Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 328: A Conversation about Abuse, Agency, and Mindfulness | Tanya Selvaratnam
Episode Date: March 8, 2021Before we dive in, a warning: this conversation includes descriptions of abuse and violence. As you may know, March 8th, the day we’re dropping this episode, is International Women’s Day.... We have a story today about intimate violence, which has long been a problem for women around the world, and has only intensified during the pandemic. My guest is Tanya Selvaratnam, a writer and artist who I’ve known socially for many, many years. I was truly shocked when Tanya’s name surfaced in the media three years ago, in connection with the case of Eric Schneiderman. Eric was the celebrated Attorney General of New York State. He was also a regular on the local meditation scene. I knew Eric and Tanya were dating. What I did not know was that, behind the scenes, Eric was allegedly physically and emotionally abusing Tanya. She has now come out with a book, called Assume Nothing, which goes into searing detail about not only the alleged abuse, but also about how she flipped the script, regained her agency, helped bring her alleged abuser down, and how she has healed subsequently -- in no small part through meditation and therapy. Please note: If you or someone you know is suffering from abuse, you can find resources curated by Tanya at the “full shownotes” link below. We’d also like to provide more context about the allegations Tanya shares in this interview: When the allegations of abuse against New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman by Tanya and three other women were first made public in The New Yorker in May 2018, Schneiderman quickly resigned. In a statement at the time, he said, “serious allegations, which I strongly contest, have been made against me.” He also said, “While these allegations are unrelated to my professional conduct or the operations of the office, they will effectively prevent me from leading the office’s work at this critical time. I therefore resign my office.” After a six-month investigation, prosecutors declined to bring criminal charges against Schneiderman, citing legal impediments, including statutes of limitations. But the district attorney assigned to the case by Governor Andrew Cuomo also said that she “believed the women who shared their experiences” with investigators. In response, Schneiderman said, "I recognize that District Attorney Singas' decision not to prosecute does not mean I have done nothing wrong. I accept full responsibility for my conduct in my relationships with my accusers, and for the impact it had on them." I should also note that our team reached out to Eric Schneiderman and that he declined to comment for this episode. Two more items: First, remember to check out “In Plain Sight: Lady Bird Johnson,” a new podcast from ABC News, on Apple Podcasts (https://apple.co/ladybird), Spotify (https://spoti.fi/3ukYgoq), or wherever you’re listening now. Finally, we are looking for a podcast marketer at Ten Percent Happier. If you love this show, marketing, and building relationships, we would love to have you on the team to help us grow Ten Percent Happier and our future shows. Please apply at https://www.tenpercent.com/careers. Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/tanya-selvaratnam-328 See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
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Before we jump into today's show, many of us want to live healthier lives, but keep
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From ABC, this is the 10% happier podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hi, everybody.
Before we dive in, a little bit of a warning.
This conversation includes descriptions of abuse and violence.
As you may know, March 8th,
the day we're dropping this episode is International Women's Day,
and we have a story today about intimate violence,
which has, of course, long been a problem
for women around the world
and has only, unfortunately, intensified during the pandemic.
My guest is Tanya Selvaratnam.
She's a writer and an artist who I've actually known
socially for many, many years. I was truly shocked when Tanya Selvaratnam. She's a writer and an artist who I've actually known socially for many, many years.
I was truly shocked when Tanya's name surfaced in the media three years ago in connection
with the case of Eric Schneidermann.
Eric was the celebrated attorney general of New York State.
He was also a regular on the local meditation scene in New York City.
I knew that Eric and Tanya were dating.
What I did not know was
that behind the scenes Eric was allegedly physically and emotionally abusing Tanya. She has now come
out with a book called Assume Nothing, which goes into searing detail about not only the alleged
abuse, but also about how she ultimately flipped the script, regained her agency, helped bring her alleged abuser down,
and how she has subsequently healed
in no small part through meditation and therapy.
Before we dive in, I'd also like to provide
a little bit more context about the allegations
you're gonna hear Tanya make.
When the charges of abuse against New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman
by Tanya and three other women were first made public in the New Yorker magazine back in May
of 2018, Schneiderman quickly resigned. In a statement at the time, he said, and I'm quoting here,
serious allegations which I strongly contest have been made against me. He also said, and I'm
quoting again here,
while these allegations are unrelated
to my professional conduct
or the operations of my office,
they will effectively prevent me
from leading the office's work at this critical time,
I therefore resign my office.
