We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - WRITING & ART: When does your real self get to breathe and be seen?
Episode Date: October 19, 20211. How writing is a lifeline for Glennon because it’s the one place her real self can tell the truth. 2. Why Abby feels that her time on the soccer field was art. 3. The unorthodox way Glennon’s... writing evolved from hourly 5AM sessions to survive sobriety with three young kids to three New York Times Best Sellers. 4. Why it’s horseshit that books by women authors are indiscriminately labeled “self-help.” 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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Well, hello! Thank you for coming back to our, we can do hard things party.
We are delighted to host you.
How are you doing, sister and Abby?
Good, good, good.
I'm doing great.
So excited to be here.
Just so excited.
Thanks, babe.
On this very day, I'm actually feeling good.
I'm not just saying I'm feeling good.
I'm feeling good today.
Wow, I know.
What do you attribute this rare occurrence to? We don't, we just
don't even ask those kind of questions on days. We just
we just feel grateful for that being nominated. I actually
agree with that completely. I feel like my general
attitude and feelings are rarely tied to reasons. Right, or two.
I would actually totally disagree with both of you.
I just think that there are probably things
that happen in the last couple of days in your life
that have given you the outlook you have today.
And so finding those little bits and trying to recreate them,
like for me, that's just like, that's all I do.
Every single day is just trying to recreate.
I know that's probably a good definition for addiction,
but like recreate something so I can feel good.
Interesting.
I dig it, that's good.
It's conscious living.
Conscious living.
What is leading to a better happier me?
Let's do that instead of something else.
That whole revolutionary idea of do more
of what makes you feel good.
It feels so simple and every time I see it,
I'm like, that is a mind-blowing idea.
Yeah, suspicious.
Highly suspicious thing.
Yeah.
So speaking, who can go about doing things
that make you feel what the hell kind of
woo-woo nonsense is that?
Speaking of woo-woo nonsense, what are we talking about today?
So today, we are talking about art, and creativity, and writing, and all of it and and and the why and the how so many people in our pod squad have asked about writing and about how this all this whole little, you know, writing revolution came about for me and all of the different things it's morphed into and what it, not what it does for the world, but really what it does for for me and my personal life.
So we thought we'd chat about the power of art in the world and in a human beings life.
Beautiful. Yeah. So why should someone, so in every human's life,
or just in the artist's life, I'm just wondering if this applies to me.
Well, I think this.
Well, I guess first you have to ask like why the hell are like what is the point?
So what that's what I was trying to ask. Yeah, you were trying to ask more kindly of what the hell is the point of all this We will art. I
mean, so obviously in preparation for this podcast, I've been thinking a lot about what the hell is the point. Why did I start feeling this
desperate need to create art
and I think
That it comes down to for me
This idea that I have always felt like I had two selves I think that it comes down to for me,
this idea that I have always felt like I had two selves.
Okay, that even when I was 10 years old,
you know, that I had this like public self,
this representative self that had to go out into the world
and kind of act appropriate and have good manners and, you know, represent
myself to teachers, to my parents, to the world. But then I had this real self. So it's
like the representative self and the real self. And then my real self, and I think this
came into such clear focus to me so early because of my bulimia.
It was very clear to me that I had this self that I sent out into the world to school,
to do the things, and then I would come home and binge and purge.
And so it was very clear to like, I had my out in the world self, and then I had my bathroom
self, my kitchen and bathroom self.
And that was a completely different self.
Mm-hmm.
And it made sense.
It was like a way to kind of indulge or live into the hunger and humanity of being human.
Appetite hunger.
All that.
While publicly following the rules of the rules of girlhood, right, like don't be
wild, don't be hungry, don't be animalistic.
So what was clear is that my real self was not fit for public consumption.
That's what I understood to be true.
And I mean, this idea of two selves, I mean, you know sister, because you lived it with me.
And then Abby, I've told you so much about this.
But on the last podcast,
I talked about the moment when I was a senior in high school.
Yeah.
And I went into the guidance counselor's office
and said, I can't do this life anymore.
I need somebody to help me. So I actually
did leave the high school. I went to hospital. I stayed there for a while in the hospital.
I'll talk about that on another podcast that actual experience in there because it was really
life-changing and important for me. But then when I came back out of the hospital, I went back to high school. Okay, so it was just like right back into that environment that I was so afraid of.
And then the wild thing is that I think a week later after I got back to high school,
I was voted leading leader of my senior class. And this is a huge ass class. Okay, it was like a thousand kids in this class.
Like everybody sat down at their desk and thought,
who is the best leader in this class?
And they were like, the girl that just got sent
to the mental hospital.
That's the one, her.
We wanna follow her, okay?
And so, and then so I found my,
I've had the sash that said leading leader,
I'm driving around on a car and like the homecoming parade,
having just been discharged.
