We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - WHY ARE THERE NO PICTURES OF US?!?
Episode Date: August 25, 20221. Deep dive into how it feels to not be in any of your family photos, why it happens, and how to change it. 2. A call-in question from a husband that made Amanda cry. 3. Reimagining “acts of serv...ice” and how to know whether actions belong in the “Adulting Bucket” or the “Love Bucket.” 4. Getting the kids to read over the summer went terribly, thanks for asking. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello!
Hello! We can do hard things, Emily. Can you stop talking when I'm talking?
I just, sometimes it's so fun to have fun.
Okay.
I actually do a disagree.
I do not think it's fun to have.
Speaking of fun, I really like when it's the three of us.
I mean, I like when people come over to our house and visit.
I also like when it's just us.
Me too.
It feels like we kind of have to be on like our best behavior
when people are here, like we're having guests.
How's everybody doing?
So see you are on family vacation.
How is your vacation going?
Well, I mean, I wasn't thinking about as a vacation.
We are existing in a different location in our normal existence.
But I do have a development in this week because I'm doing the thing where I'm trying to make up for all the things I didn't do in the school year.
Like my kids are supposed to read 30 minutes a night every night in the school year.
Which we did a total of zero times.
Oh, okay.
School year.
Nobody read at all anything.
Well, I mean, they read before they go to bed for like five minutes before they pass
out or we read to them or they never read their cereal boxes in the morning.
Yes.
They've closed the captions on the television.
They read car signs when we drive, but like SSR, silence, sustained reading.
We do not do a lot of that.
So I decided that the summer we're going to make up for the whole year and if we just
crammed it into the summer, then we would basically be even Steven with the school system.
How's that going?
It's going very poorly, Abby, for us. But I realize I'm like, why the hell don't these kids
like to read? What's wrong with them? Reading is important. Good.
Who raised these kids? And then I read this situation, which
is that the one of the most effective predictors of whether kids become readers are
whether the parents are readers. Which is not cool because I feel like can't
they just have one job on their own? And I realize that all of the books that I consume are a for this podcast
people who have been on the podcast and B, I do it all over audio.
So hold on.
I hold on.
Again, why do you do that?
Why do you only do audio books?
Because so that I can do other things.
Exactly.
I knew it.
Do you know that there's no such thing as doing other things?
There's no such thing as multitasking. Want a bet? Your tasks, which you're not multitasking,
because nobody can do two things at once. So if your attention is at one thing, it is determined.
It's not at the other thing. I believe in sister. You mean I cannot put a shirt on a hanger while I listen to Cole Arthur Riley, you have underestimated my brain power.
Okay, that actually might be if there's anybody between us, if there's anybody who can prove
signs wrong, it is sister. Well, I just don't believe that yes, but not effectively. But I can fold some shit and put some dishes in the dishwasher and satay some onions.
Okay.
Well, I'm listening to a book.
That's freaking amazing to me.
I mean, we, I just to tell you, I actually think this is an interesting thing.
I do not believe that I can do those things.
You can't.
No, well, you can't saute, and I mean,
even if you were just sauteing,
even if I was only one tasking.
Right, if I was unit-tasking, I still couldn't do that.
All right, go ahead.
So your, the gearing out all you do is multitask,
you listen to the audio books,
so your kids can't read.
So your kids can never see me.
So my guess, and yes, exactly. No one's pointing fingers at John
I see. Okay, so I don't sit down with a book. So I decided, all right, fine. And
So we've been doing this thing and I should be clear that like when I say
I swear to God, we're definitely doing this. I mean it this time,
we're doing it every single day without failure. We're effectively doing it like three times a week.
So that's fine. We're doing it three times a week, which is great. And with Alice, it's actually
been so much fun because we just sit in the hammock and read the book for 30 minutes. And it's been like
a really lovely thing. And I finished my first book that I've read in 10 years,
just for fun, C.
You weren't reading this book for this podcast, per se.
Yes, exactly, exactly.
And I also just went up, poor, went out for all the people
trying to get the other people to read,
because here's how it goes with Alice.
Alice, it's time to read.
OK, here's how it goes with Bobby. It takes one hour time to read. Okay. Here's how it goes with Bobby.
It takes one hour and 45 minutes to get our 30 minutes
of reading in because it's 20 minutes every day of no,
I'm not gonna do it.
And then 20 minutes of pretending like we're reading
when we're not reading.