There was then a six-month investigation
after which prosecutors declined
to bring criminal charges against
Schneidermann. In November of 2018, the DA assigned to the case by New York governor Andrew
Cuomo cited legal impediments, including statutes of limitation. But she also said, and I'm
quoting again here, that she believed the women who shared their experiences with investigators. In response,
Schneidermann said, I recognize that the District Attorney's decision not to prosecute does not mean
I have done nothing wrong. I accept full responsibility for my conduct in my relationships with my
accusers and for the impact it had on them. One last thing to say here before we dive in and that is that we did reach out to
Eric Schneiderman and he declined to comment. Okay, having said all of that, let's dive in now with
my friend, Tanya Selvarotnam. Tanya, nice to see you. Thanks for coming on. Nice to see you too,
Dan. Thanks for having me. It's a pleasure. Even though it's a tough topic.
Having said that, that it is a tough topic,
let's dive right into the hard part first.
Can you tell me a little bit about how you ended up
in a relationship with Mr. Schneidermann?
We met in 2016 at the Democratic National Convention,
and when he first approached me,
I was taken with how much attention he gave me.
It felt too good to be true.
It started out like a fairy tale.
We had so much in common,
a commitment to progressive causes, and interest in spirituality and meditation and
We had both gone to Harvard
We had both studied Chinese. We had both spent time in China. It was a very kind of nerdy flirtation
and
Then we got to know each other over the course of a couple of weeks.
And then over time, the fairy tale turned into a nightmare.
The darkness started to seep in.
And I went through the stages that are common for other people who get entangled in abusive relationships. It starts with the
controlling behavior, the isolation, the manipulation, the gas lighting. I wasn't prepared for when
my path would intersect with an abuser. I wasn't prepared for the gas lighting and manipulation.
And then it started to feel like I was in hell.
It got worse, especially after the election in 2016.
And then the inauguration in early 2017, there was an increasing national spotlight on him.
He was more stressed out, he was more depressed,
and his drinking was increasing.
The physical violence that happened in the sexual context was shocking.
And for too long, I didn't tell people about it. I was ashamed. And also, I was keeping his secret.
I also believed him when he said that he was going to get help. I thought he could change.
You, in my opinion, quite bravely go into a lot of detail about this in the book,
which I recommend everybody read. In particular, I remember being really, you
know, shocked by your description of the first instance of violence.
Are you comfortable talking a little bit about that here?
I've written about it, so yeah, I'm comfortable talking about it.
It's hard to talk about, it's embarrassing to talk about,
but I also feel that by being candid about these micro details
of what happens in abusive relationship,
gives a window for people to understand more
and also for other victims and survivors to connect more. So when he first slapped me
across the face during sex, it took me by surprise. No man had ever done that to me before. I had never been in an abusive relationship before.
And it started out like he was testing me.
And then it happens in the blink of an eye, and it happens at night.
It's dark.
You're naked.
You're in a more vulnerable place, and then over time the slaps got harder, and we're
accompanied by demands.
In addition to the slapping, there was the choking and the spitting, And as stinging as the physical abuse
was the verbal abuse and the emotional abuse.
So one of the worst memories I have
is how he referred to my scars.
When we first started seeing each other,
he would look at my scars like a badge of courage.
I have scars from surgery for cancer that run down the length of my torso.
Then, over time, my scars were ugly to him, and he wanted me to get plastic surgery to
remove them.
He also wanted me to get a boob job and he was criticizing my hair. And
he always made me feel like I was doing something wrong. And what I would discover later is that
I was part of a pattern, but at the time I thought the abuse was specific to me because it
Pacific to me because it manifested seemingly out of nowhere. And also I was duped because he surrounded himself with feminists.
He was known as an advocate of women's rights, a champion for feminism, and also a champion for meditation and spirituality.
So I see now how I got sucked in, and I wrote the book so that hopefully others don't get sucked into.
Hopefully others don't get sucked into.
You mentioned earlier some,
I think you kind of described them as classic tactics of abusers. I think you listed isolation, gas lighting, control.
How did that show up in your relationship?
The isolation is cutting the victim off from their family and friends.
So a concrete example, when I would be talking on the phone with my friends and even with
my mother, he would try to get me to get off the phone, even though he was off and on
the phone himself.
This was in the apartment. Even if I had the door himself, this was in the apartment.
Even if I had the door closed when I was speaking to them.
Another example is when I was speaking at an event on March 20th my birthday,
my friends had arranged for a birthday cake and also for drinks afterward.
He attended the event and then insisted immediately afterwards that
we had to leave. And my friends were all kind of like stunned. And looking back, I kind
of laugh at the absurdity of that situation. My friends, because I wasn't there for my own birthday,
they went out together and had a birthday party
without me, and they texted me a photo of them
all toasting me at this bar.