And that for me is the pinnacle of the two selves for me.
There was the mental hospital self,
and then a week later there was the leading leader smile,
wave to the crowd self
right so
And I know that most people have less maybe less dramatic
Versions of the two selves, but I do feel like everyone has them right
Like you have yourself. Okay, you're at a party for people who go to parties
You're at a party. You have the self that's like on the couch or mingling
and talking to people. And then you have the bathroom self where you're staring in the mirror
and you're like, okay, what did I just say? Like, am I, is this, I want to leave? Right? I mean,
don't, do you all have to yourself? I mean, this sounds a lot like me, a lot like the way that I went
through my addiction. It's like, I had this shadow self, the self that I didn't really let anybody know about.
And then I have my public self.
So I think probably a lot of folks out there
who struggle with addiction
probably will absolutely understand
what you're talking about for sure.
Yeah.
Or even just in day-to-day relationships
where you're like, you're in a relationship
and you're thinking in this moment,
what a healthy, constructive person would say is X.
But what I'm thinking inside my head
is a whole different ballgame,
but you're not allowed to say what you're thinking.
And some of that is like good call,
because if I said everything that I was thinking,
I would have no relationships at all.
So there's a thin line,
but I think everyone could recognize.
There's something is the internal monologue and drama
that you're dealing with internally.
And then there's what everyone else can see.
Exactly.
It's like when someone asks you, how are you?
Like we talked about in the last part
and what you say is fine, I'm good.
And then your other self is thinking,
life is shit, my marriage is so tired, I'm a lot of,
like if you've ever said something that your inner self
was not saying, that's the two selves, right?
It's like throughout the day and the you staring
at the ceiling at the end of the day.
It's the on stage day and the use staring at the ceiling at the end of the day. It's the
onstage self and the backstage self. And what you just said is kind of where eventually I'll get the art part, which is like it's good and you can't just release that self all the time.
But to me, it feels of existential importance
that that self does get released
or not somewhere and somehow an art is a way to do that.
And explored, right?
Like not just released, but to explore it, yeah.
Yeah, like that self has to come up for Airbnb scene.
Like that's why art, I mean, how many people who couldn't say the things
that they wanted to say to their families or their parents write a novel or a story with all the
rage they've ever had in it? Or a maid. Right. Or my little kids in school. I mean, when I was
teaching, I'll never forget this little one who was, oh my God, his name was Oscar, and he was one of my favorite humans.
And we were writing poetry, and all these kids were,
of course, writing their fancy stanzas
with their rhyming ending, and I love roses,
and I love noses, and all of the things.
And this kid got out of red crayon and wrote mad with red crayon on a piece of paper.
And I was like, that is art, right?
Like, the art is not about showing off.
Art is about showing yourself, that inner self that you're not
allowed to show anywhere else, as well the scripts we have and all of our discomfort
with humanity. And whenever you get a glimpse of somebody's insides, which is usually That's art. It's like allowing that in herself to breathe. So when I got sober, I started
going into the recovery rooms, right? And that was one of my first experiences, except
for the mental hospital, where I got to see people actually live out loud,
they're real self. That's what happens in those circles is it's like the place to breathe for
that in ourself that people are not allowed to. And so that was extremely comforting to me,
to have a real live place where you could let your real
self breathe. And I, and I, I realized I feel more comfortable
with people's inner wild selves than with their representative
selves. Like I would just live in these circles, if I could.
And then I started having all of the children and couldn't
leave the house, just felt so overwhelmed and underwhelmed and all the things.
And I started freaking out.
There was no time for my inner self, right?
There was no, that was over.
I was just one role after another all day
and I'm sure many people will be able to relate to that.
And then one day I was getting ready to put the babies down for a nap. And I passed
my computer and there was this thing going on on Facebook called the 20 things or 25 things.
It was like this little challenge and the challenges that go around the interwebs. And it
was like just right 25 things about yourself. Okay.
And at something like tingled in me, like, oh, I could do that.
You know that little tingled of interest, of curiosity.
And I sat down and I typed out a list of 25 things
and I passed post my personal Facebook page
and I walked away, put the babies down,
did all the vacuuming and all the things
that get done every day and nobody ever sees them.
And came back to the computer a couple hours later
and had this very confusing moment
where I looked at my computer
and I saw that my list for my personal page
had been shared like a million gazillion times
and I looked at my email and I had like a ton
of emails and if you'll remember sister I had like four or five voice mails in a row from
you. Okay, which is the moment that my blood went cold because usually when I have a lot of
a voice mails in a row from you it's a signal that I've done something
weird that like normal humans don't do, right? And so what
had happened and the only way I can describe this is to just
tell you, listener, here was my number six, okay. I'm a
recovering food and alcohol addict, but I still miss booze. In the crazy way,
we can miss those who repeatedly beat us and leave us for dead.
