Something Was Wrong - S16 E9: Taking Up Space
Episode Date: July 6, 2023*Content Warning: police brutality, murder, racism, bigotry, death, interpersonal violence, alcohol and substance use disorder, body-image abuse, emotional abuse, fatphobia, disordered eating..., anorexia, childhood abuse, gun violence, suicidal ideation. Free and confidential resources + Safety Tips: somethingwaswrong.com/resources Artwork by the amazing Sara Stewart:@GreaterThanOkay - Instagram.com/greaterthanokaySee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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in a court of law. Thank you so much for listening. Well, head on, head on It comes on, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh It's a little too long to run.
So long. But it was Morgan Shanahan.
And I've been a friend of Tiffany's for about 15 years.
Is that true?
Is that possible?
I am a mom.
I have a daughter at the same age as Tiffany Sunjude.
So when we met, we were actually both
in our first trimester of pregnancy.
The first pregnancy for both of us, my only pregnancy.
I'm a writer and a screenwriter and a content creator.
I have worked online since roughly the same time
I met Tiffany.
I ran my own website for about six years
that focused on parenting and mental health.
And then I moved on to Buzzfeed and it was one of the co-founding editors of the parenting vertical there.
I also had the really cool experience of being able to start creating the video content
around parenting at BuzzFeed. Tiffany has always been someone who zeeps creativity. When you meet someone who has that kind of gift,
it's just impossible to hide. I met her in the context of an internet message board, which is
crazy to think about. That was such a scary thing to do to actually connect with a person who I had
not met in real life. But long before we ever collaborated, I knew that Tiffany was a person who I would one day
collaborate with.
Tiffany and I are both a little bit of like square pegs
and round holes.
The way I'll put it is that I think myself also being
a little bit more on the edge of punk rock.
Tiffany 100% immediately was a person that I would connect with.
I was 27 years old.
I lived in Los Angeles. In Los Angeles,
that's fairly young to have a kid. Tiffany at the time I think was 23. And I just remember thinking
that pregnancy was so terrifying for me. I was so afraid of what it would mean for me, who I was
going to be after I had a kid. And what that would do, what kind of impact
that might have on my ambition, my career aspirations, all of these things that were really, really
big piece of my identity. And there was Tiffany just in love with the idea that this was coming
at her and just so full of joy and excitement to meet Jude,
despite turmoil in her life,
she had no fear of what was coming
of this new sort of adventure
and this new step into adulthood.
As I've gotten to know her,
I've come to understand exactly why
that was an exciting moment for her
and a fresh start for her.
It also gave me a lot of emotional inspiration to have that kind of confidence that I also
would be able to achieve everything I wanted to achieve and still be a great mom.
All of that was before we ever worked together.
And we remember very clearly when Bobby was killed.
Getting a message from Tiffany that that had happened, I remember it pretty well,
but started with just the information that Bobby had died. And I knew that that
all by itself was devastating. It was shocking and there was a lot of confusion
and she was obviously a little bit pain. It was painful as her friend to even
fathom that this was going on. She had these incredible mama bear instincts that
she had developed from being such a devoted big sister and the catalyst for all that had been taken from her.
Such a cruel way. It had a huge impact on me to watch her go through that.
She started to talk about Bobby, she started crying, and she started to share a lot of the things that had happened that she had learned over the last few months.
I felt very honored because she really allowed me to sit with her and listen to her, but
she entrusted me with these really very big, very life altering, very personal things
that she was going through, how she was feeling.
The other thing that strikes me about that time is that Tiffany had empathy for the witness.
Who, of course, was also the caller.
She had said to me, can you imagine you call for help and then this happens?
And you see this happen.
The fact that she could think about what that person was going through was just incredible
to me.
We talked about all of the different ways that it was affecting her and everyone around
her and her family and the gaping hole that it had left.
And we talked about Bobby, who he was.
Some of the things that people have gotten to hear about him from her that he was so much
more than the horrible way that he died.
And that was a really huge turning point in our friendship that just solidified something
that has never gone away.
Tiffany is the kind of friend for me now where
sometimes we talk all the time, sometimes we can go months without talking,
it doesn't matter, the relationship is always there, it's always supportive,
and I'm always fucking laughing.
It was clear to me early on that Tiffany had a tough relationship with her mom.
Over the years I think it has ebbed and flowed, there have been better times
and there have been better times
and there have been worse times.
Tiffany has been very gracious many times about wanting
to her mom to be able to be part of certain things in her life.
After Bobby's murder, she definitely tried
to let her mom back in.
They really gave it a try.
I remember her talking about how Liz was coping
as that shifted in the context of Bobby's death that shifted into Liz looking to
potentially gain from that and how that impacted Tiffany. I definitely watched her
struggle with how much she can allow Liz into her life. I believe it was at Ozzy's baby shower
important family event where
after Bobby's murder, everyone was together as a family and Liz just lost her shit. And
it was Tiffany's day, man. Another moment that I really saw just like some of the damage that
Liz was capable of doing was once Bobby's case started to become a civil case, Tiffany started to struggle a lot with,
or was visibly struggling with the overarching feeling that Liz saw Bobby's death, of course,
as a mother.
I'm sure that Liz was going through all kinds of things that I did not see, but there
was a real sense that Liz was at a certain point looking to use Bobby's death for personal
gain. That is just antithetical to use Bobby's death for a personal gain.
That is just antithetical to everything
that Tiffany stands for.
That was a really hard thing to witness as a friend,
but also just to see the professional wear with all
that Tiffany was able to maintain while also
dealing with some of the most traumatic family dynamics
that most of us never experienced,
it's just so clear that she has somehow managed
to put Liz in a box in the way that she has moved
into a place where she knows that she is not the damaged one,
that her mother is the damaged one,
that there was nothing wrong with her, there was something
wrong with Liz. And I think that revelation for her has helped so many people.
After the baby shower incident very shortly after that, Ozzy arrived. I threw up all day
every day, the entire time I was pregnant with him, the second he came out the vomiting stopped so that was fantastic Jude was six Ruby was about three and a half so pre-school it was just exhausting
Yeah, it was just exhausting. I'm glad I did it when I was young physically speaking now
I go up the stairs and it's like snap razzle dazzle crackle and pop like I can't imagine
Having the surgeries now and stuff but maybe also my body wouldn't be so beat up if I had it.
Had so many babies in my 20s, so close together,
but no regrets, five stars.
Ozzy came, it was so joyous.
We had way better health insurance.
We were in the better place in life.
It was still hard to be sure,
and we were still very much living on a budget and struggling,
but we were so so thankful.
I also got my tube-stide, which was fantastic. Highly recommend. I knew I would be having a
C-section anyways. It's wild as fuck because I already had three kids. They're literally telling me
after I had ruby don't have any more kids because you could die. Just because of all the health
complications that I had, I had pre-eclampsia. When I found out I was pregnant with Aussie,
we were ecstatic and we were super excited, but it was definitely no questions asked. Tubes tied or needed some sort of birth control plan for future because I was tapped out and
financially. It's so expensive to raise children, especially in California. They like made me take a whole class and they like make you read all these horrible scenarios like what if this happens?