So that's an example of the isolation.
The controlling behavior, it's, you know, chorus of control.
So a concrete example of that is criticizing my hair, my dress, wanting me to dress a certain
way.
But then, and this is also embarrassing to talk about, controlling what I ate.
He was a pescatarian, so he didn't eat meat and wouldn't let meat eat meat in his presence.
And I have a vivid memory of one time when we were at a party and there were waiters passing around or
derbs and one of them was a chicken saute and I love chicken saute but I didn't
take it and he glared at me after the waiter passed by and said, in a very demonic voice, I saw
the way you were looking at that.
He also didn't want me to eat sweets.
He was very infantilizing because he didn't want me to put on weight.
So I would take the opportunities when I was
away from him when I would have dinner with a friend to order meat and to order
dessert, even if I didn't really want it. But it's important to say also that
aside from the abusive behavior, there were the times when he was adoring and supportive
and kind. And so there was this like yo-yo effect of pushing me away and pulling me back,
which is a tactic of abusers. And I didn't understand all the stages I had gone through
that I walked the reader through in the first half of the book
until I started opening up to friends
and one of them connected me with the Domestic Violence
Counselor, who helped me understand what I had gone through
and also helped me understand that what I went through
was completely common in abusive relationships.
Then halfway through the book, when I get out of the relationship after I've connected
with domestic violence expert, the script gets flipped because I begin to have agency
over the story and over my future. And then the roller coaster begins with me realizing that I have to come forward
because I find out in a cosmic way that I was not the first woman he had abused.
And knowing that I probably wouldn't be the last.
I want to get into that because it's incredible and really brave.
Before we go there, though, I want to admit that before reading your book, I really was
quite ignorant about this issue and I appreciated reading the book because I learned so much.
And one of the things that I realized I, a belief I mistakenly held sort of lazily,
was that there might be a certain type of person who would end up in an abusive relationship.
And I met you, I don't know, 15, 16 years ago, and certainly didn't think of you that way.
And one thing you've said is that, and I'm going to look at my notes here to get the quote,
And one thing you've said is that I'm going to look at my notes here to get the quote.
Even fierce women get abused.
Can you say more about this sort of misconception?
A victim looks like all of us.
And perpetrators are of all stripes.
And the statistics on intimate partner violence are devastating. That about one in four women and one in ten men will experience some form of violence in an intimate relationship during their lifetime.
And of those many millions of people experience that violence before the age of 18.
So one of the big challenges I feel ahead, and one of the reasons I wrote the book, is
you know, a dream reader for me is a high school age person.
Because the conditioning that begins when we're born to normalize abuse and to normalize
violence, we need to chip away at that conditioning.
Because I think there are the victims of abusers, but I also feel that the abusers are products
of the conditioning by society.
Either there's a civil war between feminists and patriarics.
And those on the side of feminists are not only women, and those on the side of patriarics are not only men.
And we have to fight for a world that is safer for all women and men. And it's important to understand
that anyone can become a victim. I wasn't prepared for when my path would intersect with an abuser.
Even though I had grown up in a household where there was horrific domestic violence between my parents. I witnessed it myself. I stood up to my father. I stood between my mother and
father and my father would try to hit her. I even tried to get my mother to
divorce my father. I'm grateful that in my situation it lasted a relatively
short period of time. It was about a year. My mother endured domestic violence
for decades, and so many women don't have the support network that I was fortunate to have
to help me get out and to surround me with love and comfort and strength. And so many people
stay in abusive relationships because they don't have the financial independence to get out of them.
abusive relationships because they don't have the financial independence to get out of them. Or because they have people not supporting them getting out of them.
So I also wrote the book for people who might know loved ones in abusive relationships
to potentially be a lifeline to those people.
I mean, it's unfortunately timely right now now and I'm sure you'll be able to
educate me on this, but as I understand it, the numbers around domestic violence are going up
in the pandemic. The pandemic has amplified the urgency of the domestic violence crisis.
In the early months of lockdown,
the United Nations Population Fund
had estimated that there would be a 20% increase
in domestic violence incidences,
and that was proven to be true
in calls to hotlines.
Victims were in lockdown with their abusers.
They had fewer opportunities to get away,
and fewer opportunities to seek help.
And also for the children of these victims,
they would now witness more the domestic violence
in their home.
So there's a lot of healing and recovery to do.
The pandemic has had so many levels of mental health fallout and domestic violence
is one of them.