And then 20 minutes which we all just collectively
pretend is 30 minutes so we don't have to fight it anymore
of actual reading.
It's a disaster.
I get that though.
Reading is really hard for me too.
It's been a journey for you.
It's really hard.
I would be interested if like he could walk and read, like just like give him
like a little box to like walk in because he because for me it's like being
still I'm so comfortable.
Another thing that's hard about reading,
is there's no casual enjoyment of anything for me.
I am either not reading anything,
or I am reading compulsively,
like this book is going to disintegrate in 24 hours
if I don't read it compulsively through the night.
So like two o'clock in the morning.
So nothing feels just relaxing,
because then I just have to keep going.
Do you feel like since our culture puts such an emphasis on reading,
do you feel like worried and scared?
Do you have kids who don't read?
Do you feel like scared about it?
Like guilty or something?
No, I don't think that is not the area that my kids struggle most in, but I think parents
who have kids who struggle in reading, I'm sure it's a very big deal.
We have many other struggles, but they're actually fine readers.
It's more just like, I feel like, God, you have like 24 hours in a day.
Can we not just have 20 minutes where you do the damn thing that I ask you to do?
Yeah.
And it just makes me feel so,
like I feel like super mom, they read for 20 minutes,
I'm like, God damn, I am amazing.
Yeah, that's awesome.
It's just so interesting,
because I have the polar opposite issue,
which is I read so much that I spend a lot of time
feeling guilty that I'm not paying attention to anyone,
because I use reading as an excuse not to interact with human beings.
I remember we were at the soccer game last weekend and I brought my books.
I'm reading this book that's so good.
There's like a half hour where the parents are all just milling and talking to each other before the game. Like small talk, you know,
and I said to Abby, is it rude if I just pull out my book and read with everyone just standing
around me? Is that rude? Like what are the social norms about reading? If you're in a social situation
and you pull out a book, is that rude?
It depends if you wanna be social or not.
But I don't think that's true
because I never wanna be social.
Then you can read, like who gives a shit?
I think you would just put your chair to the side.
For example, if you're all like within elbows distance
of each other, or standing around.
We were in a circle and then you reach into your purse,
held up your book and started reading it,
that would be seen as the equivalent
of like flicking someone off,
because it's like, I'm here,
but I'm trying to pretend like I'm not here.
And you're like, hey, y'all, so good to see you, my gosh.
Yay!
And then pull your chair away and sat down with your book. It becomes clear of like,
she has greeted, she wishes to be over there. That's what she does. Okay. We were in a circle.
You didn't pull a book out and then the next game, we were all like in a line and nobody was like
looking at each other and so that's when you pull the book out. And then is it, is it rude to read
the book during the game? Yes. Okay. Oh, it is. But when your kid is playing,
Yeah.
You got to watch it.
Oh my god.
We have to pretend like we're what?
Okay.
So here's another tip for audiobook lessons.
That's when you listen to audiobooks.
Yes.
Because then they'll never know.
In your ears.
And then you just make your face go,
Oh, wow.
Yay.
Good hustle.
Speaking from a person who's been on the field,
half of the time, I was only doing it
just to make sure that my parents were watching.
Oh.
And like, but that's a problem.
If you're doing it for you, they should stop doing it
because you're doing it for them
and they're doing it for you
and everyone should just give up the hustle.
I understand, that's part of maybe my personality flaw is like I need attention.
But like I loved it when I like did something good and I looked over and my parents for
paying attention.
I love that.
And so I always try to stay as present as I can.
And when Emma now, she's the only one that's playing soccer.
When she looks over to the sidelines and like we make eye contact after she's done something,
there is nothing that makes me happier. It doesn't mean you have to like be present 100% of that
game. Well, that is fascinating because you're talking about presence and like presence being love.
We're going to listen to a pod squatter question right now that I have heard one million times in my life from people and
I think it's fascinating.
Cool.
This is Megan.
This is Megan and I just am calling with a concern that I cannot get anybody to take pictures of me.
You know, I do not have more than four pictures of me taken
since 2002, and I have told my husband
that he has more than 50 pictures on my phone of him
in the last three months.
So we go through and they're all delightful,
and him with the kids, and with the baby,
and it's also cute.
You know how many pictures of our family,
my husband has on his phone, zero, zero.
So this means when I die and my funeral montage,
there are going to be the same four pictures rotating in 2002,
because no one's taken a picture of me.