Just a light little casual Facebook 25 things. Little number six.
There was my friend. Here's my friend Lisa's number six.
My favorite snack food is hummus.
Oh, it's so good.
And I was like, oh shit, like I should have read other people's lists
before I did my list.
Like this, we were not doing that here.
Or not, like, or not.
Yeah.
Or maybe we should have been doing that there right yeah so babe that's
okay so I want freaked out at first I had what you know Bernay Brown calls the vulnerability hangover
I just thought how do I get this back because of course number six was like my lightest one you know
I was easing in um and but then I started reading these emails from people.
Okay, and they were from people who I had known my whole life.
But we're telling me things that they had never told me before.
Things like I just read your list, my sisters, Bluemick, and we,
I have no idea how to help or I just read your list and I'm struggling with depression
and have been for years.
I just read your list and my marriage is just so difficult.
And I have no idea where to talk to.
It was like all of these MeToos, MeToos, MeToos.
And it was mind-blowing to me because it was like,
oh, I talk to these people all the time,
but our representatives are so busy talking to each other that we never show each other
are real selves, which means we never bring to each other the real stuff that we were
actually meant to talk through and help each other through and feel less alone about.
Right.
So boring.
It's so boring to stay unscript all the time, isn't it?
It's so lonely.
It's so boring and so lonely.
And so it's just in our experience, in my experience, because I too have done this.
But my question, honey, is it possible to get rid of these two selves and to become one. I don't think so because after this epiphany of like oh my gosh
everyone wants to actually release their real selves. You'll remember Amanda that I had this like
I'm always doing these like mini challenges for myself so I was like I'm going to just do this.
I'm just going to be my real self.
And the only places I went back then were like a playground.
So I was at the playground.
And somebody said, how are you?
And I started just telling the person, this poor woman.
You know, I talked to her about my marriage.
I told her about my eating stuff.
And it was just like, I just saw her face.
Like, she just was like, oh my God,
like that, how are you as just something we say?
Like I'm trying to watch my kid.
So like, what I'm telling you is that I actually believe
that there are places for it.
And maybe we need more of it in real life,
but when I try to be my real self everywhere,
it's just very disruptive to the day.
I have noticed. I mean, I would disagree. I think that your real self is perfect everywhere.
It's just sometimes you got to know who's going to be receiving, right? Or understand that like not everybody's gonna receive you your full real self in the ways that is required.
I think that that's important too.
That's a good point. That's a good point.
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.
Shh.
Ha, ha, ha.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
Ha, ha.
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.
Well, back then I remember having that experience and being so amazed at writing. Writing was a place.
What I learned from that is that writing is a place where I can explore, I can be this
real self.
I can show my real self to the world.
And they can actually see me.
And you know, it's like I heard my friend Holly talking
about writing as like this flare we throw up into the air,
saying, find me help.
I'm here.
My people find me, you know, and we look for people's flares
and we find our people.
That's what it felt a lot like to me.
And then for Christmas that year, my sister came to my house for Christmas
and she brought me, right, or on Christmas time, brought me a laptop, said, you were meant
to write. I want you to get up every morning and I want you to write and I want you to use
that voice you used in that Facebook list. So I started getting up every morning and writing, and I don't know if you remember,
but I started writing and just sending emails to people.
To my friends.
I remember.
I remember.
Yeah, I would just get up every morning, write all of my thoughts and opinions about everything
and send them to like five of my friends over and over and over again.
Angels.
Angels, they are. Oh my God, it's true.
And then if they didn't write back babe,
because they were trying to have a life and at work,
I would ping them and just be like,
just wanting to know if you had any chance
to read my thoughts.
And finally, my precious friend,
both of our friends, Joanna,
Joanna Cosmitas, then Joanna Edwards, now, who's one of my favorite artists in the whole
world who actually designed the Love Warrior book jacket. She was one of those lucky,
lucky five. And she wrote to me one morning and said, honey, I'm attaching a tutorial about how to start a blog.
Blogs are for people who have as many thoughts and opinions and feelings as you do,
but want to keep their friends. So Godspeed, we love you.
So, Godspeed, we love you.
Joanna, now, it is the truth that, so I started writing on this blog called Mama Sterry
this years ago.
So my writing career started because my friends
didn't wanna read my writing.
This is true story.
It's true story.
We didn't want, not wanna read your writing,
but to have to read it from like eight to eight to 20 every day
and then send you a reaction was like a lot of responsibility.
It's a job.
You had five editors.
It was a one.
Did you read it?
I just wondered, did you read it?
Did you read it?
So bad.
I'm there.
I'm there.
So interesting.