Let's talk now about your own healing and recovery and let's start with the flipping of the
script that happens in the second part of the book. How did you extricate yourself from
this relationship?
When I first opened up to a friend about the physical violence, she immediately said,
you have to get out and I want you to speak with somebody.
A friend of hers who was a domestic violence expert.
And I never looked back.
It was like the scales fell off my eyes.
And it was because a friend who was like my sister
asked me tough questions.
She could sense I was going through a hard time.
Many friends sensed that I was going through a hard time,
as the months went by.
One had said that I seemed subdued in the relationship and I said there's
a lot going on. Another one who said, are you okay? I said, he's depressed. I'm trying
to help them. So I was giving these kind of coded clues without giving details because
once you give the details, you can't take them back. And if he were going to get help and change, I was holding
out hope. But this one friend asked as I told her more about the drinking and the controlling
behavior and that things were rocky, she asked, does he hit you? Those four words, does he hit you?
And because I would never lie to her,
when she asked me a question,
I'm gonna answer it honestly, I said yes.
And she asked me to describe it.
And so that was the turning point for me.
What happened next?
turning point for me. What happened next? Well fortunately at that time I was very busy with work. I was traveling a lot for work. And I remember going to Los Angeles for a film
shoot. And he tried to call me a couple of times, and each time with increasing urgency,
three times in 24 hours.
And I was trying to drift as quietly as possible.
And then I finally just emailed him saying,
I'm traveling.
He thought that we were gonna have dinner that week.
And that was mid-September.
And then after I was back in town, he continued to want to talk to me. It was around the time of young Kippur. He said he was going to do some
atoning and then wanted to have a conversation. I was in constant contact with the domestic
violence expert. And she just encouraged encouraging me not to think about him
to focus on myself, stay away, don't be alone with him anymore. And Eric and I arranged to have
a phone call. And the phone call I have been prepared for by the domestic violence expert who gave
me possible scenarios. She's like, you know, he might break up with you.
He might have gotten the hint.
You might have to break up with him.
Just do it quietly.
Don't poke the bear.
And I was at that time not angry.
I was broken.
He said in that phone call, it seems like you've been avoiding me. I said,
yeah, I just need time. And he said, well, maybe we should go our separate ways. And I said,
yeah, I think that would be for the best. And he said, really? And the domestic violence
expert had told me to end the conversation as soon as possible
and to make a plan with a friend for right afterwards so that I had a legitimate reason
to just say, you know, I need to go.
But then subsequent to that, many of my things were at his place.
We had essentially moved in together.
He never stayed at my apartment. But the domestic violence
expert said, your things are not important. There'll be a time when you will be
ready to get them. And to make sure that when you get them, you go with a friend
and that he's not there. So a couple of weeks later, this was in early November now of 2017, I did arrange to go
and get my things, I brought two friends with me.
One of them happened to be an investigative reporter and in less than 24 hours, she had identified a previous girlfriend of Eric Schneideman,
who had an eerily similar story.
And she had dated him almost a decade before me.
And that I just felt like all the blood rushed out of my body when she told me that.
And she said, I think you should speak with a lawyer.
And she connected me with Robbie Kaplan, who would eventually become my lawyer, and
who would coincidentally also eventually become the co-founder of the Times Up Legal Defense
Fund.
And I had no intention of coming forward.
I was really focused on protecting myself and recovering. But then when I realized
that I was part of a pattern and that the story might eventually come out, then I went into
survival mode. And part of what made me feel like the story could come out in some way, whether through my coming forward or through other means,
is because by a convergence that still overwhelms me,
the Me Too movement began, right then,
with the breaking of the Harvey Weinstein story.
And I remember on the day that Ronan Farrow's story
appeared in the New Yorker about Harvey Weinstein story. And I remember on the day that Ronan Farrow's story appeared in the New Yorker
about Harvey Weinstein, which I believe was October 10th, Eric reached out to me, saying,
I want to continue to support your good work. These are not normal times. Almost simultaneously,
the domestic violence expert also reached out to me.
She wanted to have a phone call.
She wanted to make sure I was okay.
Because she read that Harvey Weinstein story and felt it would be triggering for me.
And hearing her and receiving that email from him on the same day that that Harvey Weinstein story broke,
I felt like these waves crash around me.
That suddenly I was being swept up in
a global conversation
while my story was unfolding in real time.
Because with the Me Too stories, they were in the past,
but I was experiencing a story in the present,
and also my story was about intimate violence in a committed relationship. It wasn't in the workplace.
Just going back a few minutes, you really pained me to hear you describe yourself as broken
at one point.