And I do not want to ask him because I don't want that posed picture taken of me.
I want something natural and I want something where he just
sees it and takes the picture.
Where do I go from here? I hate being my family's photographer.
Thank you, Megan.
Thank you, Megan, for speaking for millions of people.
This is a deep one.
This is a deep one.
I have a lot of upsetness right now.
Well, I'm gonna say a lot of things.
Let's just talk about this.
Okay.
I think the first thing that this question makes me think of is one of the things that
matters the most to me in our relationship.
When I know that we are actually in love with each other is when I am experiencing something in a moment, whether it's, you know,
on a walk or at the beach or something with the kids or something that feels like magic
to me, like I feel joy in my heart or I feel beautiful or I feel out of my comfort zone
or I feel amazed at something the kids have done and I can look over and
Know that you Abby are
Either taking a picture of it
Honestly or just
Noticing it as deeply as I am noticing it. You're in it with me
That is what in love means to me a place that you are together
Mm-hmm, and if you are only feeling the beauty of you,
and the power of you, and the joy of life alone, because every time you look up that person's not with you, then it's not just about the camera. It's about being seen or noticed or experiencing life together at all.
It is about being seen.
And I, I mean, that's beautiful that you two have that.
I would be willing to put cold, hard cash on the fact that at least the majority, if not the overwhelming majority of women
who are married to men are in Megan's position
of not having the photos taken.
And I think it is about being seen.
I think it's about seeing all those tiny moments
that could be to the eye that doesn't see it,
just dismissed as kind of inconsequential, insignificant moments. But when they are not seen, when they are not noted
as significant enough to document, it can feel like your love is not being witnessed. Like all of the,
like your love is not being witnessed. Like all of the, you know, that kind of long suffering
minutia of what we do day after day of showing up,
that really is what love is made of,
is also unseen and un-telebrated.
And if love is paying attention,
then it is hard to feel loved when there is no attention paid
to those moments.
It's exactly what you said.
Like, if in those slices of joy that happened where you're like, oh my gosh, this is the magic.
This is the moment.
This is the chiro's moment.
If you're experiencing that as significant alone, then it is lonely.
Yeah.
Yeah. as significant alone than it is lonely. Yeah! Yeah! [♪ Music playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in I grew up working class. My parents were immigrants with factory jobs. And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I wanna 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, 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. A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios,
available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm just like sitting here, like, just upset
because, not because I do it differently,
but because it's such a thing that everybody
is capable of doing, right? Like I know marriages low hanging fruit here people.
All sorts of problems, whether it's you have sex issues or communication issues or you've
got family stuff going on. This is something that like requires a very little effort.
like requires a very little effort.
And I think why it offends me so much is that it's a doable thing
and it also, to me, it is related to respect
and like respecting somebody else's humanity.
The reason why this specific story is so upset into me
is because
thinking about you of persons funeral and having so few photographs for this woman to be able to
showcase as her legacy as a person in this family, it is unfucking forgivable to me that people
forgivable to me that people would choose not to notice. Take a couple of years.
This is not like something.
I'm an overdoer.
I'm like, I see a moment.
I'm going to take a picture.
I'm just so sorry for Megan.
And also, I'm really sorry for those men who have chosen to completely tap out and not
do one of the most easy things
that you could possibly do in terms
of connecting with a family.
And that's just like being present
and taking a picture.
What it's like deeper.
It's like, it's not just about the picture at all
because actually it's easy for you
because you're paying attention anyway
and you're like writing the wave of a day
and watching me and being like,
oh, that's like a little quirky thing that I love so much about her. She's about to do that thing
and you're going to take a picture or like, oh, she is working on this thing with Emma and so
now they're doing it together and so this is going to be important to her. And so it's because we
are have been talking deeply about things and you know what's important to me and I know what's important to you. And so when you catch those moments, it's easy for you because we are
already connected and you've already chosen love as a deep paying attention. It's not about
the picture because I can just see dudes being like, well, I'm not taking a picture because
I'm in the moment. I don't always take a picture. I'm in the moment. And you're like, okay,
what do you fucking deep-act show? I know you the moment. And you're like, okay, what do you fucking depack show? Part of you're not.
Like you're not nobody, no partner who has a part,
another partner who's deeply paying attention
is in pain and complaining about this thing.
It's about you don't see me.