So I started that blog, Mama Stere, it was called Mama Stere because
I was, I'm so obsessed with every spiritual tradition, right? Back then, and my everyday
spiritual practice was motherhood. That's how I was, I was in the trenches. That's where I was
learning the most about myself, my capacity for caring, my capacity for rage, my exhaustion, like all of it was a crucible,
early motherhood. So I called it mom and stereo, I promised myself I was going to get up every single day
no matter what was happening. And I would go up at like 5.30 in the morning to this little playroom,
tiny playroom that we had upstairs, and I would set and I would write for an hour,
and then I would press post every single day.
And that was a big part of it too, because you didn't, you made that promise that you were going
to just after an hour post it, whether you thought it was like good enough or not, and I think that
was a big part of how you ended up doing
what you were doing because you didn't wait
for everything to be perfect.
It was just every day you just do it.
That's exactly right.
Can you be an artist without posting?
Because I think that we have that question with Tish.
Like sometimes she writes all these songs
and won't play them for us or won't let us read the songs. And it's like, does
art need to be made public to be considered hard? I don't know. I think people probably won't like
my answer to this question, but my first reaction to that, and I'm sure this is wrong in a million
ways, but I feel like for me, the people who make art and then don't release it, it feels like
purer to me. It's like they're just doing it because they have this
self that they want to get out and see for themselves and they're not doing it for anyone else's
applause or reaction or it just feels so pure to me.
Oh my god, that's how I feel about trips. I feel like when you go, like, there is something so sacred to me about
traveling and visiting and seeing new things. And I have this feeling about it, about not posting anything about it on the internet, because I feel
like then that becomes, you're living for that post, or you're doing it for the people's
response to, oh, you went to that place as opposed to just living it and being it and
having that be the end and of itself.
I love that.
That's exactly it. That's exactly it.
That's exactly it.
It's like, I feel that same way.
It's like once you give something away,
it's so important in so many ways.
This is not a black and white thing.
Like it's so important.
Art can change people's lives and change the world.
And obviously, like I believe in putting it out there.
But there's something that when you keep something to yourself, you just get to keep it.
Well, it's also proof to yourself that that was an end in and of itself.
That like that just that there is value just having produced that not for the consumption
of others, but just that that was worth it that it got out of you and that you created it,
but not that anyone else saw it or understood it
or appreciated it.
I think that's why Emily Dickinson,
reading Emily Dickinson makes me so emotional.
It's because I'm like, oh my God,
she just is writing this, it just makes me feel, feel when I read her stuff
because it's clear to me that she was just trying
to get her insides out for her
and not for the world's approval or response.
Well, I think about her during the time
when she was creating that art,
how little women were respected,
and especially in the art world still, right?
It's hard as a woman to get any respect,
but you did get respect, Klan,
with the Don't Carpe Diem post that went viral.
Tell that story.
Well, I mean, because that's what people always want to know,
like how did it get big?
I mean, I wrote on the blog just, that a doubt that is what I was looking for a place to tell the truth a
Place where other people it was like a meeting it was like turning the my life my everyday life the inner webs the
My life in my home where I was so isolated into a meeting because I'd get to say every morning
Hi, my name is Glenin.'m recovering everything. And here are the things. And then
everyone else would go, holy shit, I think that stuff too. I thought I
was the only one. And then it's like this process where the deep dark
thing inside of you that you're trying to hide, you get it out in the
light, everybody else goes, oh, same. And suddenly
you're free from it. It's not dark anymore. You feel lighter. You just, that's what I was
looking for. It's like that, Muriel, um, Rook Heiser poem that what would happen if one
woman told the truth about her life, the world would split open. It's like that's that's kind of what happened over there.
Yeah. Yes. And it was beautiful. It was it was what I wanted and needed. And
and then I somebody revamped the blog and added share share buttons. I didn't even have share buttons on it for like a year or two.
Or maybe longer than a year or two.
Like five years.
Yeah, we're clearly, clearly you set the blog up sweetheart.
I know, because I know she's like, dear Google.
So I wrote for years and years with just no sharing ability.
And then somebody came and revamped it and added share buttons.
And then the next day, after it changed over, I wrote a post called Don't Carpe Diem about
raising small children and how people are always telling you to pay attention because it
goes by so fast,
which is the worst thing we can say to parents of young children because every day feels like a
freaking millennium when you have small children. So then not only do you feel exhausted,
but you feel guilty for not being joyful enough and on and on and on.
And so that post, and I remember you and I were on the phone that night, sister,
because I was like, what's happening?
Why do these numbers keep saying like 40?
Our blog is broken.
My blog is broken.
Yeah.
It just went so crazy viral.
And so then, all of these agents, and the only agent I had ever had in my life before
this moment was a real estate agent.