It will you still will be happy with this decision? What if this happens?
I'm like no fucking planet men to get a vasectomy do not have to do any of that
It was just very ridiculous and then during the delivery the doctor who was delivering Aussie asked me so many times
Are you sure are you sure and I'm like on fucking morphine cut open like a frog.
They're taking Ozzy out. Or Ozzy's already out at this point. I'm pretty sure. And he's like,
are you sure? Trying to make it as emotionally difficult as possible. And I was just like,
stop asking me. I'm sure we already had outgrown our space that we were in because of how high rent
costs are and the small space we had. But it was some of the happiest times of our lives to be clear.
We made the best of it. and the kids have so many fond memories
and they got to go to an incredible neighborhood school
and we didn't live in the nicest neighborhood,
but there was less gunshots and it was a bit more peaceful.
We were carving our own path at this point
by the time Ozzie arrived and we were just in a different place.
Michael and I had both matured as young adults.
It was definitely a different environment that we brought him into
versus where we were at when we had Jude.
So Ozzie arrives and my website is continuing to grow.
Instagram and Pinterest are exploding at this point and all of this content
that I've been banking for years is now exploding on Pinterest.
I wasn't making a ton of money, but the numbers were growing and that led to all these other
opportunities. The nature of the work, it's very like freelance writing, you know, sometimes you get,
oh cool, I got booked this job, sometimes you go three months and you don't book a job. So it's
very up and down and it's certainly not consistent income that I could count on in anyway. When
income would happen, it would be like fantastic. But the numbers continued to do well.
The website continued to grow. I started to get outside opportunities. Morgan, who I met actually
through online mom pregnancy boards, shout out to the bump.com. If you know, you know. And we actually
randomly met on this message board. It's kind of funny because I honestly wasn't very active on this message board.
Somehow her and I connected. She was a blogger and she's from California. She's related to my tramp and fucking hilarious. Amy knows her as well. We've all been friends for quite some time. She's fantastic. And so she was working at BuzzFeed. A lot of people recognize her.
She was the hot mess mom on BuzzFeed.
She did a ton of video parenting content for them for years.
And she started to work on more video content.
And she was working on some body positivity styling videos.
And she knew about my writing and the work
that I did in my personal journey.
We kind of were always like, Tiffany,
you need to have a blog.
The things that come out of your mouth, man, come on.
Like, she's so smart.
She's all the reasons that something was wrong
is the huge success that it is.
She had children's fashion blog.
She was also, besides being a talented makeup artist,
it was very clear that she also was an incredible stylist.
She had an ability to put together an outfit,
a unique ability. The
outfits were also unique, but the ability itself was unique. Watching her start to flourish in
this new way where she was putting her work out there and getting positive feedback, we had the
opportunity to like go to a few professional events together. We were still sort of operating
in parallel at that point. In 2016, I want to say,
I had been at Buzzfeed for a couple years already. We were starting to do parenting video content.
I was putting together a video where the stylist that was using someone in house, someone who was
local, someone in Los Angeles, and they bailed on me. Tiffany was planning a trip down for a
professional event that we were going to attend together, and it just me. Tiffany was planning a trip down for a professional
event that we were going to attend together. And it just clicked. I was like, oh my god, Tiffany's
coming here. If she just came a couple days early, she could do this. I can hire her for this.
I called her and she's Tiffany and she was like, hire me. I don't care. You need help. I'm coming.
But she was also very excited to be able to come down and dig into some of this content that we
were making, which was a lot of the things that we as mothers experience around body image,
as you're getting older, as things are changing, as your sense of self is changing,
as your style develops from being early 20-something to late 20-something to an early 30-something.
She was just brilliant. She drove down. I think she drove
overnight. She got to my house like five o'clock in the morning or something. I don't even know
she'd went to sleep. She put herself together, looked amazing. We got on set and she was the star.
Not only did she know how to put the people in the video at ease, but she was also able to
anchor the video. She got up there,
she was styling everyone, she was telling everyone exactly what she was doing. In the very
short time she had to prepare, she was able to get in touch with the sponsor and figure
out what clothes she could incorporate from the line that we were promoting, to see her
leap into action and just instinctively know what to do was not surprising to me, but
I was yet again in awe of her.
I think we shot two videos that day back to back
and then we went straight down to Laguna Beach
from Los Angeles that night for the event
that we were going down to.
But after that, it was like everybody wanted a piece of her.
All of the other shows, all of the other producers,
I mean, I definitely continued to have her in videos,
but I was like, this is my seeker weapon, man,
am I really gonna have to share her?
But of course, I had to share her.
I could not not share that brilliant woman.
It was really awesome to see the reaction that people had.
The videos were really impactful with the audience
to collaborate on that with her,
something that I was passionate about and wanting to
start more conversations around and have someone as self-possessed as Tiffany, who has been through,
which Tiffany has been through, who has the sense of self to counsel other women who might be struggling
with their body image when the freaking lottery. I pulled her in and then, you know, it was like hard to book her after that. Everybody wanted to have her on their productions.
The first video that I did with her, I couldn't freaking believe it. And this is peak Buzzfeed days.
I didn't make a ton of money on the videos, but obviously the exposure, it was one of those rare
circumstances where when they say we can offer you exposure, it was true. So I remember preparing all the looks and being so nervous.
It's also important to note that after Ozzy was born and after losing
Bobby and after the situation with Liz, I was typically with my
disordered eating when there's these big, heavy moments or big shifts.
Sometimes that triggers for me a year plus
disorder eating after having three kids and the trauma I had joined a gym. I also
believe in physical exercise and eating well and how it benefits your mental
health. And so I wanted to join a gym to help with my anxiety. Also they had
classes for kids and stuff like that. Then I got involved, unfortunately, in a weight loss contest.
And it just led to a lot of problematic behavior.
Because I had lost so much weight, I was feeling more comfortable appearing on video, which
is ironic considering I'm a body positive stylist and going to do these videos.
It's hard to describe how you can be both body positive and struggle with
Disordered eating, but similar to my depression, even though I know my depression is a liar, I still struggle with it. And even though I know that I have so much to be
thankful for and so much joy and I have all of this, it doesn't change the fact that I have a chemical imbalance or I have trauma that can trigger certain feelings.
the fact that I have a chemical imbalance or I have trauma that can trigger certain feelings.
I'm a human being. And honestly, a lot of my disorder for eating for me has to do with physically how uncomfortable I feel eating, especially if it's in front of other people and avoiding it,
and then not taking proper care of myself. So during this time, I think I was more body
positive light than sincerely body positive, but where things were in terms of the public conversation.
I felt confident that I could do this and I think it's really really cool that I went from having my mom treat me the way that she did in dressing rooms. rooms, how she kept me from dressing myself and making my own choices and tried to just
honestly beat me down so much to then going on studying fashion and becoming more body
positive and accepting who I was.
