Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 229: Our Experiences After The Lost Years Series | Ear Biscuits Ep.229
Episode Date: February 24, 2020The episodes are out, and the responses are in! Listen to R&L discuss their experiences after the revealing all in their Lost Years series in this episode of Ear Biscuits! -- (1:04) - our life after t...he Lost Years series (7:07) - the process behind getting the stories out and people interacting with them (23:13) - Mythical Beasts sharing stories (27:44) - interaction with an old friend (35:48) - an unanticipated response (39:49) - thanks for all of the positive responses (49:24) - what we’re going to do with this momentum (51:41) - a tweet from a Mythical Beast (52:41) - Link finally does it (54:52) - L on giving love (56:59) - why we told this story (1:02:36) - a heartwarming conversation on the Discord channel (1:07:23) - the most important thing (1:09:31) - L’s rec 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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This, this, this, this is mythical.
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Welcome to Ear Biscuits, I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
we're discussing what's it like after you put out
a series like the Lost Years series.
What has our experience been like
since sharing everything we've shared
and now fielding a lot of responses
and including a lot of questions
because that's what we ask you guys to do
is tell us, use hashtag your biscuits,
let us know how you're processing it
and if you have any questions for us.
So we knew we were going to do what we were calling
a follow-up episode and this is it.
At least this is one of them.
Yeah, I would say this is one of them.
Yeah, let's just say it's one of them.
And we may get to some questions,
but I think one of the conversations we've been having is,
as we've processed how we're processing the reaction,
it kinda just led to the decision to take today's episode
in a slightly different direction,
but I'm not saying it won't end up
in a place of answering questions,
but we'll talk about that.
One quick thing we do wanna cover
is if you're listening to this,
you might know that the podcast comes out every Monday
in audio form, but through the power of video,
we are also recording every single episode with a video camera,
have been for quite some time.
And then the following Sunday,
so a little bit less than a week
after the podcast comes out,
the video version comes out at youtube.com slash Ear Biscuits.
So if you wanna see us talk and not just hear us talk,
if you're like listening and you're like,
man, they're referring to a photo,
or man, I don't know exactly how to take what he's saying.
Maybe the look on his face would help me understand it.
Oh, he was actually smiling when he said that.
Right.
Yeah, he was crying at that point.
Well, and some people-
If you wanna see us smile and cry,
then go to the Ear Biscuits channel on YouTube.
And I also made reference to my hair during my episode
where I told my story and then-
But you're done with that.
Regretfully, I watched a little bit of that
and I was like, well, that was an interesting decision.
I'm not saying I'm not gonna do it again.
But we're not gonna talk about it now.
No, we're not gonna talk about it now.
Because it's not the thing we're talking about.
I'm not even gonna tell you what my hair looks like today
because you'll have to watch it on YouTube
to figure that out. That's not why
they're here, man.
No, well, it's at least.4%
of the listening audience is here for my hair.
But that means that 99.6% are here for other things.
Like maybe your hair. My hat and my jacket.
You wanna get a load of my hat and my jacket? Link has on a hat and a jacket.
So do you.
You can almost see it.
How do you wanna get into this?
Because I do think it's, you know,
the brief conversation we had last night.
I called you in a panic.
You called me in a panic.
No, you didn't call me in a panic,
but you were like, hey, we should talk about
how we're gonna approach this thing because
I think that's a good place to start
because we were each individually pulling
questions and comments that we wanted to address
or respond to, at least that was our plan.
And it turns out independently,
we were having our own struggles
with how we wanted to have this discussion today.
Right, so when I called you last night,
I had just gotten out of therapy.
He's busting out the barn doors.
And I, you know, I don't know if your experience,
those of you who go to therapy, I mean, for me,
I always go in thinking, why am I doing this?
Like, you know, I got nothing to say.
I got nothing to talk about. What am I gonna do? Like, you know, I got nothing to say. I got nothing to talk about.
What am I gonna do?
Just make stuff.
Like I always lull myself back into this place
where I kind of just feel like it's unnecessary.
And then by the end of it, I'm like,
this is why I go to therapy.
Well, as a side note,
this brings up something very pertinent
that I'm not gonna talk about right now,
but I will talk about later in this episode.
Continue.
Oh, wow, that was a tease.
And I,
so the first thing I started talking about was,
Jessie and I had had like a, basically a fight about,
you know, of course we're redoing the pool area,
and so this is typical cliche,
married couple construction project arguments situation.
But I kinda had this sense that there was something going on
beneath my concern about the construction project
that was fueling the intensity
with which I was arguing about this and standing up for things like,
you know, where grills will be and, or where grill will be.
I'm not like you, I'm only gonna have one grill.
I'm not doing two grills.
You're already losing.
But it's a, oh, it's a nice grill.
It might be one grill better than both of your grills
put together.
Well, I think you're- At least that's what
I'm going for.
You are waving the white flag at the design phase
and I'm all for it.
So I was like, you know, I've been feeling like
kind of tired and sort of worn out and it isn't like,
we're not- Working hard.
Well, I wasn't gonna say, we're not working as hard
as it can get for us.
Like we're not touring.
We don't have a major project besides our ongoing things
that we're doing, but I'm like,
and just usually I would be like, have a lot of energy,
but I'm like, I feel a little bit beat down
and I started trying to process that.
And that was when I started realizing that this,
the process of our stories going out there
and then them sort of people interacting with them,
interacting with the stories, interacting with us,
it's been a very emotionally draining thing.
Now, I wanna clarify that,
it's also been awesome. Just because it's been emotionally draining doesn't mean, it's also been awesome.
Just because it's been emotionally draining
doesn't mean that it hasn't been great.