So literary agent started emailing me.
And I just did nothing.
I was like, this is too weird.
I remember I started forwarding them to you sister and saying, what am I supposed to
do with this?
You said, find one that you like and email them back.
Find one that you like. So I read one email, there was two women that I vived,
I felt like their email was great.
I wrote back, I said, what the hell is happening?
And what am I supposed to do?
They said you're supposed to pick an agent.
I said, how the hell am I supposed to pick an agent?
And they said to me, you just need to ask around.
And that was the moment where I was like,
how in the hell?
Okay, let me tell you where I go.
I go to the bus stop.
I go to the grocery store.
Should I ask around at the bus stop
about like what's the best process
of choosing a literary agent?
Because so you and I, Amanda, end up going to New York City
a month later to meet these agents and to go on a publishing like, actor where we go around
and meet all of these different publishers in New York City.
Yeah, it was actually two separate trips, first the agent from the publishing.
But I do think it's important to note here that for people who aren't as lucky to get
an influx of agents trying to get their attention, that like three months prior to this, we had
printed out every single page of the blog and organized into chapters and like did a letter to a couple
of agents to try to get published and was rejected by them.
So, I think it's important to know that if you get rejected, it is not necessarily because
your work is not worthy,
because fast forward a hot minute,
and they were all trying to get your attention.
So anyway.
Yeah, and then you get to think about those people
that rejected you just every once in a while.
You just get to think about them.
It's the best. Ah! Shhh! Ah! Ah! Shhh! Ah!
Shhh!
Ah!
Shhh!
Ah!
Shhh!
Ah!
So that, I don't, I think that ship to New York, I don't think I'd ever been to New York City.
Had I ever been to New York City?
I remember walking around with you in the streets.
Oh, so fun.
And you just holding my hand and begging me to walk faster and just being like,
oh my god, like what is happening in New York? Why are all these people walking so freaking fast?
Like where is everyone going? And you just begging me to pay attention and begging me to look at
the street and I had to run in order to walk New York. Yeah, you're poor little leg.
Yeah, you were made for a place like New York City Bay, but no offense.
It's just not, it's just not.
Incompatible.
Yeah, yeah.
Incompatible.
Just no.
Yeah, nope, nope to that.
I will say that that weekend in New York before anything had happened, but like we were
like, whoa, something's happening.
Nothing from the rest of my career has compares in any way to that time with you in New York.
I think we got on a frickin' Rickshaw.
Actually, I still have that video.
We're gonna play that for the Bod Squad.
The Rickshaw, you and me, like being like, wait,
they have hearts that you go through the streets
of this chaos in a bike.
In a, what we couldn't get a cab,
we were late for our train back
because our meetings went so late
and we were gonna miss our train back
and we couldn't get a cab.
And so we had, that was our only choice.
And then we were like, well, it's been a good run,
but we die here. Yeah, but it's been a good run, but we die here.
Yeah, but it's okay.
It's okay, we die here.
It's okay, it's okay.
It's just so fun.
And I was so excited.
And I remember we went to a lunch,
like a fancy lunch in New York with like some kind of
publisher type person.
And I just felt like all of New York was for us that day.
And I remember leaving, walking out of the restaurant,
and the man who was holding the doors looked at us
and said, congratulations.
And I looked at him and said, thank you.
This is a really big day.
And we walked away and you said to me, sister,
he was, it's because I'm nine months pregnant.
Like he was talking to me.
I never knows what's happening with you in the city.
Like so many other people are working to happen.
I mean, oh, you're so so freaking cute.
Thank you so much.
This town is lovely.
I mean, my parents are so excited.
We're just really, we're so grateful.
This is an honor being nominated. my parents are so excited. We're just really, we're so grateful.
Honour being nominated.
Every New Yorker got a bullet in that morning.
In big news today, Glending Doyle is in New York for a meeting that's important to her personally.
But, um, yeah, so that was, you know, people often want to know like what is that process?
Like that's what like that weekend was for us.
And then we turned the first book was Carry on Warrior.
That was a line from Don't Carpe Diem, which became a chapter in the book.
And I just spent a lot of time turning the blog posts that people resonated with the most into that first book.
I love that book.
I love that sweet little book.
It feels like, it just feels like your first house you lived in.
I know.
You just like love it so much.
And then I leaned, I look back to the way I was talking
and that it's like so strange you all to have a
version of yourself a decade ago out in the world. Like I want you to think about if like your
senior picture from Heiseby, like people were walking around looking at it, talking about it.
It's like, it can, it feels like this is why Jesus only wrote in the sand, right? It's like so it can be very crunchy to have this version of yourself.
But it's beautiful.
And it was true.
And it was true.
So it was a nose in your picture.
No, nope.