Something that I talk about in my second book is I have disordered eating, but I also am
super confident in my body.
It's more so like how the outside world has treated me and made me feel like I shouldn't
that has been the struggle.
It's not because I hate myself and I think I'm so gross.
It's just that it's easier to exist in this world and people are nicer to me when I'm
thinner.
Strangers, anybody?
People are kinder to me when I'm thinner.
I'm almost six feet tall.
I am built like an hourglass.
I have very curvy frame even when I am at my lowest weights. I am just a larger framed person.
So I think where the disordered eating and stuff really gets stirred up and where a lot of the
anxiety comes from is just the feeling of taking up space and the way that I was always made to feel bad for taking up space.
And so a lot of my healing is accepting who I am that I'm beautiful, who I am as an entire person.
And overcoming all of the narratives that I had to the place where now I'm on Buzzfeed helping
other women in their journey and helping them feel better about themselves.
Now I'm in dressing rooms helping other people heal and helping heal myself in the process.
It's really incredible and ironic when you look at the full picture and the full journey.
My first video that I did with Buzzfeed was focused on this idea where we covered all the sizes
on the clothing and we just styled the people's bodies
based on fit and what they needed from the clothing
and how they wanted to feel.
So it's a lesson in like we get so hung up
in the sizing of things and stuff versus the clothes.
We're always trying to shove ourselves into the clothes
instead of looking at clothes for what they are.
They're just objects and they're all made differently
and some are gonna work for some
and some are gonna not work for others
but because we've been so
brainwashed and because so many people are profiting off of the insecurity that they're trying to instill in us every
day. It's a billion billion billion dollars these people are out here making off of our insecurity
They want to keep us insecure, not just women, but specifically a lot of it is geared towards
women.
And specifically during times of year when they know people are feeling more insecure,
aka after the holidays or aka right now when we're entering bathing suit season.
Now I'm able to be a part of the solution. When I was losing weight and I was doing the gym,
sharing all that stuff, unfortunately I contributed to fat phobia because of my own internalized
journey that I had. And I was presenting it like I'm doing this healthy thing, but the way that I
spoke about myself and the way I treated myself was still not okay. And it was still coming from a place of shame because
I was trying to gain the validation from other people and also to lessen the pain, which
is existing in a bigger body in society and the way that people treat you and the way
that impacts your life and the way that that impacts a lot of things. Being able to be
part of these Buzzfeed videos also then getting
clients from those opportunities and getting to work with people who have body dysmorphia
or are overcoming eating disorders themselves, getting to spend time in their closets with
them, making them feel better, making them feel good. There was so much healing that came
from that with me. Getting dressed and going out and anybody who knows me, it's like my
favorite thing to do in the world. I'm like, give me an excuse to get dressed
up. Once I get there, I'm good to go. Probably after like five minutes, but I love to get dressed
up. I love fashion so much because people are art and information. And that's why I love
meeting new people. It's like visiting a museum of a human being to me. I want to know everything
about them. I want to know what they're wearing where they've been. I'm such a naturally curious person
And I love fashion as self-expression
And I think because of the way that I was deprived of that self-expression when I was younger
It made me hungry or for it
So it was this huge moment to be on this other side and also be free of Liz and free of Bob during these years
Completely and getting to just focus on my family and myself
and that felt so, so good and empowering.
Throughout these years and every day of my life,
I'm still unlearning behavior,
and I'm still a work in progress.
But to me being body positive is being intentional
with the type of relationship that you want to have with your body.
And the intention that I have with my body is that I want to have a positive one.
I want to focus on the ways that my body serves me and has brought me here and has allowed me
to do all of the things that I've wanted to do trying to focus on being kind to it and grateful for it.
And also your body changes over the years and I've had some health stuff that
happened and pieces that have helped me also understand myself more and why
certain challenges I maybe was more predisposed to.
It was so cool and all three videos that I ended up doing with Morgan and
Thru Buzzfeed did really well. It really
accelerated my career. Again, it wasn't necessarily financially yet, but exposure wise. Eventually,
I was able to leverage that into a styling career for a fashion company. I worked there for a few
years and then applied for this dream job.
Essentially, the job had three parts.
One was styling celebrity clients.
Two was overseeing a large remote team of stylists
who wrote all of the comms for the website
and blog giving styling advice.
And then the other piece was representing the company
in public spaces like video, et cetera.
It wasn't a ton of money,
even though the job was such a dream
because it's a startup company, but it was huge.
I couldn't believe I got the job.
I had to interview with like 27 people
and their mothers and their grandfathers.
Then I finally got the job
and I was able to give Michael the opportunity
for the first time to take a fucking break.
And he was able to give notice at the kitchen.
We kind of swapped in this moment. to be sure we needed to incomes, but during this transition phase and because we always are most concerned with our decisions impacting the children.
We wanted to make sure that because Ozzy was so young, he would have a full time parent that he's familiar with with him through the transition.
We didn't want to keep both jobs
and then have to hire a nanny or somebody else
to come into the situation.
So that was a personal choice we made.
And it also gave Michael the opportunity
to like think about what he wanted to do with his life.
And I don't think working 80 hours a week
on his feet sweating his balls off
was the thing that he wanted to do anymore
for not very much money.
And it's a really hard job.
He worked his ass off for a long time so the other joy from getting this job was to be able to be
like, fuck and take a nap buddy, put your feet up. He was actually able to spend time with his kids
in a much greater way than he was before because he always had to be at work. We'd be lucky if he got
one day off a week sometimes. I was really thankful to be able to like give him that as well.
Of course, it would mean me being away from the kids more,
but I knew we could navigate it and we could figure it out.
And this is when I started commuting a ton from Sacramento to the Bay Area.
And this is pre-COVID, so everybody was still living in the Bay Area,
but the traffic was horrible and so I would spend hours and hours in
the car and the ferry and etc etc etc and I started listening heavily to podcasts. As I mentioned
before, there was always this internal feeling of looking for purpose and I thought at this time
that perhaps this was the purpose and really driven by not only the love of fashion and wanting to
see myself succeed and be able to provide for my children and not be worried about whether or not we were going to be able to feed them,
but also the satisfaction that I loved getting from styling and working with clients and helping
people. While I loved the job, it was extremely difficult for a plethora of reasons.
The commuting and the amount of travel that I needed to do, the amount of hours that I was working versus the amount of pay that I was getting, it
didn't make any sense anymore.
That started becoming clear.
There was this one moment, and I honestly had forgotten about it until two days ago when
I was thinking about putting my notes together for this episode, and I was like, oh my god,
it's another one of those lightning bolt aha moments now that I think subconsciously influenced the work and the idea for the show but I didn't even realize it until now
So at this company I was working for was very much startup tech fashion company in the Bay Area
Think Silicon Valley but sorority addition
There was a lot of fantastic people I've met some of my best friends through this experience.
There was a lot of joy and happiness,
but there was also a lot of parts that I didn't like.