I mean, the amount of encouragement that we've received
from people on both ends of the spectrum,
regardless of whether or not they, you know,
people who started not being a Christian
then became a Christian, people who were a Christian
who aren't a Christian, people who still are Christian.
No matter what your point of reference is for the story,
we've received so much encouragement
and just kind messages and thoughtful comments.
And that's been great, hearing people's stories.
But for me, the thing that I realized
I was kind of focusing on, this is not too surprising,
was the small percentage of people
who I kind of felt disapproved by.
Disapproved of.
Okay.
By them.
And you know, to kind of, I don't wanna go.
You're talking critical responses?
Yeah, well, people who, I mean,
there's some responses that are just
not critical and not thoughtful.
And those are really easy to just be like,
okay, I'm not gonna let that affect me.
But there are some that are critical and thoughtful.
And the way my personality interacts with that
is I just have this like,
I get immediately defensive, right?
And so what I wanna do is I wanna come on the show
and I wanna go through the questions and the critiques
and I wanna enter into some sort of like defense
of my position.
I wanna justify the conclusions that I've come to, right?
But maybe beyond that,
there was also people who kinda did like a takedown
essentially of like my story or whatever.
And my story was kinda easier to do a takedown essentially of like my story or whatever. And my story was kind of easier to do a takedown of
because I kind of presented like these,
this very specific process that I went through
from an intellectual standpoint.
So people can kind of key in on things and be like,
well, here's the thing I take issue with here.
And here's the thing I take issue with here.
And then there were people interacting with the people
who had those kind of critical responses
who didn't know who I was, didn't know who you were,
didn't listen to the podcast,
but immediately were interpreting me
through the lens of this person who's being critical.
And I felt, and this isn't one person,
there's a number of people who have done this.
And I felt super defensive
because I felt like I was being misrepresented, right?
And so I just realized that,
and I didn't even understand that I was dealing with this
until I started talking it out.
And just this idea of wanting to be like,
well, this is what you, I didn't say that,
or you just said this about me,
or you assume this about my process,
or you're being critical of me
and the way that I thought about this
or the resource that I suggested
and I have all these answers that I wanna get into.
But then I very quickly just started realizing that
I just don't want this podcast
to devolve into like a defense of the position
that we have, you know, the conclusions that we have come to
for a number of reasons.
Number one.
I'm most curious about what the, if you're gonna number them,
what are your personal reasons?
Because I know, yeah, I agree that one of the reasons
is that it's not, that's not what this podcast is.
Yeah, right.
Well, I was just gonna say yes,
this is not what the podcast is.
It's like this isn't some defense of any, you know,
this isn't a place to come on and defend and conjecture because that's not
what everybody's here for but also,
we're not qualified to do that.
You know, I am not an expert in any of the stuff
that I talked about.
I'm just an interested lay person who was,
who had their faith basically turned over
by just looking into some of these things,
but I'm not then qualified to then tell you
what you should think about it.
Because when I start thinking about my process,
like it wasn't easy to revisit a lot of those things
because sometimes you're like, well, in the past, I was very interested
in this particular thing and I looked it up
and I was convinced of something.
But if you ask me, why were you convinced?
I can't immediately recall why I was convinced.
A lot of times you'll become convinced of something.
Yeah.
But the specific reasons you were convinced,
you're like, I gotta go kind of read that resource again
to get back to that place because that's just the way the human mind works, right?
Doesn't mean that I didn't come to a conclusion
and didn't move to something else.
But anyway, the idea of getting into this like tit for tat,
defending a position,
it just felt like it would be very unhealthy
for me personally.
But it also felt like
I was just very quickly just kind of moving into this place
that it was about me and it was about my ego,
which is a consistent problem for me, right?
I mean, I talked a little bit about being a three
on the Enneagram and one of the weaknesses of the three
in being an achiever and a performer
is you want everyone's approval.
And so the idea of throwing something out there,
throwing a bomb out there like we did
and being like this sacred thing
that is the most important thing in so many people's lives
and was the most important thing in our life,
we've discarded it for the most part.
That is going to, that's throwing a rock
into a hornet's nest and some of the hornets
will come out and sting you.
Yeah and I just realized that I'm just not,
I wasn't, I haven't been dealing with that in a healthy way
because my response to that has been,
well, let me tell you why I am justified.
Let me prove to you why I was right about this thing.
And it's like, no, A, that wouldn't be effective.
It's not like that's gonna change anybody's mind.
But B, that wouldn't be good for me.
Yeah, and I think that as we've talked about
on this podcast and like I just said,
this is not, that's not how we've built this thing.
This podcast, and I was really glad when you called it
to hear you say that because I didn't know why
when I was looking back at the questions that I was,
I was kind of stuck or kind of troubled by it,
but that helped make sense of it that,
yeah, this podcast is a conversation
between us sharing our experiences
and our perspectives on things with each other.
And I think if,
whatever people wanna take from that as a listener
is they're free to do that.
But if we start turning towards the microphones
and the cameras and we start saying,
a little bit of that made sense.
It's like, hey, these are the resources.
If you're interested in some of the things
that either one of us talked about, these are the books you can resources if you're interested in some of the things that either one of us talked about,
you know, these are the books you can read
if you're interested in that, if you're into it,
but you're not gonna sit here and go through
all of these arguments about, okay, now let's do a podcast
dedicated to Jesus and all of the takeaways
from our research about that and the conversations
we've had and let's start doing
something that's like, that's challenging
or that has an agenda or puts out a specific perspective
that then we're hoping to change people's minds.
I think it's more of, I mean, even when we would,
in previous episodes when we would just give
relational advice or life advice and half the time
it would just be for the fun of it.
We would often say, listen, we're not experts at this.
We're just sharing our lives and our perspectives.
