak out loud, it would go like this.
I don't understand what you're saying. I'm bored.
You know, I would start, I'd like shout it.
She'd be like, okay, maybe that's not the way to do it.
Maybe you could be curious.
Perhaps you could, you know, say, I just want to ask you, are you aware
that I'm not speaking at all?
So she started, you know, and I use
the word trouble, like, yes, troubling, trouble. How to because she taught me how to stress
relationships. She says we must stress relationships. Say more. Stressing a relationship is me saying to Abby,
hey, Abby, are you okay if I come later to that thing?
And Abby going, yeah, it's no problem.
Don't worry about it.
And me still not believing, like,
I don't know if she's just saying that to be nice.
I'm not sure.
And me stressing it by saying,
Abby, I just want to ask you,
what would it look like if you weren't okay with it? nice. I'm not sure. And me stressing it by saying, Abby, I just want to ask you,
what would it look like if you weren't OK with it?
Oh, gosh.
I'd say, it hurts my feelings.
Or I'd say, actually, I really need you to be here on time.
Oh, OK.
Thank you.
Now I know how.
So I'm pushing it. Or Amanda, when you ask me questions like that, it's scaring me.
I feel like I'm stupid or something.
Are you questioning whether or not I know what I'm talking about?
I don't know because I don't know the answer.
I can assume that you're being judgmental. I can assume that you're being judgmental.
I can assume that you think I'm dumb.
Or I can ask you by saying, I'm feeling really uncomfortable
right now, and I don't know why you're asking me in that way.
Can you tell me?
That's stressing the relationship.
And being willing to hear the answer, and then Amanda says,
can say, I don't know what you're talking about, and I don't want to have the answer. And then Amanda says, can say, I don't know what you're talking
about and I don't want to have this conversation. And I can take that information and go, okay,
I have information. And then you start to make choices about your relationship and how
much time you want to spend with that person.
Hmm. Okay, everybody, we're going to stop there with Alex, but don't worry because we're going to
come back with Alex. This conversation needs to continue and I have a couple questions to ask Alex
because there are some answers that she has given me that I know you are going to need to hear. So
So come back next time more with Alex Hedison.
We can do hard things. We'll see you soon.
Bye.
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We Can Do Hard Things is created and hosted by Glennon Doyle,
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I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle.
I walked through fire, I came out the other side
I chased desire, 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
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 pain
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
Cause we're adventurers and heartbreaks on that
Our 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 hard today.
We're adventurers and heartbreaks on map We might get lost but we're okay that 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 hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things Hard things