You don't notice me.
You don't value me.
We're not doing life together.
And everything that I contribute to this family
or to this partnership or to this world is not even being witnessed by the one person
who's supposed to be witnessing it. So am I a ghost? Do I even exist here? Do I matter?
Lazy love. It's lazy. Well, I call complete bullshit, like you said, about being in the moment,
because it's not like the someone is looking and gazing into your eyes while you're pushing the kid on the swing,
just thinking, God damn, I have to savor this. And I would reach for my phone, but I'm
just glorifying in the beauty of this moment. That happens. I'm sure a time that has
happened, but I'm willing to throw the benefit of the doubt in the light most favorable to these people and say
Maybe it's not about not loving
Maybe it's not
Recognizing that these are monumental moments just all of these little joy moments that you're not recognizing those
as
The body of documentation and it makes me think like I, I'm not one of those people who
has like that kitchen, the sign in their kitchen that says like kitchen and the sign in their laundry
says like laundry. Those are really cute. And I love that. But I do have two. And one is that Whitman
quote that says we were together, I forget the rest.
And then another one says, these are the good old days.
And those, for me, are reminders all the time
that like when life is long, it will be the togetherness.
It will be those little moments right now
that we think are mundane, that are actually
the most precious,
and it is heartbreaking. And that's why it's so sad that we will be invisible in those
moments. Those moments that we work so tirelessly to create, to make the magic of our lives,
to make their lives infused with little speckles of magic where we can. We have generated those, but we will be invisible in those.
I mean, pink, do you remember when pink posted?
It was January a few years ago, and she posted a picture on Instagram of her
husband, Carrie and their son, Jameson.
And the caption was, I hope one of Carrie's resolutions is to photograph
his wife more just so people know I exist. Carry on. Like pink is feeling invisible like
she doesn't exist. And she's fucking mega star. Right. It isn't like, oh, have a little
confidence. It's, it's like, I wish to exist in these moments too. I wish for you to see
me existing in these moments. Because if you for you to see me existing in these moments.
Because if you had eyes to see,
it would be automatic that you would take a picture of me.
It's not that you're not taking the picture.
It's that you don't have eyes to see.
That's right.
That's it.
Why is it so often the women who are not being seen,
who are taking the pictures and the men who are not, is, who are taking the pictures,
and the men who are not,
is that something that happens to them as a little kid?
I think about the Natalie Portman episode,
where she's over-practicing, thinking outside
of a little boy's own experience,
noticing others, noticing the beauty of others,
empathy, like getting outside of yourself.
Maybe that's part of this.
It is a symptom of the same problem.
I think that traditionally, or at least generally speaking,
women are the ones responsible for creating magic
in a life,
for making the birthday party sweet,
for making sure they're special,
you're holding the fucking sign on the first day of school
with the date and the whatever
and what you wanna be when you grow up.
You're doing all the things, right?
And it is precisely because of that responsibility
to make the magic that we are forward thinking on that.
We are thinking in five years and 10 years that my kids rehearsal dinner,
it will be magic to have this magic moment, right?
So we're, we're collecting it because we are manufacturers and collectors of magic
for our children.
And I don't think that men see it because I don't think they have that within
their purview of responsibility. That's right. That's true. That's right. don't think that men see it because I don't think they have that within their
purview of responsibility. That's right. That's true. That's right. I think
romantically, if you look on Instagram, right, pictures of me and Abby, when I
take a picture of Abby, and it's just like this thing where she's like laughing
on the deck or something, white new simple picture. She's with the kids. She's
laughing on the deck. The reason why people, simple picture, she's with the kid she's laughing on the deck.
The reason why people are moved by that picture is not, and I know this because it says in
the comments, is not just Abby looks so great in that picture or look at Abby, she's laughing.
It's like, that's how you see her.
In that moment, when you look at a picture, you're not just seeing the object of the picture.
What you're seeing is somebody who saw something, who thought that thing is so beautiful.
I need to take a picture. You're seeing it through the lens of the love of the takeer.
Or the love of the takeer. And so what people, this woman, and what women are saying
to their romantic partners is,
if you show me a picture of me,
you are showing me how you love me.
You are showing me, I saw this moment
and it took my breath away.
It's not just about show me a picture of me.
People are saying show me, you love me.
Show me, you had a moment where you thought,
you're reflecting me back to me.
You are seeing the devotion and the love and the magic that I create.