Take it with caution and sometimes with grain of salt.
I mean, we're just people.
We're friends having a conversation
that we welcome you to be a part of it.
But we don't wanna be prescriptive
and we don't wanna start arguing on a soapbox about anything.
So yeah, it started to feel like it was,
the temptation was there to be very defensive
with some of the questions.
And yeah, because of the nature of your story,
it generated a lot more of those questions
that weren't personal in nature,
but they were intellectual in nature
or they were philosophical or just belief oriented.
They were separate from you as a person.
And it does invite those kinds of conversations and I think having,
starting to address those now would just perpetuate that
and that's not what we're after.
Yeah.
For me, I think that,
I felt a lot more, I mean you felt,
you talked about how you felt relief
and how there was a lot of positive ripple effects
from this podcast too and you can talk more about that
but I would say, I mean, that's predominantly
what I've experienced.
Definitely the relief of getting it out there
and I knew it but I didn't fully appreciate how sharing so much
of our conversations at this desk, at this table,
but not sharing that had kind of really eaten away at me.
It really made me uncomfortable to seem like I was being
real but then I wasn't being, it wasn't like a full
disclosure so I think I have experienced some lightness
associated with getting that out there.
And like you said, I definitely did as well.
It wasn't until I started thinking about
this follow up, which we were like,
ask us questions, make comments and we'll respond to them.
And then I just started finding myself
kind of keying in on the critical ones
or the gotcha questions.
People asking a question because they think that
by me trying to answer it, they're gonna get me,
they're gonna catch me in some illogical thought process.
Right, whereas with my story,
it was so, it was told in a way that like,
if people were critical of me,
it would have been critical, told in a way that like if people were critical of me,
that it would have been critical, it could have been taken as a personal attack
of a personal experience, not just some external assessment
of a belief about something.
Well, and I think that that's the thing
that's difficult for me is that
even though I kind of told a story which was like,
these are the things that I read or learned
that then made me question what I had always known,
some people interacted with the points, right?
Some people might be like,
I think your conclusion here was incorrect
or I think you've given too much credence
to these critical thinkers,
people who are critical of the Bible
versus people who believe it, whatever.
But the majority of people find some sort of fault
with me, right?
Well, it was something in your process,
something in your pride,
something in the way that you see things,
you ultimately want it out, you just didn't know it.
Like trying to find some way to explain it
based on some deficiency in me, right?
Now, first of all, you may be right about that.
But this kind of beside the point,
what I'm talking about right now is
it's difficult to not take it personally
even though it's difficult for people
to not make it personal.
And I'm not saying, oh.
And it was your personal process.
I think the things that you said can be separated from you,
but for you, they weren't.
Yeah, well, I wanna be clear.
I'm not complaining about this.
Like I expected, I actually expected it to be much worse
than it was.
Like I said, the vast majority of people,
whether they're Christians or not, have been very gracious.
I think that the thing that I was reminded of
is just how big a part my ego plays
in anything that I talk about, right?
It's just like, I'm obviously,
I was trying to be as honest as I can
when I tell my story,
but I also kind of want to be the hero of my own story.
Don't we all?
And in telling the story,
I'm also telling it in a way
that justifies my decisions and my conclusions.
And there's really no other way to live life in one sense,
but that can be also done in a very unhealthy way.
And we're gonna take a break here in a second,
but I wanna talk about how that tendency
to basically find personal fault
with someone who's deconstructing
is something that we relate to really personally as well
by telling a little story.
What was the last thing that filled you with wonder
that took you away from your desk or your car in traffic?
Well, for us, and I'm gonna guess for some of you, that thing is...
Anime!
Hi, I'm Nick Friedman.
I'm Lee Alec Murray.
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In terms of my experience, I would say,
I mean, I shared my story for me.
I shared, you know, when I reached the conclusion,
it's like, I want to be hopeful,
I want to do the work to remain engaged in a faith journey
and not just to be, not just sit on my laurels
and go on with my day to day life
and there's so much that I could get distracted by
that I would just never get back to it.
I actually feel like sharing my story was a big,
this was a big part of my journey
because it just helped me process things for myself.
And I would say kind of jumpstart
or kind of reinvigorate my own process
because for a number of years,
I just kind of put it on a shelf.
It's like I just, I'm kind of stuck and I don't feel,
but then the thing that I started to realize
as I prepped it and then as I shared it started to come out
and even afterward as I've talked to people about it, started to come out and even afterward, as I've talked to people about it,
I've really benefited from understanding myself even more.
And I can get into,
I'd like to get into some of those details,
but at the same time at a parallel path,
the fact that again, secondarily,
it was something that resonated,
either your story or my story or both of them
resonated with so many people that we didn't ask people,
I don't know, maybe we,
I don't think we asked for people to share their stories.
I think we acknowledged that it was happening along the way
but I didn't anticipate that a lot of people
would just use it as an opportunity
to start to share their own stories
to the extent that they have and share how they related
to different aspects of what we had to say.
And I was just, you know, I would just,
I didn't know how to, I would just heart
a lot of these things
because there were so many and I just,
I wanted to reply and say something,
but practically, it just wasn't really possible.
But I just wanted to say that my experience
was just being blown away with how our stories were helpful.
Because when you,
when you hear somebody share something and there were people saying, I just,
I don't feel alone now that you've shared.
And again, not just me,
if you're responding to you sometimes, me sometimes,
but it just means,
it means so much that people
were moved by it
to not feel alone, to be moved to share their own stories
and just to start that conversation
with their friends on the internet and off the internet.
It was, I was like, wow, I actually think
that it's helped people.
And I really didn't know that that would happen.
I don't, maybe it seems obvious in this internet culture
of sharing that's like, yeah, when you share
and when you take a risk, it helps people.