It's funny, because we used to do these business meetings,
but they're like, let's start
with a five minute meditative session
led by so and so today.
Oh, and there's Kim Booch on tap, everyone.
No, you can't make a livable wage, but we have a bounce
house for the Christmas party. This was peak boomerang. I will never forget that either. The boomerang
function on Instagram because we did so many goddamn boomerangs. We had these like little teams,
and each team was gonna like plan these different team building exercises. The team that had come up
with the topic that we were supposed to discuss in this meeting was what keeps you up at night.
They were like all about be your authentic self, be your best self.
And something that was told to me about this team that I was entering was they need somebody
to like bring the team together.
That's who I am as a person regardless.
Like if I'm standing outside and there's two moms talking to each other and there's
another mom who's standing off to the side, I'm gonna bring that other mom standing off to this
side into the conversation.
So we're in this meeting, what keeps you up at night?
Some people are like dancing around things and like this is a really heavy question, right?
And me being like way too honest, I was told I was too authentic.
They're like, we mean it in the normal people way, Tiffany, not in the Tiffany Rees way.
I've fought really hard to live in my reality and I plan to stay
here in the truth as much as fucking possible. So we're going through this.
There's some vulnerability happening. So in this meeting I decide to share that
I don't have a relationship with my parents and the reason for that is that my
parents were very abusive to me growing up. Sometimes it's hard for me when I'm in high pressure situations
to shake off negative thinking.
I'm sharing this and I like look up
and there's multiple people crying
and then the people who shared after me
started sharing way more intimate stuff
and then it kept going.
Afterwards, multiple people came and spoke to me in private
and were like, thank you so much for sharing that. I experienced this and then the going. Afterwards, multiple people came and spoke to me in private. And like, thank you so much for sharing that.
I experienced this.
And then the manager was like,
what you just did brought our entire group together,
that moment of vulnerability and you being brave
and opening up.
Now when I reflect on that,
I didn't even realize it until these last few days,
how much that influenced subconsciously,
where I am now, seeing that payoff of when you share,
it helps other people and it makes other people less scared to share and live in their truth.
And you can share however feels comfortable for you. It can be one-on-one, you can write in a journal.
I started writing about my experiences for a long time before I was able to speak about them a lot.
Even though the job was really, really stressful and difficult and the hours were long and the
commutes were long and stuff, I'm so thankful for the friendships I gained.
I took a lot from the experience, but I started to recognize that I wanted to do something
else, having that deep desire for purpose and realizing that wasn't it.
Also, I missed my kids and I was really sick of commuting. I was able to transition to a full-time
role working remote for less money, but thankfully by this time Michael had gotten a job working with the homeless
community. He ended up finding his purpose in life through being able to just explore a different path.
So we were able to swing it. We both were working and now Ozzy was a bit older and all the kids were
almost all in school. And because I was working remote, I was able to like take care of him and work at the same time.
The grieving that happens when you got your degree
in something and you've been chasing this one thing
and then you maybe realize that like,
it's not actually your trueest passion
and maybe there's something else that you wanna do
that speaks to more.
As I've shared throughout these episodes,
I was the weird kid to watch documentaries.
My space profile just used to be a list
of like 200 documentaries that were my favorite. just used to be a list of like 200
documentaries that were my favorite.
What I love about documentaries is that it's people
sharing their experiences.
I love people and I love learning about people
and sitting with people.
I love a slow burn.
I want to know everything about everyone
and everything that occurred.
That's just my curious personality.
I loved podcasts and that was like a joke at my old job
as people would always talk to me about podcasts
and a few people had suggested,
you need to start your own podcast.
I still had a following that I had somewhat retained
from Instagram and the website and stuff.
So I'm working, Michael's working.
And I had some other things that happened in my personal life
that I'm not gonna get into that don't apply to my family.
And I found myself in one of the darkest depressions that I've ever had.
It was really scary and Michael was concerned for my mental health.
I felt like I needed something to pull myself out of it and then...
Welcome everyone to our break for something was wrong live here in
Sacramento.
I'm going to meet Elizabeth Doyle out of your post tonight.
So let's just kick it off.
How did the podcast come to be?
Let's talk about that.
So the podcast came to be through you.
And you're like, well, my friend was supposed to be getting
married. I don't know the story.'re like, well, my friend was supposed to be getting married.
I don't know the story, but I know that XYZ happened.
Yes.
This was at a diving bar in East Sacramento, I believe?
Yeah.
It was for our friend's birthday party.
I had smoked probably like two joints at this point.
Yes.
You were telling me the story, and I was just like,
oh, my God.
And you didn't know all the details,
but it was just like, what is happening?
And I remember the one thing that I remember for sure
was the cellulite text.
You were like, all I know is this fucking guy created
this fake person and somehow brought up her cellulite.
And that's all I needed to hear.
I was like, podcast right now, fucking get it together.
Like I need to know this story.
I'm a really curious person.
And I was just looked at you and I was like,
that would be such a good podcast.
And you were like, yeah.
And I was like, yeah.
And I remember like standing in a group of people
and like, they were like, oh god,
they're talking about podcasts again.
Like, you know, I was like walking away.
So Sarah, what were your initial thoughts
when you were approached about this?
So you texted me. And I remember the wording was so thoughtful and so diplomatic, as you
always are.
But I knew the source too much, so my first thought was, ooh, like a podcast, and I thought,
oh wait, this is my, like, it's about my worst nightmare, and I kind of like paused for
a second and thought about it.
But knowing you, that was what I think caused me to react positively
because I knew how delicately you approached it and that you valued me as a friend and you wouldn't suggest something that was, you know.
And it was really soon after.
Yeah, it was been like two or three months, it was the same song.
Yeah, you know, you texted me in like June, so the wedding was called up and made.
I think it was either June or July.
Can you in debt of the Reese's home? Yes, so we set it up and then you came over, we met,
we turned on a wave shittier microphone to Matt in my kitchen, and that was pretty much
the majority of the audio from the first season and then obviously as like more things came out over
as episodes started releasing there was more content to record.
And that was about a first hour sitting video.
Six?
Six?
Yeah, I know that I bought a lot of snacks from Trader Joe's and no one ate the snacks.
And I don't know why I bought so many crunchy things I saw in my videos.
And I remember the first couple hours we were being really polite and like being very aware of our reactions
and stuff and by the end I swear to God I was like up pacing the room.
Because I had read all the details.
I was like, are you freaking kidding me?
I didn't even think about what it would be like for you as a long time friend because
we've known each other for what over 10 years ish around there.
To hear the story, I'm just I like
switching storytelling mode and I'm not thinking about it. And by the end we're flipping tables
and throwing snacks and screaming. Yeah, yelling. Yeah.