And you are reflecting it back to me in the form of my best self and the
and in the context of the magic that I work so hard to create. And when you don't think
that that is worth documenting, you're telling me that you don't value it.
Yeah, that's right. And I don't think, y'all, if pink is having this problem, like,
pink could have, and probably does have three professional photographers follow her around
a document whenever she wants. Right. She's not worried about that picture. She's worried about
caring, taking the picture. There's more pictures of pink than anyone could possibly imagine.
of pink than anyone could possibly imagine. That's not the point. The point is she wants to know she exists. And I really have come to the conclusion that we can be like Megan
upset about this and just and just very sad about it for forever.
Or we can try to solve it.
We just spoke to Nedra the other day about all about boundaries and stuff
and we were talking about passive aggressiveness, but we didn't talk about it in depth.
And her definition of that is, I will act out how I feel, but I will deny how I feel. And it's a way
we resist actively setting boundaries. And we hope folks will see our behaviors and self-correct.
So we're like annoyed and expecting them to self-correct by being annoyed and self-correction is not
going to work here. I think we have to say take a picture
of me right now. I want you to take a picture of this. I'm about to go and play in the
water. I'd like you to take 10 pictures of me so I can make sure I have a good one. There's
a whole category of the being seen, the love and the whatever. But in the meantime, we need
to get some fucking pictures of us taking them with our kids. Yeah. And so we need to ask for it.
We need to ask strangers to take pictures of us.
Anytime I go anywhere, I ask, if I'm walking down the street and I see a woman and her
kids, I say, may I take a picture of you?
Do you have a phone?
Do you want a picture of this?
All the time.
Oh my God, you're so good.
It's something that we can do for each other.
And like half the time they say, like, oh my God, yes,
thank you so much.
And then they say, can I actually take a picture
of you and your kids?
I'm like, yes, please.
I think we need to just start doing it ourselves.
And then maybe as we ask and we ask and we ask,
they'll start to do it more.
But I think we need to parallel
track this because I don't think waiting for self correction is going to yield us what
we need.
I think smart and you both have brought up like really good, very empathetic and compassionate points, but my soul feels offended
and have your husbands listen to this podcast.
Yeah.
And hear me say,
get your shit together.
Be the photographer of your family's existence
of a beautiful moment.
You can do that.
Like don't be an asshole, just do it.
I have like such little patience for this.
It's like, really, it feels like somebody's stepping
on my field of honor.
Dudes, you can do easy things.
And there's also like, I just wanna speak to,
just my woo-woo self to the dudes if they're listening.
I'm sad for the women who are not getting the pictures,
but I feel on some level,
sadder for men than for women,
because I feel like,
oh, you just don't get life.
Women are like,
why don't you see this magical moment?
It's so frustrating for me
that you don't see this magical moment,
but men actually aren't seeing the
magical moments. I think there's two things. I think that there is a group of them that don't see it at
all. And I think there's a group of them that are so unacostumbed to having any sense of responsibility or ownership or expectation around their role to document a firm
nurture celebrate these moments that it does not occur to them Because we have photos
Why do why do I need to take photos? We have photos. You know why you have photos because your fucking wife takes them
That's why you have photos. So like act as if she's not here
So you think that some of it is just truly not wanting to be interrupted
I think it's beyond that. Yeah, I think she's taking it.
It does. I think it doesn't occur to them.
It hasn't entered their purview because it's never been their job.
So you don't think it's an issue of like sometimes I feel like women are the
artists of the world.
So artists walk through the world and we have a deeper, more magical experience of the
world because we are always looking for what is beautiful and strange and unique and different.
A photographer's job is to walk through their day, looking deeply at things and noticing,
like paying attention and noticing things so they can grab it for other people to see. So, that's what women do in our families. So, my question is, are men, the non-artists of their families?
Like, are men just walking around not noticing shit because they don't feel responsible for grabbing it in the first place. And if that's the case, then I feel sad for them because they're not experiencing life
and love and gorgeousness of moments because they think it's not their job.
I think it's probably both.
I think depending on the human male, it could be one or the other,
or it could be a blend of both.
Because another way to look at this
is the cherishing versus the taking for granted.
And if you are someone who shows up to your family
and expects sweet magical moments so much
that they have become mundane to you.