But I never associated that with what we were
considering doing.
And so I just remember being in my bed one night
and I was just looking through all the stories
and I was just overwhelmed with gratitude
that it did make a difference.
And again, I didn't know that was gonna happen.
That was not, I don't think I would have said,
I'm doing this to help people.
I think, you know, I was doing it as,
because I felt ready to do it
and I felt like it was part of my process.
So I guess I was surprised,
maybe more than you would have thought I would have been.
Well, I wanna talk about how I interacted with all that
and how that, while it was helpful,
it also increased my anxiety.
I wanna get to that
because I think there's a whole conversation to have there,
but I don't wanna skip over
the interactions that we've had with our old friend.
Yeah, so there's, I mean.
We talked about him a little bit in one of our stories.
Maybe your story.
I can't remember but there's, yeah,
there's been a number of people that we've reconnected with
but when we mentioned him,
we were talking about how we were on the other,
we were still, we were on the front side of it
and he was kinda going through the process
that we've described.
To recap, so this is a very close friend of ours
growing up who was a fellow very strong Christian
who in the early 2000s basically started
to have somewhat of a deconstruction.
And we reconnected with him.
Well, first of all, since our deconstruction,
we've connected with him and we know
where each other are at, but we told him,
we're sharing our stories publicly,
we'd love for you to listen or whatever,
so we've been talking with him since then.
He was able to uncover some of our old correspondence
when Link and I were getting ready to go into the ministry
to work with Campus Crusade to do evangelism training.
And we were running some things by him
as someone who was in a different place.
But then what he was doing,
after we spent some time with him,
he was going back and like writing in his journal
about the interactions that he was having with us.
And in reading so many of the responses to our story,
especially the responses from-
Oh, you're talking about public responses.
Yeah, yeah, so reading public responses to our stories
and specifically responses from people who are,
you know, basically their only response to what we said is,
this is just very sad.
There's no like, it's basically just like,
I'm praying for you guys, this is very sad,
I hope you find the faith, those kinds of responses.
It was very, very reminiscent of the way
that we interacted with him.
And it just reminds me how much where we were at in life
and what we were doing was informing our responses.
Because we were literally raising support
to go on staff full time.
And I had probably, you were in the very middle of it,
I was coming to the end, this giant sort of left turn
in your life where you've thrown,
you've left your previous job and you're putting it all
on the line for Jesus.
And then you go and you talk to a friend
who you really respect and we probably,
we had the deepest sort of intellectual conversations
about our faith, even in high school with this guy.
Like this, you know, we talked about things
on as deep of a level as we could at the time.
And in high school, I remember those conversations starting.
And so it was just always kind of had this sort
of philosophical thing going with him.
And then for him to have these really deep questions
that were kind of tearing at the roots of our faith.
I remember me and you talking to him
and then talking to each other and it was just like,
I think the way you described it in a text to him
the other day was like, we just had,
there was zero openness to what you were going through.
There was a complete inability to turn the questions
that you were asking yourself onto ourselves
because there was way too much at stake at the time.
Yeah.
What are we gonna suddenly stop raising support
and tell everybody who just gave us all this money that, oh, by the way, guys, I'm really questioning
the foundations of this whole thing.
It's like, I'm not gonna go there.
So I'm not even gonna allow that thought to enter my mind.
Yeah, so I, my recollection was we were, you know,
we were as polite as we could to be in trying to help,
help him turn a corner to double back.
And that was it, you know, it was like,
cause that's what we had,
that's what we were supposed to do, you know?
So it wasn't an actual conversation.
And he, you know, he felt that, he knew that.
He was also gracious because in his journal entry, he basically that, he knew that. He was also gracious because in his journal entry,
he basically said, I completely get where these guys
are coming from because it's where I came from.
And that's why, and so.
Yeah, I think he said that he did to others
what we were doing to him.
And so all that to say that
any sort of dismissive comments
that we're getting about our story,
which again is a very small minority,
it's more than justified.
We deserve every bit of it because we've done it.
We've been there and it's that,
and I remember thinking about him and thinking about, I was like, where did you go wrong?
You know, like, I think he hung out with the wrong people.
I was trying to figure out, I was trying to get to the bottom
of why he, someone who had a very real, strong,
informed faith
was suddenly questioning it and I was just like,
where did he screw up?
Let me find that.
Let me find where he screwed up.
I never could figure it out.
So anyway, I just wanted to acknowledge that,
that we've done that and we've been there.
Yeah, so I think there are people
who are coming to our defense when they see people say,
it makes me sad.
And I saw someone make the point,
I don't think people realize when they say
that it makes them sad when someone else shares
their personal story that that's manipulative.
But I get it.
I understand why it makes,
if you have a certain worldview,
it made me sad before.
Yeah, 100%. For other people.
But I do think it's helpful.
I think it's helpful.
And listen, I'm not saying this,
but I think this could be,
this could help those of you who have said this is sad
to understand why it's not,
it's difficult to not take that as an insult.
Because if I were to say,
you know, it's sad that you've based your life
on something that's not true.
That's offensive. That's an insult, right?
To say that to you.
I'm not saying that, but if I were to say that,
that would be offensive, it would be insulting,
it would be dismissive.
And so I think the same thing is it's sad
that you guys are moving away from this thing
that I know to be true.
And it's sad that your eternal destiny is in question.
I understand where you're coming from
and according to your worldview,
this is pretty much the only response that you could have.
Right.
But to communicate it in that way
and not understand why that's insulting and dismissive
and people are gonna perceive it in that way,
hopefully I've shown a little bit of light on that.
I think another thing that we didn't anticipate
was that people, not that people are gonna come out
of the woodwork in order to text or email
or try to Facebook message us even though
we're not on Facebook anymore about things is, well, it's not that that surprises,
but that they would then reach out to, you know,
our wives or our extended families.