But strange in life how all these experience happened that felt like these little breadcrumbs
leading me down this path when I reflect now. It's like all of those pieces perfectly aligned and made
sense for me to make something was wrong. And that's really mind blowing because I'm
not one of those people who's like, oh, we have to make toxic positivity and purpose and
tie everything up in a bow and like, no, some shit just sucks and it's fucked up and
that's it. That's all you can say about it. But honestly, when I reflect and think about the internal feeling that I had
once I entered the workforce and even before it, just as a human being who had gone through all
of this trauma and pain, I knew in my soul that I was supposed to do something with this. I didn't
know what it was, but I knew that I needed and wanted to make purpose. And human
connection out of my experiences, I had this deep yearning for that. And once the idea
for the show came into my brain, it was like one of those record scratch, everything in
the movie like, that's why I often use a lightning bolt for the logo for Broken Cy to represent that because that's what it felt like it felt like this like
lightning bolt in my brain
This is it and when I said it to Alyssa, she was like, yes
It was like she knew it and then when I told it to Michael like what if this is my purpose?
He was like, yes, what if it is, you know, and as I started talking to more people about it
They're like, yes, Tiffany, this is perfect for you. You have to do this, you have to do it.
So then really season one,
there was no guarantee that anybody
was even gonna listen to it, right?
She started, something was wrong from nothing.
She talked to someone whose story moved her
and she decided to go bigger.
I knew she had the capacity to produce something,
but when I heard the first episode, it just blew me away.
I remember crying because I just felt like this is everything I've seen her do come together.
And she dealt with so much with moves and the loss of important people in her life. All
of the sort of unfair tragedies that continue to happen, no matter what else you are trying
to accomplish in your life, she pushed through all of that and she created this thing and
she stayed consistent with it, which is so hard to do when you're going through stuff.
Watching her develop as a storyteller has been incredible.
Her instincts of what people need to learn and hear and understand about the world to know that they're not alone.
And her ability to tell a really fucking good story just blew me away. And I remember like gushing
so hard like, this is so incredible. This is not something that I didn't believe you could do.
But holy shit, it just never even occurred to me that you could blend your skills in this way.
You know that you could bring it all together into this one thing.
You found this one thing that made so much sense for you that drew on the empathy that
you have end.
Find a way to blend that with the personality and the joy and the humor that comes so naturally
to her.
It is a gift.
It really is.
So my experience of Tiffany has just been like unwrapping one gift after the next.
And watching her find new ways to conquer the world. And every time she does it, I put my
bullshit aside and look at her and think there is nothing that you cannot conquer.
I knew that I wanted to prove it to myself. I knew that it would mean something to Sarah and her
family and it would
give her the ability to point people in a direction and say if you want to know about this
press play because she was also sick of talking about it. And that's one thing she talked
about on the season. And it was all of these moments and all of these pieces as fucked
up and horrible as they are. Somehow they all came together and made this incredible tapestry, this incredible puzzle that clicked into place and everything changed.
There's way bigger than we expected, though. We didn't expect anything that crazy.
We expected, okay, maybe the guy's cheated. Maybe the guy's married. Maybe, you know, there's a child somewhere like something devastating, but not this sick. You think you know me, you don't know me well at all.
Some shit has come out of the frickin woodwork
for you to call off a wedding days before.
You think you know me, you don't know me well at all.
My chest goes cold like this, just tight. I can't breathe. No, please God, no, me, wait, let oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh It didn't get it automatically easy. Let's be sure there was still years and years of heartbreak
and stress and anxiety and depression to come,
even after the podcast started.
As I said in my Irish Awards speech
at the end of the season, very drunkily.
End of the winner of the Irish Award
for podcast of the year is Tiff and Eres.
Oh!
Something was wrong. Oh, my God.
So I beat the guy from puffed.
Oh, my God.
Holy.
I'm so sorry.
I was not going to scream.
I was like, be a professional divani.
Oh, my God.
What was they thinking?
That would never happen.
be a professional divni oh my god what was I thinking that would never happen
oh my god
I really want to thank my husband Michael and for my kids who put up with me ignoring them on Sundays so I could edit this podcast then I'm gonna keep buying you guilt donuts and I hope you're fine with
that and Wendy you'll forgive me okay I want to thank is there gonna be like a
band that plays okay okay okay I want to thank
holy I want to thank Sarah that the podcast is about.
She's amazing.
And she inspires me every day to share more about myself.
And my friend Alyssa, who introduced us and cheered me on, and one in three high school
girls in the United States experienced either physical or sexual violence or both.
An emotional abuse is even more common and difficult to measure. Women ages 18 to 24
experienced the highest rates of intimate partner violence and psychological abuse. I just
wrote a note to myself, you are okay at the bottom of the snow card. Oh my god, I'm up
here so long, I'm so sorry. I took 10 years to get here, that was so like you're fine.
Okay. Oh my god. Okay, you guys 11 months ago. I just
Life was not good 2018 was a
And Mercury was in retrograde like so many times it was insane and I I fell into the deepest depression
And I thought I was a failure and I thought I literally said to my husband
What if what if I never feel successful again?
Well, you imposter syndrome because I have a trophy now.
Okay, and making this story help bring me back to life.
And I can't be here without all of you
because you are an amazing community of empowering women.
And I am so lucky to know each and every one of you. And if I don't know you yet, like, we're dancing.
And the last thing I want to say is just if you're sitting on an idea and you're thinking,
I want to do that, but I don't know how. You'll figure it out. That's what YouTube is for.
I didn't know anything. I just want podcasts of the year off YouTube video tutorials. Like,
you can do anything, so please do that thing.
And you will be here next year.
So do that thing.
In your soul, if you have experienced that feeling or that
or that desire in you, and you feel that connection to an idea,
or you're trying to essentially tap into your purpose
and what you want to do or what you want to move forward.
When you get that lightning bolt feeling of like this could be something, listen to it. It is so powerful.
So powerful. It's just wild. Your wildest dream. I already cried this morning talking to my go
about this. When I think back to myself and who I was five years ago
and where I was and where I am now,
whoo, I wanted to die so many times.
And thankfully I made it through those feelings.
And now it's like all I wanna do is live, you know,
it's such a joyful feeling.
And it's taken so much work to get to this place
where I am now.
It's still not perfect and it's still really hard all the time, but wow, connecting with
yourself and trusting yourself.
When I started season one, I remember saying to many people, like, even if the only thing
that happens is Sarah and her family and a few of my friends listen to this, it will be
worth it because it's not about
making this for anyone but her.
I will feel so proud of myself.
I was coming out of such a dark depression that I needed creativity desperately in a new
way and I needed to be challenged.
I wanted to find purpose so desperately that I was like, the worst case that could happen
is that I make a
season of an audio documentary, which I've always wanted to make a documentary. The worst thing that
happens is I prove to myself that I can do that, and I make Sarah's life a little bit better,
and hopefully make her feel a little bit more validated and understood. Hopefully if we can teach
people a couple things along the way, fantastic. And now the show has heard in every continent, I think
except Antarctica, I'm still working on you Antarctica. I think there's about four of you there.