Well, not mine, but no, not mine.
Well, beautiful in the way of that was a true snapshot of you at the time.
When you were in fact doing your best with what you knew.
My snapshot.
Baby, did you have long hair in your picture?
I had a ponytail and this is,
I had my hand on my clasp ring here.
I was just like crushing it.
You leaned me to her.
Everyone listening, Abby is resting so gently,
her chin in her hand in a very artful and natural pose that you can imagine
first.
I had this baby blue like Kashmir like it wasn't real Kashmir Kashmir like sweater on.
Oh my gosh.
Good times.
All right.
So what do you that was gosh 12 gosh, 12 years ago, something like that, 10 years
ago, what would you say is your favorite thing about being a writer since that was the
moment that you could actually officially call yourself a writer?
Or did you call yourself a writer before that and what's your favorite part. My favorite thing about being a writer, which is,
I think the most life-changing aspect of having art in your life in any way,
is, so I remember when our oldest
decided that he was gonna be a photographer.
Okay.
So being a photographer is just mean someone that takes pictures.
All right, so I don't think of like being a writer or being a photographer or being a painter as
someone who makes a living off of that thing. It's just someone who does that thing. So someone
anyone who writes is a writer. And to be clear, I know plenty of people who write and do not get paid for it,
who are, who I believe are like true artists. And I know plenty of people who write
and are marketable in a way where they get to make money off of it,
who I don't feel come close to these other people in terms of depth and talent.
So there's a million things in our world that affect who gets to be paid for their writing,
things like race, things like gender, things like a million different reasons why some people
get opportunities to get paid and others don't.
And that does not define whether you're an artist or not. That's I've just seen. I've just seen that being disproven every day. So when our oldest decided to become
a photographer, I just felt so my heart just like exploded because I started to watch him
just like exploded because I started to watch him experience his days differently. Okay, because he was always looking for something interesting or beautiful to take a picture of.
So what was important in life changing about the decision to be that thing was never the result.
Like honestly, the picture was just like this cool thing at the end of the day that he had.
What was amazing was that his the way he experienced his world and his day
experienced his world and his day was changed forever.
Because we seek and you shall find. Like we find what we're looking for.
And what I love about being a writer is that
I am constantly thinking what is true about this moment?
What is beautiful about this thing?
I'm experiencing my day differently.
So it's not just about what I do when I come back to
the computer. It's about what I'm looking for all day. That makes my life better. That makes my
life more interesting. That makes my experience of other people and of the earth and of the entire world just alive. And then there's the other side of that.
Every good thing can become shit, right? Like, where sometimes I feel like, wait,
am I even getting to have an experience here? Because all I'm doing is like seeing everything as
potential writing material. And actually this is my wife, not a character.
Yeah, right.
Yeah, actually that's just a cactus, not a metaphor.
And actually that's just a piece of chicken.
Oh my gosh.
Our kids would have so much to say in this moment.
They're like, mom, everything doesn't have to be a metaphor.
My goodness.
They can't take it. Although they're also starting to do it,
which is so beautiful. I know. I know. I know. I don't see a table as a table
anymore either. The other thing I love about being a writer
is that I think one of the reasons I can't stand the two selves
is I understand that because of all of our conditioning,
when we see someone, we are never really seeing that person.
As human beings, it is our nature to prejudge everything.
And so when we see someone, our experience of them is always skewed immediately. Right?
There are no faults of our own, just the way the human beings are made.
So it's a art when somebody puts out a painting, when somebody makes a play,
when somebody writes a poem, when somebody dances a dance, it feels to me like a way
of showing that untamed self to other people's untamed self.
Right?
A way of truly, how do we ever really,
I mean, it makes me so stressed out
and sweaty to think about this,
to really think about the,
how do we ever show our real true selves in a way where other people can actually see
us?
And it's not perfect, right?
I feel like I'm writing in a way that is as close as I can get.
Okay, hold on a second.
This is fascinating.
And it's like striking me.
This might sound super odd.
I don't know.
But it feels like what I was doing on the field
was a little bit like that.
So maybe that, maybe I also have art in me.
Because yes, I was creating something out of nothing,
but I don't know, there was maybe sports
is like art in motion on some level because just hearing
you talk right now, Glennon, I'm like getting like this. When I was on the field, I wasn't
performing like gender roles. I was like out there just being free and being powerful
and being fast and being talented and being creative and being skillful and being tactile and all of these things,
though it might not from like the world's quote unquote definition of what art looks like,
like I think that that is art on some level. And I think that this could be kind of telling in terms of the way that our women's national
team is experienced because maybe I for a long, maybe the whole of my life have been
breaking free from gender norms or the gender, the conditioned idea of what being a girl is on the field.