And so that was something that I don't know,
I don't know if it would have changed how
or if we would have done it,
but it's not something that we specifically anticipated.
You know, it's like, I mean,
Christy would get a bunch of messages from people
she hadn't heard from in a while.
And I know they come from a place of really caring,
but it's like, then all of a sudden,
now she's got a field questions from people that are like, it was basically like,
are you okay, are you guys okay?
And I was like, Christy, you know,
the thing that I'm realizing is that it was two years,
when I tell the story of us in the minivan,
like in tears, not going into church
and trying to figure out where we were
and where we each were and all those type of things
and the anguish from that particular story I told,
well, that was two years ago.
It's like we're in a different place than that.
We're not sitting, we don't have the minivan anymore.
And even if we did, we're not sitting, we don't have the minivan anymore. And even if we did, we're not sitting in it
weeping every Sunday, you know,
we're in a much healthier,
healthy is not the right word,
but like, we're in a good place.
And I don't, you know, and people,
when you share this story,
and if the last time they talked to you was three, four,
five, six, seven years ago, it's like,
well, they don't know when that was.
So it's like, did this just happen?
And really the first thing Christy learned was
the first question she would ask in response
to the people that she would engage with was,
well, have you actually listened to the podcast?
Because a lot of people, they would hear from someone
and they would have concern,
but they wouldn't have listened to it themselves.
And so that's an important point
because I'm not gonna engage
if you don't really know all the details already.
I can't sit here and retell you all of this on Facebook.
So even from a purely practical standpoint,
it's kind of like there's a handful
or maybe more than a handful of like, oh, we gotta,
I find myself in a conversation with someone
and it's like they're bringing some assumptions
to the table that like we're in trouble.
Yeah.
And that's not the case.
Yeah, I didn't anticipate,
I mean, I should have thought about it
but I was thinking about a lot of things
leading up to us talking and I did not anticipate,
given the nature of a small town
and a community of people who,
at least in the circles that my family runs in back home,
it's like, you know, we're talking about
a Christian circle of people.
Yeah.
A very well connected group of people.
Both my family and Jesse's family.
So it's like the amount of people who have kinda come up
to them saying things, making assumptions,
again, having not listened to the podcast in many cases.
Yeah, I feel like I could have prepared them better.
I feel bad about that.
I think that's been a source of some anxiety for me as well
as I've thought about this.
Cause you know, they knew that we were gonna talk about it
to some degree, some more than others.
They're back there on kind of the front lines.
It's like we've been dealing with a lot of the online stuff.
Nobody comes up to us on the street.
But they'll see somebody at the grocery store.
You're not sitting at a restaurant
or in a grocery store and somebody's gonna come up to you.
Yeah, so I guess we could've done better
on that front.
But I wanted to talk about what you were saying
with the number of, the way that I interacted
with the number of stories that people were telling
and the number of people who related.
Now, my initial reaction was one of this is awesome,
this is super encouraging.
Like you said, there was a few times
where I was just reading people's stories,
it was a very emotional thing.
It's like people have been through some shit, man.
Yeah.
In contrast to our stories, like I said,
it was very difficult to kind of move out of that world,
but that world, we benefited personally from that world
in a lot of ways that other people have a lot more trauma,
depending on their background.
And some of those stories are just heart wrenching,
but the way that, again, so there's just sort of
my heart reaction to it, which is, this is great, and then there's my head reaction to it, which is this is great,
and then there's my head reaction to it,
which is like, what are we gonna do with this?
You know, I'm always thinking about what the next thing is
that we're gonna do.
And...
Yeah, and I thought about that too.
When you got all these people sharing the story
and there feels like there's this momentum and there feels like there's this momentum
and there feels like there is this,
you know, we've all kind of left something
that was very organized and was a very particular movement
into this thing that it's just pretty nebulous.
What is this life after Christian faith?
Yeah, are you talking about thoughts that enter your mind
like, well, should we organize something?
No, no, no, no, no, no.
I wanna be clear, I wanna be clear.
I'm too old and just wise enough
to know that that would be a horrible idea.
I'm not talking about a Rhett and Link church.
I'm talking about like a specific like,
oh, let's change the complexion of this podcast
to have some programmatic addressing of some of these things.
I would say in a more general sense,
it's just asking the question of,
is there a project associated with this, right?
That's one question that enters my mind is like,
is there a project?
I don't know what that is, but you got all these people,
they've got their stories, there's this momentum,
we've tapped into something.
And so I feel this pressure to sort of figure that out.
At the same time, I'm feeling this pressure to,
like you said, this has sort of been a kick in the pants
to like sort of reengage spiritually.
For me, that's been true, but it's also kind of the way
that it's registered with me is,
I threw out this deconstruction story
and talked about what I don't believe anymore.
I talked a little bit about what I do believe now, but what I do believe now is held with a much lower level
of conviction and passion
because it's more of a position of openness and curiosity
but I don't wanna be in that position perpetually
and never embrace anything, right?
But there was this sort of like,
oh people, like you just,
again you just threw this rock into the hornet's nest
and now you got all these hornets flying around
and some of them are coming up to you and asking,
well, what now?
You know, and I'm not trying to put on the mantle
of some spiritual leader,
that's the last thing that I want to do
because that's not, it's very much the last thing
that I ever want to do.
But there is this part of me that's just like,
well, you should find some answers.
You know, you should find some answers
and then you should relay those answers.
And again, I just feel like that is rooted in my ego.
I don't think that that's rooted in anything good.
I don't think that there's,
I think it's very much about a personal,
personal interest
and personal self justification.