And therefore, you don't feel the need to capture it, then maybe you're sort of not seeing it and sort of taking for granted that
it's A happening, and and b that at the end
of the day your wife's going to have accumulated enough photographs because she's so annoying
and she's always taking photographs and she's always making you stand there that you're
taking for granted that those photos that your family needs will exist.
Mm-hmm.
It's good enough.
It's just that you're right, they will exist and she'll be in three of them.
Right. Because she's taken a selfie or some nice human on vacation has walked by while she was struggling to take a selfie with her in it without her face being four times the size of everyone
else's face and has agreed to take the picture. Yeah. And like at her funeral, the message will be
of everything will be she loved well, she was not loved well.
That's what it'll look like.
And that might may or may not be true.
If you are a partner whose partner has led you to this conversation and you're listening,
one possibility is to when I think of what I tell writers
is like as you're going through your day,
just keep a goal of noticing one thing,
like one cool moment to write about.
If you are someone who has been
lulled into not noticing the magical things about your partner.
For one reason or another, and you actually are listening to this conversation and you
have decided to be open and to hear what we're saying as a call for love and attention
that it is.
Consider what's one moment a day.
I'm gonna notice one thing a day that feels special.
And I'm gonna take a picture of it.
One thing a day.
I also think that assholary needs to be met with assholary every once in a while.
And so fucking just do better.
Seriously, like, you guys, it's so sweet,
but I actually think that if this is happening
and you've brought your husband to this podcast,
like just do better, do it, do better.
Like stop being an asshole, do better.
Move over it. Well, we potentially have the husbands here.
Should we hear from Tony?
Let's do it.
Tony.
Good morning.
My name is Tony.
My wife and I really enjoy the show.
My question is for sister, I'm a big fan of the five love languages, but listening
to the podcast and something that sister said really made me reevaluate it, and it's
talking about the kicker.
As a man, I grew up reading and understanding that the greatest act of service I could
do for my spouse was to vacuum the rug and clean the bathroom, which I now know is just
complete horse shit.
I'm reading a book right now, and a line in the book says, My wife's love language is
acts of service.
One of the things I do for her regularly as an act of love is
Vacuing the floor like this is what I was taught and this is so
Offensive now because of the three of you and and thank you for that
I now know that the greatest act of service is not doing things on the ticker list
It's actually seeing the ticker list.
Yes.
But vacuuming the floor and cleaning the bathroom,
those are an act of love.
Those are being an adult, right?
It's my house too.
Yes.
So my question is, now that I see the ticker,
and if I do all the things on the ticker, what is a real act of service
that I can do for myself? Because I don't want to live in a world where the great
effect of service I can do from the woman that I love is simply be an adult. There has to be
something more and deeper than that. So I thank you so much for the show. I appreciate all the reviews.
Thank you so much.
All that I just said about Astholary
does not apply to Tony.
This question made me cry.
Oh, it did.
Yeah.
Tony, thank you.
There's something about hearing the words from you, Tony, that was healing to me and it was beautiful.
And so three cheers for Tony, the fucking tiger, okay?
He's loved you.
He's great.
Great.
So, yes, y'all, if you came for the photo, say, for the
Axis service.
I, it does not take Beyonce level genius to see that the
floor needs to be vacuumed as Tony identified for us, that's
not love. It's just the manual labor inherent in the privilege
of enjoying habitation. Okay.
So good job, Tony, taking that off the list. enjoying habitation, okay? Yes. So good job, Tony.
Taking that off the list.
And you know what, I would be really interested.
And just let's play with this for a minute before we actually answer Tony's questions about
what is an active service.
But it's always fascinating to me that the same folks who uphold this kind of fiction of
gendered work or this hierarchical binary of roles,
are the exact same folks who completely demean men as too stupid or too weak to step into a
primary role in their own families by seeing needs and responding to them. So it's intellectually
dishonest. The same folks who consider a man
the head of the household also proclaim that his headship is incapable of being a leader of the
family in these ways. And this kind of cultural endorsement of learned helplessness. Like,
there's no added to a diaper. You know, it's no, it's, it's infantilization of men
within their family units.
And it's a total fucking lie.
Like, it's just a great disservice,
not only to women, but also to men.
And so for me, Tony, it's exactly as you said,
love is not doing the bare minimum
of your own individual responsibilities of
adulting.
It's not like checking off the honeydew list.
It is, those are not favors to your partner.
Those are favors to yourself that allow you to live not in filth.