Like, I'm just going out there playing and being fierce and being myself
and not following like the guidelines or the conditioning that was handed to me
when I was born into this world, right?
So, I don't know, I think I could just be free to be myself out there. And maybe that is what is so contagious and magnetic
about watching our Women's National team,
is we're watching women not just break free
from the social norms we were handed at birth,
but also the freedom that we are being
and using our bodies
with that we kind of took,
like we took this freedom from like a young age.
I don't know, I mean.
It's fascinating.
It's like,
while far from perfect sports do seem to,
first of all, of course it's art.
You're creating something out of nothing.
You're creating the play, you're creating the thing using your mind and your body,
you're creating this thing that was not in existence before,
that people are seeing and feeling and reacting to in real time.
It's like a play.
I've had that experience, Abby, where I've watched the boys play the sports on the television.
And I have watched them hug each other, kiss each other on the cheeks, be so affectionate
to each other, watch the men in the stands with a full, unbridled enthusiasm and passion
and tears.
And I have wondered, is this why they love this sports?
Because it's a place where they can be fully human.
Where they're allowed to let go of this conditioning
boys have, which are don't touch each other,
don't show vulnerability, don't show enthusiasm,
don't show joy, don't care.
They're allowed to do it in that realm, right? And girls are
allowed to be fierce and animalistic and mighty and not care how they look and
just care how they feel and compete and so did it? Did that freedom? This is what
it might question for you what I'm really interested about.
When you stepped off the field, because there was your, you felt free,
but what about the world's reaction to you?
Yeah.
Okay.
It was like, I guess, this oasis,
this field for me, just thinking about it instantly
when I'm walking off the field, right?
Like the first things that are said to me are just, first of all,
surprise at what I was able to do.
Wow, you don't play sports like a girl.
Like you don't run like a girl.
And so from a young age, I'm internalizing this misogyny.
I don't understand it to be that. I'm taking it as a young age, I'm internalizing misogyny.
I don't understand it to be that. I'm taking it as a total compliment, right?
But what's getting set in my conditioning
is hatred of women, right?
That women are less than,
that women are not to be aspired to be, right?
So this probably informed so many of the decisions
that I ended up making on how I want to dress
and how I want to present and how I want to walk
in the world.
And what looked like a big compliment
is this total,
like this total sexist way of being.
And like, yeah, what not to be like.
Like, and so I don't know,
I think it's really fascinating thinking about this freedom
that I was expressing on the field was then being
not just judged, but like put in this corner.
So I'm now, I mean, the male privilege
that I have experienced in my life is true.
It's real and it's something that I'm
trying to work through, right? Like, why have I made some of the decisions that I have made? And a
lot of it has to do with the way that the world responded to the freedom that I showed on the sports
court or field. And I would say that about art.
I would say that exact thing that that has been my experience.
That in art, I feel free to show my true self, my real self,
in a way that feels less encumbered by my conditioning.
When I step off the field, right? when I put that art in the world, the world's reaction to my art is completely gendered. Okay.
Men write about their lives and it's called literature. Women write about their lives and it's called women's issues. Men write about their lives and it's called their called leadership books.
Women write about their lives and they's called, they're called leadership books. Women write about their lives and they're called self-help.
Such bullshit.
Go ahead, Susie. I can tell you when I jump in there and I know you do.
Well, I just have scruples. I think that's really important because I think the whole idea of women's art being self-help,
I think is important because it isn't this kind of, oh, an author feels annoyed about being labeled
a certain way, which I know that that's a thing too. But like to me, it has nothing to do with the author.
It has all to do with how the world views women
and this phenomenon where every author
that connects on a grand scale with women
is defined as self-help.
It's based on this kind of circular logical fallacy
that completely patronizes and completely pathologizes women because
here's how it works.
It assumes that women's lives are a series of isolated problems as opposed to these like,
as opposed to these deeply problematic political and social structures.
And then it says these individualized, clearly these women need to help their
selves out of, right?
So therefore anything that connects deeply with women, anything that edifies them, anything
that is a conduit in which they recognize their own lives and experience must be an answer to our collective,
yet individual, neurosis, right?
Yes, we are, so that's why art,
that is the story of men's lives,
Hemingway, Bonnaget, Fitzgerald, that's art, right?
But art that tells the story of women's lives is self-help.
That's right.
And it's horseshit.
Every time someone hears that, they should think,
you are viewing me as neuratically in need of self-help.
Because when I say...
Inherently flawed.
Yes.
All of my male counterparts
are either memoirists, artists, or leadership people.
All of my female, that's what they're labeled.
All of my female counterparts are self-help.
It makes it, the self-help idea
is only talking to the individual.
And this leadership idea is talking to the masses, right? So it's like this whole philosophical
difference between women can only help one and men can help everyone. And this is like the freaking,
this is why the systemic and institutional bullshit, like who made up these fucking terms?