I don't think that there's any,
I should be leaning into that.
That doesn't mean that I shouldn't be personally seeking
and being open and being open to whatever is next for me,
which I think that I am,
but doing that because I want to then present myself
to a group of people who are listening is a-
Right, right.
And the interesting thing is-
It's a trap.
Ironically, that's what ministry is for so many people.
That's what any position of leadership is,
but I've known, I've got a lot of friends who are pastors
and I've had a lot of friends who are pastors
and some of them in their most honest moments
have relayed to me that there is this sort of
self-fulfilling prophecy, I don't know,
that's probably not the right terminology,
but there is this idea that now I am the one
that you are coming to for answers
and so I must create the answers.
I must have the answers.
I must live the life.
I must have the appearance of having it figured out
because that is what you expect of me.
And I think that a lot of pastors are just kinda stuck
in this.
It's tough.
Hamster wheel of appearances and kinda,
and the church in a lot of ways has set it up
that you can't screw up.
You can't be a human.
You can't have imperfections,
especially if you're in leadership,
especially if you're the pastor.
Right.
Yeah, I feel for him.
And but I'll draw an analogous scenario for us.
I was on my Valentine's date with Christy
and first of all, there's a story
that I'm not gonna tell now.
Maybe I'll tell it next week when it's like,
when we have more space for this.
So don't let me forget.
I guess it's a funny thing to happen, but that's kind of my point.
I was sitting at dinner and another weird thing happened
that I'm not referring to,
and I made a joke to Christy at dinner and I was like,
oh, you know I'm gonna talk about this on Ear Biscuits.
And it was like, and she, you know, she got,
she was like, uh-uh, are you serious?
It's like, and it wasn't that she didn't want me
to share a funny story, it's just that we're on a date.
This is about me and her and if I'm sitting there,
the moment something happens, I'm like, oh yeah,
I got an Ear Biscuit story, then that robs
the intimacy of the moment, you know?
It's like, well, we just had a funny moment, you know?
We didn't, we experienced a funny moment
that you can then have on an audience later, you know?
It's like, and I was like, actually, I was just joking
because that was my joke, Christy, that was my defense.
It's just a joke, but I am talking about it
on your business right now.
No, I'm talking about.
Talking about it.
Talking about it, but I'm not talking about it.
Okay.
But maybe next week I'll share another story,
but not this one, because it's off limits now.
Yeah, because that's sacred, precious.
Just between you and Christy.
But my point, I hear your point when it comes to like,
am I gonna pursue, am I gonna,
like let's just say it's find an answer
to a specific spiritual or philosophical question
for yourself.
Are you gonna find that question just so you can turn around
and prove that you have an answer on ear biscuits?
Like that's dangerous, that is a trap.
You know, it's like.
And it's a trap for certain personalities.
My personality, listen, it's a trap for me
and it's one of the ways that I interacted
with responsibilities in the church, right?
It's like, yeah, of course I'm gonna lead a Bible study.
Right?
And of course, every once in a while,
if they ask me, I'll preach, give a talk on something.
And I think there's a, ironically,
the way, and of course, our experiences
with the evangelical church,
but the way the evangelical church is structured
at this point is typically men who are type A personalities
who would otherwise make great CEOs
make really good pastors in the system
that is currently set up.
And they're charismatic leaders,
not charismatic in the theological sense,
but just winning personalities.
They're smart, they're insightful,
they know how to relate, they know how to tell a good story.
And they very quickly find hundreds,
if not thousands of people who want in.
And I think it just creates a really unhealthy,
I know for me personally, if we had stayed in ministry,
I'm sure that we would have taken some sort of path
in leadership and I think I operated
in a really unhealthy place for a really long time.
I know I did, I described it.
Yeah.
As a worship leader.
Yeah, but the interesting thing is that
to get back to what we're gonna do with this momentum
or whatever it is,
and this is kind of what I was talking about
in therapy last night, is finding a way
to just lean into
the personal nature of the process.
But it not being about a movement,
it not being about being right, being justified,
being the Bible answer man, you know what I'm saying?
And having an answer and having a reason for everything.
Because very quickly, almost immediately,
that just becomes about me.
It just becomes about me wanting to justify myself
and to get your approval.
The whole process that I've been going through in therapy
is leaning away from that and being like,
it's not, no, no, no, it's not about people's approval.
It's not about what people think about you.
It's about figuring out what is actually happening
in your heart.
And so I think, so my desire for when we talk about
these things on the podcast is just to,
I'm not saying we shouldn't answer a question or two
at some point, even now, I don't know, probably not now,
we're almost out of time, but I want the tone of that
and the purpose of that to be, hey, not an expert,
just a couple of guys trying to figure out life,
trying to move closer to the truth, doing our best.
Yeah, for me, like I said,
the process of sharing my story really helped me
almost internalize some conclusions about
like realizing things about who I was
and about how I interact, like the way that I interacted with
my faith and my belief system and what that what that meant about me as a person then
what it means for me now um and well there there's one tweet from Holly that I wanted to read.
She said, I too was raised evangelical and am an Enneagram one like me.
I struggled my whole life trying to be a quote, better Christian.
And it wasn't until after college that I realized I was exhausted from living with this internal struggle. And that is, this process of putting this out there
has really helped me begin to understand
to a new level my own internal struggle.
And that there is absolutely a level of exhaustion
that I did not know that was there associated
with my perfectionism,
my underlying anxiety.
And again, I know that there's a lot of anxiety there
and it's not all from my experience within the church,
it's from a lot of things.
And so it really provided the occasion for me to say,
you know what, I am going to go to therapy.
I'm not just gonna talk about it.
You know, we've talked about it a lot.
Christy and I have talked about it a lot.