So think of it like there's a bucket of stuff like doing those things, including like taking
a shower, that is for you by you you, and a basic requirement of life,
of adopting.
Okay, that's one bucket of things.
That's just yours.
We're not labeling that love.
To me, when I say that like your wife, Tony,
my love language is active service,
what I mean is that love is carrying one another's burdens.
And you have to see it to carry it. So it is loving your partner and your family enough
and respecting yourself enough
to know that you are an invaluable part of your family.
That you are there to know and sense and
anticipate and get in front of your family's needs. So Tony, to answer your
question, for me, what acts of service love looks like, it is seeing your kid is
struggling in an area and researching and analyzing what kind of help and resources
we could pursue to support them.
As opposed to what is not inactive love is waiting until your partner sees it, analyzes
it, researches it, and sets up the appointments and then thinking you're a superhero by agreeing
to drive them.
Okay? Driving? First adulting bucket, not love bucket.
Seeing, anticipating, researching, solving is love bucket.
Another example, like if something in your marriage, Tony, is not working for one reason or
another, you are bringing that to the forefront. You are finding out how and when to get the help that you need to have the kind of relationship
that you Tony want, not the kind of relationship that your wife is demanding.
That goes in the love bucket.
What is not in the love bucket is congratulating yourself for agreeing to a proposed strategy that your partner brings to you after analyzing the problem to give yourself a better marriage. Okay, that's a Dalton bucket.
And I just love Tony for this and if Tony sounds like an anomaly to you, if he sounds so monumentally different than what you're used to, we need to understand
that women have gotten used to expecting and even celebrating from their partners, someone
who will see them struggling to carry their overwhelming burden and will take a piece from that burden to
slightly lessen the weight. And what I want all of us as partners to begin to
expect to share the burden of truly seeing the pieces shattered on the ground.
Sharing equally seeing the pieces scattered, sharing equally picking them up, sharing
equally organizing them, sharing equally hoisting them on our own backs so that each partner
carries equal responsibility and equal weight.
That to me is love.
Yeah.
Adolting bucket and love bucket.
It's really good.
You don't get to put things in the love bucket
that are just adulting bucket.
How do we do that?
When you actually said that metaphor
of like all the pieces scattered on the ground,
it's interesting because in order to get
to all the pieces scattered on the ground,
women are going to have to drop all the pieces.
One of the problem is that the men don't ever see all the pieces scattered on the ground.
Because it's like the fucking pictures.
They don't have a picture problem.
They have all the pictures they want.
No picture problem.
But I'm just saying.
Is there a responsibility here? Is this martyrdom mountain on some level? Because is it like
we are carrying the heavy backpack. We are taking all the pictures. Why the fuck do I have this backpack?
If that were gonna work, begging people,
this backpack is too heavy.
It's too heavy.
Please take some things from the backpack.
If that were gonna work, it would have worked, right?
So is there an element of, and of course,
this is easier said than done,
but is there an element of fuck it?
And letting everything scatter on the ground,
is that what it takes for
entitled people to see what life really takes?
I also think that the scatteredness of that stuff,
of women letting go and letting it all go.
Part of that is gonna be really hard
because so much of what we do is a part of how we get
our, it's a way we get our worthiness. And so I think that it's hard for probably a lot of women
to let go of some of the responsibilities and let them actually shatter on the floor. So is it redefining for women like what a good mother is or what a good wife is?
Because at the end of the day, we must really believe that a good wife would keep doing all
of this shit, or we would stop doing it.
I think it's more complicated than that because I don't care if my house is a mess,
but there's certain levels of it that, I'm going to suppose we could let scatter, but who
suffers for that? My kids would, by not getting the services they need in school,
by not getting placed in the classroom that's best going to serve them by not having the therapist appointments they need.
Who feels the shattering?
And in many cases, I think it would shatter silently because we are doing it for the collective.
I think there are certain things that that is a very apt observation, G, that, you know, if,
if there is no problem, men aren't going to step up to solve it. But I think that,
that a lot of people are reticent to drop it because they're doing it for love and protection
because they're doing it for love and protection of a lot of times their kids,
their own mental health, their own doing their best.
And I mean, I think maybe like things that are truly
done from love, like Tony's question was not,
what do I need to do?
Tony was, how can I love my wife? And I think that it's going to take
conversations that you may love me. I don't feel loved by you. And this is how I can feel
And this is how I can feel your love. So if you indeed do love me and you intend to make me feel loved, I'm here to report
back to you that I would love to receive that love because I, in fact, love you.