Right? Like the world sees us.
Yeah.
The world believes that men's challenge
is to just unleash themselves, leadership.
Just unleash your power.
Women's issue is they just need to fix themselves.
I think it's more, I think it's deeper than that.
I think it's whatever the default group is.
I think that men's stories are about our stories
because that's the default, because that is the lens
through which the world allows them to just be stories
and women's stories and women's experience must be,
and women's stories and women's experience must be,
must be a lens through which we see that all women have these various and inexplicable
individual dramas in their lives.
That's right.
One can't know why they're also deeply,
deeply irritated, but that's good because we'll give them lots of books.
And then maybe they'll figure out what the hell is wrong with them
and then they can help themselves out of it.
Yes, that's right.
That's where they used to call in the second wave,
a feminist in the used to call the conscious reasoning groups,
therapy, they would make fun of them.
Are you the girls who are in therapy again?
Yeah, this is repeated over and over again
to all female artists forever and ever.
We just have to see it.
And that's why I feel like there's this,
like when you're talking about creativity
and people might think of themselves as,
you know, I'm not a writer, I'm not a painter,
I'm not a poet, so I'm not a writer, I'm not a painter, I'm not a poet, so I'm not, I'm not a creative.
But the, one of the, like, main theories about creativity is that a driver of it is this,
is called the assumption breaking process or counterfactual thinking that you need to
engage in counterfactual thinking to lead to creativity.
And so you have to get rid of all these kind of preconceived assumptions
to even begin to attempt a new approach that hasn't been tried before.
And that's why all of this, it always starts with like if only,
or why can't it be, or why can't, and so that's why all of that kind of deconstruction of
conforming to gender
you know roles or
white supremacy or worthinesses productivity all of that is inherently a very
creative process if you're willing to think you know what if or why not
That is creative like you're doing a creative thing.
So I think what we're both saying here
with this art and sports and all of it is that
what is crucial to me is that art is just about finding
a place to tell the truth about your life.
Like as close to the truth as you can get,
we call it like the truthiest truth to be free, to let that real self free. And then there's this crucial
moment where you have to only be responsible for that. And when you leave the field, which
the equivalent for me would be putting it out in the world or letting other people read it, understand that nobody will see it as clearly as you said it. That everyone's conditioning will
come into it and that is not your responsibility, right? That it is not our responsibility to like
follow our art around and be a lawyer for it. Be a defender of it. That actually, when I used to do that,
that is what warming out. Trying to make sure that everybody sees it the way that I meant it and
trying to prove that it was right or whatever. Almost quit writing a few times, not because I wasn't
a writer, but because I wasn't a good lawyer.
Like I just stopped that part of it, understanding that once you step off
the field your job is done.
You're responsible for telling the truth
and in no way responsible for how the world handles your truth
or reacts to your truth.
So I think for our next right thing here,
we're just gonna ask ask you, you know,
where do you get to, where does your real self get to breathe and be seen? Like where and how is
it that your real self gets some air? And it certainly does not need to be seen by other people.
That's not what I'm saying. Like it's just, is there any time in your day
where your real self feels any freedom?
Is it a coffee with a friend?
Is it a quiet moment in the morning?
Is it a walk?
Like I actually want to know from the pod squad.
Where is it during your day that you give your real self
a moment to breathe and be seen and be acknowledged?
And we love you. I'm going to ask sister. I just feel like we didn't hear enough from you,
which is shocking. I can't believe I talked so much. And it's just so unlike me. I think if it's
okay with you, I would love to start the next episode with hearing
about your approach to creativity and how it has or has not laid out in your life. Is that
okay? No. Okay. Thank you for showing me yourself. I see you know, I acknowledge it. I
celebrate your know as much as a yes. I said that to somebody on email and it felt good
yet. I asked them for something and I said I will celebrate your no as much as I would celebrate your yes
Um
Okay, we love you all find a place this week to let your real self breathe
It's hard, but we can do hard things
Also babe good job. You were using sports metaphors. Well done. Thanks. Love
Bye I give you Well done. Thanks, Slap. Thank you. Bye-bye.
I give you Tish Melton
and Brandy Carlyle. I chased, desire, I made sure I got once mine
And I continue to believe, I walk the line
Cause we're adventurers in heartbreak
So now a final destination
You stop asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
Through the joy and pain that our lives bring, we can do a heartbreak.
I hit rock bottom, it felt like a brand new star 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 matter
A final destination with light
We stopped asking directions
So 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 spring
We can do our thing Can do a hard thing
Those perfect, cherished and heartbreaks on land We might get lost but we're only in that
Stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be loved, we need to be long
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.
Yeah, we can do hard things.
We can do hard things,
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