Some of our closest friends, we've talked about it for years
and it almost felt like I was practically going to therapy.
But that's also, that's also, But that's so wrong.
That's so Link.
Yeah.
You have this, and I can't come up with any other examples.
I was like, I'm not opposed to it.
But you have this tendency that I've noticed
throughout our lives together that like,
sometimes it's like when somebody close to you
kind of starts doing something
or is interested in something, you're just like,
yeah, yeah, I'm by proxy interested.
I'm by proxy.
So I think you've been experiencing the benefits of therapy
because the people you're closest with have been going.
You pick up on a lot.
Right.
And it's not like we don't read and discuss
a lot of the same books.
But last night, ironically, the same time you were at therapy,
I was at my first therapy appointment
and I don't think without going through this process,
I would have pulled the trigger
on setting up that appointment.
A first therapy appointment,
I'm not gonna sit here and give you a play by play,
but you know, one hour is not a lot
when you're trying to get it,
when you have as much as I have
that you're trying to get out.
So it's, but you know, I'm very excited
to have taken that step and to me,
it's a tangible step for me personally,
as a result of decide, you know,
to follow through on the commitment that I made to myself
and just shared at the end of my story that was,
I do wanna work at understanding and loving myself more
and expanding my capacity to love others more
and also to pursue faith. and expanding my capacity to love others more
and also to pursue faith. To me, those things are connected.
If I can't, I don't think if I can't start
to love myself more,
I don't know if I can receive any love from God
receive any love from God,
if that love is there to be received, you know? So, again, I'm just getting started,
but I'm very, I'm excited.
I know there's a lot of pain associated with therapy
and that I also know that I have a lot of,
that there's this fear that is somewhere in me
that then on the underside of that,
there's things that I've been afraid to explore.
But my hope and my excitement to grow and to work at it
my hope and my excitement to grow and to work at it
is overrides the fear that I think that
maybe has always been there. And I think this process has helped me realize.
So, and again, to hear like Holly's tweet
that like she related to that,
it was just hearing that somebody related
then kind of doubled back on itself
and helped me understand myself even better,
hearing it in somebody else's words.
It's like, well, this is how I feel
and this is the words that I would put it in
of being exhausted.
It's like, wow, this is how I feel. And this is the words that I would put it in of being exhausted. And it's like, wow, yeah, that is me. So it's already come back.
And I just feel, I'm grateful that we've done it
just for me personally.
And I cannot you know,
I cannot own how other people process it for them. That's on them.
Well, you know, if we are gonna answer a question,
I think, you know, you're kind of getting
very close to it already.
A question that I saw a number of times was why,
why tell this story?
Mm-hmm.
And maybe even more specifically,
there were people who were like, why tell this story?
What if you're wrong?
What if you're wrong and you're leading
an untold number of people,
depending on the popularity of this podcast,
down the wrong path.
Do you really want that?
Do you really want that on your shoulders?
You wanna be responsible for that.
I think that most of those comments are coming from people
who haven't been listening to the podcast.
And I don't just mean the episodes,
I mean the podcast as a whole.
Yeah.
Because I think that anyone who's been on board
for any length of time has sort of seen this coming
because we have gotten increasingly personal.
And so listen, some people are like, I would never do that.
I would never talk about what is happening to me in therapy
and have thousands of people listen to it.
Listen, I get that, I respect that.
And I don't exactly know why this is the way
that we've chosen to do what we're doing.
And in some ways,
this podcast has become therapy.
It has become very therapeutic, right?
Because we talk about, I talk to my therapist
in the way that I talk to you guys on here, right?
It's just very much like,
you kind of just start talking and see what happens.
And I don't know if there's just this increased desire
for vulnerability and being able to just communicate that
with a wide audience.
I don't know what the motivations are.
I don't know exactly how we got here.
I just know that, like you said,
the idea of continuing to kind of pull back the curtain and be like,
this is just two guys trying to live life and figure it out.
And if you wanna be in the conversation,
listening on the conversation of two guys
who've known each other forever, who are best friends,
who work together, who are husbands and fathers,
and now people who've deconstructed
from their former Christian faith.
You wanna be along for the ride, then let's do it.
Let's do it together.
But because it had gotten,
the tone had gotten so vulnerable
and there was so much about self-disclosure,
and because it was so related to our careers.
Like we can't honestly talk about
why we do what we do as an actual career
without talking about how we got here
and telling the full story.
And we honestly can't tell the full story
without putting our perspective on those years into perspective,
which then requires us to tell our story personally.
Yeah, yeah.
It all kind of fit together.
But I think another answer is that we are discovering
that when you are vulnerable,
it opens you up to more love and more empathy for,
again, for yourself and for your best friend
and for other people.
What I just described that like,
I shared my story from me.
Other people, it helped other people.
And then that response helped me.
It's just the way people look at it like a show.
And yes, we have to set boundaries for ourselves
and we have to be like the thing we talked about
a few minutes ago about like whether it's on the date
or like our version of being the preacher.
But so yeah, we have to be protected
and we have to set boundaries and we have to,
we're gonna learn that as we go.
But we're able to,
and I'm grateful that we're able to have
an honest conversation in front of a microphone
that we would have if it wasn't here.
We've talked about how we have them a lot more
because they're here than if the microphone's not here.
But then we also, it's just,
what I'm saying is we're conducting an honest friendship.
It just happens to be recorded.
And I'm just, what people do with it is their business.
But we also experience a greater capacity
for connection with and love with an audience
because it's not just some people sitting in chairs
listening, it's individual people
who are then contributing to a conversation.
It's not like we're going on television.
It's a different thing, you know?
And the nature of the conversation
has been really refreshing.
Can I, and I just wanna, I wanna read this one thing.