I've been going through submissions and doing a lot of planning for future content to come across
people's messages that are like your podcast saved my daughter's life. I'm just very overwhelmed
with an immense amount of gratitude as I am on the
other side talking about the hardest parts. I feel like I'm really living out loud in bold font
exclamation points for the first time like really really doing it sincerely genuinely fully
at first the vulnerability felt so so scary scary. But on the other side of that
of the sitting with it and the letting it go, not that the pain is going to be gone, but there
is so much freedom in living in your truth, giving space to yourself, and validating your own feelings,
validating who you were and who you are now, and how far you've come.
This is an important thing to do. That's why the first book that I wrote ended up being about gratitude
because gratitude helped me survive my darkest times. I'm thankful for a roof over my head,
thankful for my family, I'm thankful for the most basic things. When I get out of gratitude is when
I get to a really dark place, meditation
and different exercises have also been really helpful. And a lot of it is stuff that I learned
through the show and through survivors, through the reading, through the research. It's just
really mind blowing the whole full journey, reflecting on how far that little girl in the
nail salon who was told to go on a diet at four years old has come.
How far that girl who was told she'll never be successful. She'll never have a boyfriend.
She'll never have kids. She'll never be anything because of how she presented in this world.
And it's like not only did I do all of that despite you, I've done it really well and in a way that I'm really proud of and
with integrity most importantly, it also is a great reminder to have sympathy for those
who can't pull themselves out of their own shit. Liz and Bob, they're gonna live in their
misery and do whatever they're gonna do because they're unwilling to accept responsibility
for their behavior. And that's the difference, right? Between people who are toxic to us, we're all human and we all make mistakes. And we're all
capable of bad behavior. However, people who are empathetic and compassionate and loving and kind
take accountability when they harm people, they don't just say sorry, they actively make change in their behavior to show that they
are sorry and that they are respecting your boundaries and your feelings. That's the difference.
When I got to a place where I saw that I was continually going to these people for something they
could not give me, they were incapable of giving me. I started to focus on instead giving it to myself.
That is when everything changed.
How it feels is free. I feel so free. I felt so at peace with it. It was still hurtful.
Don't get me wrong, like all of the ship that came before it. It was still painful even
though I knew it wasn't right. It's still hurt.
And there's still grief for what's not there. I wasn't even 30 years old yet. And I've already lost my brother and
chose to cut contact with Bob and Liz. There's a lot of grief and pain, but it's a completely
new chapter. And it is so freeing. People will say like, have you spoken to your mom or like,
are you planning on speaking to your mom? And just for the record, everyone for the rest of time, the answer is no, I do not plan
on speaking to her.
The reason for that is that the peace and the freedom, not everybody deserves access
to your energy and your life.
My kids deserve better, I deserve better, and I learned a lot about life doing the exact
opposite of what my parents did
So I can thank them for that. I also think that as much as my parents hurt me and harmed me that they're also human beings
Who perhaps did the best that they could?
It's not an excuse. It's more of giving grace because that serves me to release the resentment, bringing up all of this
and talking through all of this, how upset it made me, and hearing myself back, hearing how hurt I
still was, I realized that a piece of the healing too is now choosing to find compassion for them because I now get this incredible life that they don't get to be any part of.
And in all the fucking possible ways, I won!
So like, you know, fuck you very much.
I release it, and as painful as it still can be to think about I also have reached this place
of I guess it's more pity so maybe it's not real healing but at least it's better than
anger maybe on the other side of pity is forgiveness.
Amy I know that we talk about this a lot forgiveness isn't required you can let go and you can
move on and you can seek closure within yourself part of the journey for me is also reminding
myself that some people are just not going to apologize or take Part of the journey for me is also reminding myself that
some people are just not going to apologize or take ownership of the things
that they've done to you because then they would have to look inwardly and face a
lot of things about themselves and they may not have the capability or choose not
to. I can't let that delay my healing because I've been through too much and come too far to
allow them to hold me back any further.
They got too much of my energy and too much of my time.
It is an honor and a privilege to be a parent.
It is not a guarantee.
Anybody who tries to convince you that blood means that people can treat you however they
want and have no accountability, family as family. who tries to convince you that blood means that people can treat you however they want
and have no accountability, family as family, that is completely toxic and false.
That's what abusers want us to believe.
They want to keep us there.
They want to silence us and I'm going to get into that a little bit more about the reflection
I had about all the ways my mom tried to silence me even in these last few years. But I'm able to start letting go of more.
So I'm going to start focusing a lot more of my energy on that and living in the past a lot less.
Because I'm feeling really done with the past.
The more that I have learned through the show and through therapy and through these years
is a different understanding of how the parent-child relationship should be, but because it never was there in the first place, it was very
confusing navigating through that. But now when you look at the, just the evidence, the data points,
it's quite clear in a different way than I've ever had clarity. And honestly, I've learned so much through other people
sharing that I'm finally able to contribute something. Now I know thanks to Amy's research
and her help through the season that about six months after the baby shower incident was when
their civil case was finalized and I believe they got their settlement. I don't know if her behavior had anything to do with that, but she's so
selfish and strange about money and possessions that it wouldn't surprise me.
She's told me so many times in life that basically if it was an inconvenience for me to be around for whatever reason if I was being too
poignant or truthful or
emotional or whatever it was she would push me away to
avoid accountability or, you know, if she felt self-conscious about substance use, things
like that.
So it makes me wonder like, because she knew that I thought that the money should go to
Bobby's daughter and I had made that very clear, because she knew that I knew everything
about her racism and Bob's racism and the community that they're now trying to infiltrate
essentially for their own gain.
I wonder if it was convenient for her
and she knew what she was doing
when she came to that baby shower that day.
In the moments of honesty,
she has confessed essentially to those sorts of things before.
It was difficult to see people like Bob and Liz.
Liz specifically was going to these vigils
and going to protests and stuff,
which like to be clear, Bob and Liz,
there were so many times where I would be out with Liz.
And I remember one specific example I'll give
is being at a movie theater with her in South Lake Tahoe
and the young teenage gal who was waiting on us while she was getting popcorn or whatever.
Did something that Liz didn't like and Liz such a Karen slammed her fist on the movie
popcorn counter and said fucking Mexicans at this girl.
I was so horrified my mouth just dropped open, she stormed off and I was just left
there apologizing like, I'm so sorry she's such a bitch, I'm so sorry are you okay? And that was
like so much of my fucking life when I reflect to this, it's like being fucking stuck with these
miserable people for so much and so that's why there's also so much freedom on the other side of it. So it felt really fucking weird to me to go to these police brutality marches and see Liz get up
on a stage where most of those families are black, brown, and indigenous people because they are
killed at much higher rates than the white population and seeing her essentially using this community to serve her own interests
because that is what she told me.
She told me that research that they did
of ways to sort of put pressure on the police
in civil court was to do these things
and like take part in it.
Now does that mean that they didn't also care?
Sure, they did, but it's like you have to look
at the whole picture
and all the data points of this person and these people
and their behavior leading up to these moments.