And here is the way that you can calibrate to make sure that the love that you're pouring out comes to me.
Is felt and then people who want to love their partners will and people who are in fact not
loved by their partners will have to decide whether they require that kind of love in their lives or not.
But we should give up the intellectually dishonest, horseshit argument that men cannot see
those things and are incapable of doing them.
Yeah.
First of all, I don't think it's just that men,
they just, we think they can be leaders of the family,
but they can't do these things, these sets of things.
I think it's because we, as a culture believe
that those sets of things are not worthy of men,
that women are below men.
They're feminine.
So women should do those things.
Of course, they just use the words, he can't do that,
but what they mean is he's too good for that,
and I'm not.
Right, but what I'm just saying is that we have arbitrarily
decided that certain things are leadership roles
and certain things that aren't.
And I would suggest that the things that women do all day long
consistently to make their households run
that are invisible are in fact true the true leadership of the family.
Right. Exactly.
But we have categorized that as not leadership,
so as to absolve men from the role of doing them.
Right. And to be able to still call them leaders.
Sister, my God, that was incredible.
Everything that you just said.
Yeah. And it's probably what ending with what she said
is the terror of this conversation is the aftermath.
Is like, what if I say all these things, what if we get all this out and it doesn't matter?
Like, what if it doesn't matter? I mean, at least then you can look yourself in the mirror.
At least then you can know that you're not hiding behind this first that's like, oh my god, my husband can never do that.
I mean, those conversations are so fucking boring.
It's just like all of us collectively deciding that we are not going to address the elephant
in the room by making a fucking joke out of it, because that's a joke.
The fact that your husband can't do this.
Yep. It's a joke that he is playing on you. Yes.
That's exactly right. And you're laughing about it.
Okay, here's the deal.
Heavy man.
I mean, talk about good boundary setting here. Also, I just want this to not be the end of this conversation. I just want
this to be the beginning of this conversation. Like, I desperately want here from the pod squad
about the picture thing. Did that hit? How does it hit for you? And what Tony said, like,
sending your options, like, what would make you feel loved deepening that yeah, what would make you feel love
What is love to you with your romantic partner and what is not happening to make it feel to make you feel loved and what is happening talk to us
Let's let's let's fix this
And I just want to say before we end this is the opposite of a male bashing situation
this is a belief in men. This is a faith in men.
This is we know like you are missing it. You want like Tony to love your person. You are
just as confused as we are as to why things aren't working because you love so deeply.
I believe you. I believe you love your
partners, just like they love you and they are confused about why isn't working.
And you are too. And we're just saying that that confusion lies in the
disconnect between the way you are showing your love and the way your
partner is not receiving it because you're not seeing her and what she carries.
And so it is a belief that you can.
And Tony hats off to you and to the rest of you,
you can do it.
You really can.
It's not saying you're on cable one
and it's not trying to paint you with a broad brush.
It's trying to say you know your family's
just as well as your partners.
So open your eyes to it and pick up a bag and start filling it up.
And the why, there's a why and the why is because truly, why would you go through all of that?
Why would you actually deeply try to love it? Because I just swear to you, it's just all that matters.
You're missing the one thing.
The one thing does require work.
It does require vulnerability.
It does require admitting you don't know what the fuck
you're doing and that maybe you fucked up in the past.
It does require super effort.
Love is effort.
But I guess what I mean at the the soul of me is like
God I'd rather be an angry woman than a missing everything man
Give me this existence over the one where I don't even see it all and I miss it all and so what I'm saying is I feel sorry
For the men who are missing it all and I feel like they should know that there is more.
Yeah.
That real connection is possible.
And it's the only thing that matters and it's worth fighting for.
We love you.
And be like Tony, ask.
Yeah.
Ask.
It's not intuitive.
Tony's been reading for God's sakes about how to do this better.
And he still has the question.
If you are sitting there saying,
like, okay, but you're acting like this is so intuitive,
I should just know it.
No, we're not.
Ask your partner.
Those are just my answers.
Your partner has very different answers.
Yeah.
Ask.
Ask.
Yeah.
If you do have stuff to tell us,
which I think you will call us,
747-205-307, we love you, Pod Squad.
We will see you back here soon on We Can Do Hard Things. Bye!
Bye!
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