On the Discord channel of the Mythical Society,
which is, if you don't know, that's our fan club,
and yes, you gotta pay for it.
I'm not promoting it, but I'm just saying that like,
I was just so encouraged by this one exchange
and I'm not gonna read the whole thing,
but there was this 16 year old guy who was,
he just, he was processing our Ear Biscuits
and he just shared that,
he's had a devout set of beliefs,
the specifics of which aren't pertinent.
And that, you know, he was impacted by our conversation
and there was parts of it that kinda shook him up
and he was just sharing that.
Not with us but just in the Discord.
And then a response from one particular mythical beast,
I just wanna read part of it.
Well I'll read the whole thing.
I remember being there as a teenager
so I definitely know what you're going through.
My best advice is just to trust yourself.
And to remember that there's nothing wrong with questioning
and researching on your own and coming
to your own conclusions.
Remember that no matter what your religion teaches,
there is nothing wrong with questioning or having doubts.
And that whatever conclusions you come to
or choices that you make,
make sure that you're making them for yourself
and no one else.
You may have people try to guilt you
into making a certain decision or believing a certain way
because they want you to believe the way they do.
I know I definitely did.
But ultimately, no one but you can decide what you believe.
And then the response was, yeah,
that's what I need to hold on to.
And then there was some more there and it says,
if you need support, I know there are a ton of people
in this server who will be happy to talk or listen.
And if there's anything in particular you're struggling with, we might be able
to provide resources.
Again, I really appreciate it was the response.
And I think there are a couple of things there.
You know, it just seems like that's the message
that I talk to my kids about.
And it is such a big deal to say, okay,
you have to make these decisions for yourself.
No one can make these decisions for you.
They can, but you really need to make these decisions
for yourself, no matter what it is,
you're gonna be loved and supported
by this community, which is my second point
that I was just blown away that that one example
is repeated again and again that there's
so many people in our community
and then it gives me hope for humanity at large
that there's that level of love and support for people
that, you know, even if you're not talking
about the specifics of, well, do I agree with you on this?
Or are we on the same page?
Or are you right?
Or are you wrong?
But it's love and support and encouragement
to deal with those things
in the most healthy way possible.
These issues that are so important.
I was just grateful for that.
And that's why we don't,
we don't want the conversation to devolve
into an argument, right?
Yeah.
About the finer points of theology.
And again, it's not that I don't think,
I just wanna be really clear,
it's not that we don't think that you having your own answers
as close to the truth as possible is not important.
As I hope I demonstrated in my story,
it's like because those answers are important
is why I don't believe like I used to believe, right?
It isn't that those theological points
and examining those things are not important.
They're very important.
But the moment that they become a source of contention
between people and the moment that you take love
out of your interaction, you're missing the point
regardless of what side of the issue you're on.
I think that just the idea,
because basically what you're talking about is that,
the most, and this is a cliche and corny,
but the most important thing is love, right?
It's like, what is my ethic?
Or what are my ethics at this point?
It's love.
And I actually think that asking that question
in any given situation, what is the most loving response?
What is the most loving way forward in this situation?
Is a pretty good guide.
And incidentally, that's very consistent
with what Jesus taught, you know?
Faith, hope and love, the greatest of these is love.
I think that regardless
of where you're at and where you come down
on these particular issues and what you think
about the nature of life and the nature of eternity,
you're not gonna go wrong if you kind of fall back on that.
What is the most loving thing that I could do
in this situation?
And like Link said, I think that it's been super encouraging
that the vast majority of the conversation
has been loving and respectful.
We have an incredible community.
We value that a lot and that's the conversation,
that loving conversation is what we want
to continue to engender.
And it's not about two guys who are,
listen, we may have engineering degrees,
but we're just, we're YouTube comedians.
That's what we are.
We're not authorities on any of these issues.
If you're coming to either one of us
to figure out what you think about your faith,
there are much better sources.
And so that was not the intention at all
in telling our stories was you to be convinced
that we were right.
It's just very much, hey, this is what our process was,
this is what our story was.
You should be doing your own investigation.
But we just wanna be about love.
It's that simple.
And on that note, can I recommend a children's book?
Sure.
I was reading this book to Lando.
He pulled it off his shelf
and this is my wreck in effect this week.
It's called The Three Questions,
written and illustrated by John, J-O-N, J Muth, M-U-T-H.
The three questions is based on a story by Leo Tolstoy.
It's a short story that I had never read.
And so as I was reading this children's book to Lando,
I was just moved.
And it's very pertinent to the conversations
that we've been having.
And it was just like, it felt like a fate moment.
I'll be honest that I was,
I mean like Lando started looking at me weird
cause I was like tearing up and I was like,
this book, this is amazing.
There's something, there's some wisdom in this.
And I didn't realize that it was based on
a Leo Tolstoy short story until we were done reading it.
But like, I could sense that there was some depth
to this thing.
So you know what, I'm not gonna tell you about it.
But I recommend if you, you know, Lando's nine,
he was very much into it.
But you don't have to have kids to read it.
I actually recommend this children's book adaptation
instead of just listening to or on Audible
or reading the Leo Tolstoy short story of the same name.
Though I do recommend that story as well.
But the way that it's turned, it's more modernized
and it's a little bit more existential,
is it's very powerful.
So that's my recommendation.
Will you read it to me?
A kid's book. Will you come over
to my house and read it to me and tuck me in tonight?
Gladly, yeah.
Good. Yeah.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits, let's continue the conversation.
And I'm not, listen, we will,
we're gonna answer some questions at some point,
so I don't want everybody to think
we've just completely thrown all your questions aside.
We've still got a bunch of them.
We'll get back to them.
We're just trying to zero in on the tone
of how we're gonna approach those.
Thanks for listening.