And I prayed a God that she had a change of heart
and has reflected.
I've never heard that reflection, so I can't speak to it.
She just pretended, as she always did,
that things never happened that happened.
It's always been very layered and hard to do it without
telling the full story, which is why I'm so thankful to to be sharing the story on the show,
because I feel like I'm able to do it in a much more honest and clear and hopefully full picture.
I think two things can be true. I think they cared about Bobby and were very much harmed by his loss.
I also think they are racist people who will take advantage
of any situation they're put into if it serves their interests. It doesn't change any of
my beliefs in whether or not families should pursue civil action. And also just knowing
how selfish they are. It was very difficult to navigate all of the emotions regarding Bobby's death, who killed
him, the accountability options, the money element given my parents passed.
There was so many different layers to it.
Throughout the first two and a half years, I still had to work a full-time job on top of
parenting three kids on top of taking care of a household and then
working on the podcast which was a second full-time job. So no days off at this
point but I think that because of where I was emotionally I was really ready to
be like head down in the work connecting with Sarah and Alyssa and discussing
these things and learning more and reading and educating myself and all of it
that lightning bolt moment and finally feeling like I'm walking in my purpose.
It was hard to be sure, like taking some of the feedback in season one and all the drama
and all the stress that comes behind the scenes and stuff, and there's a lot to it, but
the good exponentially thousand times outweighs the negative.
I wanted to prove to myself I
could, and I also wanted to help Sarah, and I also saw the importance of her story. And
was drawn to her story in many ways because of my own experiences, and also digesting
so much in the true crime space and seeing areas of opportunity for more survivors voices, more empathy, more ethical content and consumption,
observing all of that, and then taking stock of what I had to offer. And my desires as a creator,
I saw the investment could be really life-changing of my time, even though there was no guarantee.
And I knew that no matter what, I would gain a friend,
I would learn a lot, I would prove something to myself,
and maybe I'd help some people.
And me and Sarah said from the beginning,
if we help one person great.
I also shared with Sarah that I saw the opportunity
that there could be potentially many seasons
of people's stories, the body image abuse and cat fishing and the unique circumstances
of her story when I heard it really drew me to want to meet her and validate her feelings and
connect with her and know everything about it. Also seeing that this is the perfect example of
when these things escalate and they continue how they can lead to much more dangerous things
and seeing the opportunity where we can educate people, specifically young people who are listening
to podcasts at higher rates than ever before, knowing that we all want more ethical content and want
to hear more lived experiences, but also educating the next generation of people, like my children, so that they
can avoid these things because I saw that was often missing within the content.
Working on season two, I was also working on writing my first book, which was a journal,
and then my father-in-law died.
We lost pop-up around season two, season three. He was very important to our entire family and he really
was a dad to me in a way that no one else ever actually was. As imperfect as our relationship was,
I know he loved me very much. I'll never forget, on Mother's Day or my birthday, he had given me a
card. And he wasn't a man of many emotional
words, but I also could kind of bring out a soft spot in him because I'm the type of
person like, oh, you're not going to say you love me.
That's fine.
I'll just tell you 10 times.
I love you.
I don't care.
But he wrote on this card something along the lines of like, I'm your dad.
Sorry, whether you like it or not.
The podcast I was not making even as much as like a part-time job. It was costing a lot
of time and energy. I was so invigorated by the response, the community we were building, by that
purpose that I was finally feeling and even though life continues to be hard and things continue
to get hard outside, finally living in your purpose, and being able to also work so intricately
with something that you are so passionate
and have so much lived experience with
is an incredible blessing and a gift.
I'm just really, really thankful
for every single survivor who has ever trusted me
from Sarah and every person who has come after her.
And it's like going from having this very isolating childhood,
where like the TV in my tapes were my friends and plants
and sports and these things going from feeling so isolated
and alone and feeling at times like nobody could understand
to now getting to have these conversations with people
all over the world in such a meaningful way.
It's fucking bogs down. It's ridiculous.
The book that I wrote, Irreverent Self Help, is how they described my writing.
It was written by me and Morgan together.
When I moved on from Buzzfeed, I took this kind of funny turn into book publishing and I found myself with the ability to suddenly hire writers and get books published.
Tiffany was, I think, on season two or three of something was wrong.
Just continually leveling it up every time I listened to it. It just blew my mind. She just is so, so natural and so good at it. It just blew my mind. She just is so so natural and so good at it. It was my daily
listen on my way to and from work every day. But I was developing a book that was a gratitude
journal for people who had been through some shit. Essentially, it occurred to me that my friend
who was so brilliant, who I would have wanted to write this book under any circumstances,
had created something where I could go to my bosses and I could say,
look at this, she should do this book.
She's the person that we're gonna hire for this.
And she brought that work ethic to it.
She rocked it out, she was amazing and effective.
For the first time we disagreed on something professionally,
and she won that argument because she smarter than me.
But even in collaborating and disagreeing, collaborating and having to have tough conversations, I was
just so excited to be able to work with her and I learned from her.
I learned from the way she self advocated.
I've worked with a lot of authors, and some people are just so excited for the opportunity
that they lose sight of their own best interest.
Tiffany is true to herself in a way that would never
allow that to happen, that she would not put something out
into the world that was not authentic to her.
So I hired her to write another book
because obviously when you learn something
from the person that you're working with,
you wanna work with them again.
When I reached out to her about strong women rising,
I remember saying to her,
I think you can write whatever book you want.
So I wanna present this opportunity,
but I don't want you to feel like you have to say yes
because it's me and I don't want you to write this book
if it's not a book you wanna write.
Ultimately, she did decide it was a book she wanted to write
and I had her in mind when we were first developing
that book and she brought to it
more than I could have ever imagined,
which I think at this point you realized
would have been a lot, my expectations of her are pretty high.
It was yet another capacity in which I got to work with her.
And at that point, she had been doing so much research and working with so many
people and connecting with the audience that we're talking to now and the knowledge that she was able
to infuse into those books, especially her second book, was just so valuable and I think for the rest
of my life that book will be one of the things I'm proudest of. Because it has small part and bringing a little bit more Tiffany
Reese to the world.
A few months before COVID finally stepped away from my other
position because the show was finally starting to make almost as
much as that job was making to where I could justify it.
So I actually wrote the two books that I wrote for the money that
they paid me up front so that I could continue to make the podcast for six more months because I believed that much in the podcast and the idea and I saw how the community was impacted and how meaningful it was to myself in our community.
So I'm like working full-time job taking care of three kids wrote two books and made the podcast all at the same time during 2019 and 2020 just so that we could reach season five,
season six, which is just wild to think about now.
Then COVID happened, the lockdown happened
while I was working on season four.
I had gotten like my tax return.
And so I had decided I was gonna invest in myself
for six months and get myself in a very small
inexpensive office outside of the home
because we were living with so many people that it was nearly impossible to record or write in
piece. And then within weeks, COVID happens. And then as my second book was coming out, COVID
is happening. It was very interesting times. And we all kind of know how that went.
Some things transpired and we ended up during 2020, not having anywhere to live.
That was a really difficult time for our family
within a few weeks of the lockdown.
Emails were being sent out at a lot of networks,
not just the ones that I was at at the time,
where it was basically like,
we don't know if you're gonna make any money this year
or next year because advertising is the first thing
to go when the economy is struggling
typically in terms of people's budgets. During the summer of 2020 Memorial Day weekend, George Floyd was murdered by a police officer.
While that was happening, we were losing our housing. It was a very difficult summer for our country, the protests, and certainly given Bobby's murder, it was very difficult
emotionally to navigate all of that. I was so thankful to see that some people were finally
starting to care and honor police brutality as a very valid and real thing and the ways that it
impacts black indigenous and brown people the most. It was also extremely triggering and hard because a lot of times when I would try to get on the internet, even if it's for work purposes or whatever there's these horrific videos and obviously that's extremely triggering to anyone.
It was really, really hard. While I was working on season 5, the lockdown was continuing. We ended up barely being able to get a house and we were living in one of the most dangerous neighborhoods in Sacramento again and a very small space.
We didn't have a washer and dryer, we didn't have a dishwasher, our house backed up to a very high crime pocket.
It was really difficult.
And I think you can hear that in season five and season six. Actually, I don't
listen to the episodes back once they're really out and done unless there's a reason that
something's flagged or a reason that I specifically go back to content just because I'm always
focused on the next thing. But I was really, really depressed. We were struggling financially.
Michael had taken a new job that was hopefully going to be better for our family
long term. And during COVID, after a few months of being there, the restaurant closed. And the day
after Christmas, actually, he had to lay off every employee of the store, including himself.
It was really scary. The kids had a hard time. The neighborhood we lived in, It was during the fire, we had firework time to where people were setting up fireworks
for no reason all the time, and they were specifically doing this in this area that we
lived.
People's houses and trees caught on fire from fireworks, but also it's just like gunshots
and so much violence and to continue the podcast.
It was more always a question of can I continue to make the podcast and somehow make enough
money so that we can count on this and that I can justify all of the time that I'm spending
because our family is hurting.
I think getting on the other side of the depression,
what was life changing was when I started feeling
suicidal ideation that I couldn't place.
Thankfully, I recognized it.
I went to the doctor and actually we met over Zoom
and then she sent me in to get blood work
and it was determined that I have,
I mean, I don't want to get into it in detail,
but like my thyroid's broken,
and I'm severely vitamin D deficient.
So the two things that the blood work revealed
majorly impact your physical health,
as well as your mental health.
There's things you can do to like navigate it.
It was also really good for me to know that information during COVID,
because the health stuff that I had going on
made me way more susceptible to losing my life
if I got COVID during this time of pre-vaccine
through the doctor and was able to start treatment
and also through the forming of the podcast
and a lot of the healing, the making sense and reflection
and just learning more, I was able to reflect a lot
on my disordered eating and come able to reflect a lot on my
disordered eating income
determines with a lot of things.
I'm really thankful to share that I
have not been specifically on a diet
where I'm like, I'm going on a diet
for over four years now.
And even though I still struggle
with disordered eating, especially when
my anxiety is high, as I've shared
and it's still work in progress.
I am incredibly proud of where I am now,
compared to where I was in the past.
In general, my body positivity, the relationship
that I'm able to have with my body now,
and the place where I'm at is in such a healthier place.
It's been really beneficial to me,
and I think frees up a lot of my brain space
so that I can focus on the show and my family and the things that I really need to focus on.
After I started addressing my health, taking better care of myself, even though we were still struggling a lot,
it was emotionally getting a little bit better. I started working on season six, and that is when we had the Jez episode where crime junkie then made to follow up episodes
called Operation Fireball. Through that crossover episode that we did, it completely opened up the
podcast to a much, much larger audience, Britt. She had listened to the show and we had communicated
with one another since season one. Then having their support, it was completely life-changing.
It completely skyrocketed the show in a whole different way.
I'll never forget.
Seeing the show shoot up on the charts and not being able to believe it, I never even
looked at the charts really before that because I don't know if I was ever even on them.
I was too busy working and paying attention to other things to even like think about that, honestly.
Then I remember it was at number two
and I was already like shitting myself.
I could not fucking believe this.
Me miss never gonna be successful.
Me miss really bad credit score.
Like I'm number two.
Me?
Me and my fucking zero dollar budget.
And then I went to bed and I woke up.
It was fucking number one.
I think it was like four in the morning
or something and I was getting up to pee.
I opened the app and I saw it and just screaming.
And at the dog barking and everybody was like,
what's going on?
And I'm like, what number one?
The whole family jumping up and down and screaming
for like seriously like forever
My kids were so proud of me and Michael was so proud of me
Definitely one of the most life-changing moments like holy fuck maybe I will be able to like pay my bills now
Maybe things are gonna change maybe I'm gonna be able to like make this show and be able to survive and also like
Fuck look what you did.
You fucking did that shit.
You fucking put yourself through school.
You fucking worked multiple jobs.
You fucking trained yourself.
You fucking worked so hard to get here.
Now you're seeing this representation
of all of those years of work finally here
and it was undeniable proof.
It was insane.
I remember that whole weekend walking to the house
and just being like, number one, just like, I could not contain myself and my friend celebrating me
and I just couldn't believe it. I honestly still can't believe it. It was wild, feeling like so proud
and knowing all the bravery that it took from the survivors. And also how this was going to mean that their stories
were going to be reaching so many more people, which is what we all wanted. It was amazing, amazing.
Then comes Amy. We started working on season seven. Amy's book was about to come out. I instantly was
connected to Amy and was also so proud of who she was as a human being.
Just hearing a brief summary of what she had overcome and what she was doing with it and
instantly was like, whatever it takes for us to work together, let's make that happen.
And also Amy, by the way, audio chuck might be trying to sign me.
That's next time on the season 16 finale of something was wrong.
I have to know my limits, like even just going to the site, the only one time I went two
years ago, which is so wild that May 4th was when I started digging into this exactly two
years ago.
I just pulled up the email that I wrote June 2nd, 2021,
115 PM to Eden.
Hello Eden, my name is Tiffany Reese
and I'm a journalist and podcaster.
I actually found your dad's name on it.
It does say it's a recommendation to settle.
He got out of prison eventually
and he was staying in facilities for unhoused persons,
or persons who have just gotten out of prison,
and had been spotted by somebody I knew.
And that's how I found out he was staying
a block away from me at the time.
I hadn't Googled him or looked him up in so many years,
and then I do, and here's this article
about his newest scam
that had just come out two months prior.
Three of three sentences, but the second one
is what is mind-blowing.
It says, to hear Bob Henning talk about coffee
is an educational experience to say the least.
Something was wrong is a broken cycle media production created and hosted by me, Tiffany
Rees.
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At Something Was Wrong Podcast.
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Check out their album, Wonder Under. Thank you so much.
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