What have you done to heal yourself?
We've discussed this in advance, so what I'm about to say is not a violation of privacy.
You have a psychiatrist who's probably a familiar name to listeners of the show, Dr. Mark Epstein, who's both a practicing
Buddhist and a medical doctor, psychiatrist. What kind of tools did you use and how has
it gone for you, this process of trying to recover from this?
Therapy with Mark Epstein. Meditation. I did your 21-day challenge for the new years. I
meditate every morning. Sometimes I do two or three sessions in a day to ground
and center me. Friends, thank goodness for friends who surround me and really keep me looking up and finding ways to experience joy.
Because I do have an innate sense of joy that I was born with, like even with the health issues that I've dealt with,
with miscarriages and infertility and cancer, with divorce, and with abuse. I feel like the abusive relationship with Eric was kind of the culmination of a long stretch
of about six and a half years of dealing with difficult personal experiences.
But now I feel like I am my strongest self ever because I have done the hard work to understand
how I got into an abusive relationship. I have done the hard work
of therapy and meditation. And also, I wrote the book. And I wrote my way out of the darkness.
I'm grateful that I'm a writer and could use my skills as a writer to excavate those painful memories, both the painful memories
of abuse by Eric Schneidermann, and also to excavate painful childhood memories of what
I witnessed of domestic violence between my parents.
And I wrote the book because I was inspired by many people that I know and that I don't
know reaching out to me to share their own stories of abuse.
And I felt like we need to split the world open together by sharing our stories.
Because there is so much shame and stigma around being a victim and a survivor.
But it's like how do you go from being a victim to a survivor to a driver?
And I think it's very important to realize that you might have been a victim,
but you can find power through your voice and through your community
and the importance of allies. So I feel very grateful that I have that network.
Much more of my conversation with Tanya Selva Rottenham right after this.
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Can you say a little bit more about how meditation is useful for you?
Can you say a little bit more about how meditation is useful for you?
Well, trauma sinks in at a cellular level, which is what scientists understand, and I wish
were more widely understood. It's one of my hopes for the book, to understand how moments of abuse, whether they last a few minutes or many years, create scars that are a marker of time before and after.
And no one should have to have memories like those.
But there's a way to heal them, to kind of unseat the trauma that sinks in at a cellular
level.
And meditation can help with that.
Because when I'm meditating, I am mining my memories
and able to work things out.
And also just the physiological impacts of meditation,
the breathing, the physiological impacts of meditation,
the breathing, the connecting with your body, your senses, the unplugging, which is so essential,
avoiding the noise, avoiding the chatter.
So that's how meditation helps me.
I'm interested in hearing more about the mining of the memories.
Let me take a guess at how it might work and then you'll correct me. So you're sitting
feeling your breath coming in and going out or whatever kind of meditation you're doing whatever you've chosen as the
Object of your meditation and then you might get ambushed by a horrifying memory. And the
meditative stance is to neither fight it nor feed it.
You know it.
Yes. Is that where the healing comes in? Just sort of the warm, non-judgmental witnessing
of your own trauma?
Completely. Because you can take a long view of the painful experiences you've had
and say those are painful but they don't define me. You note your experience. And also I recognize
that my experience is not unique to me. I am unique but my experience was not unique to me. I am unique, but my experience was not unique. And it's one that is shared
by multitudes. What role, if any, does anger play in your emotional landscape? I was not angry with Eric because I recognize how much he and other abusers are the products
of their conditioning.
I believe in redemption.
I believe in restorative justice.
The problem is that most abusers don't acknowledge the harm that they've done to other people
and they don't do the work to stop being abusive.
But there was one moment when I did feel anger at Eric long after I had gotten out of the
relationship, which was last year, 2020, when a woman reached out to me
out of the blue while I was working on the epilogue, the final chapter of the book, and a woman reached
out by email to tell me that she had been abused by Eric after the New Yorker story had come out.
When I received that email, I started shaking, and I felt rage, because he had made a statement
after the conclusion of the criminal investigation that was
launched after the New Yorker story came out.
I participated in the criminal investigation because I believe in due process.
I subjected myself to the legal process in the same way that I subjected myself to the
journalistic process because I believe in investigating allegations.
In this situation, because it was intimate violence in a committed relationship, it was
a he said, she said, situation, but in my story, there were multiple women interviewed independently of each other,
very different from each other,
who had eerily similar stories.
Objectivity emerged.
At the conclusion of the criminal investigation,
Eric issued a statement that he apologized for the harm he had done
and that he was getting help and had gone to rehab.
So I felt anger finally last year.
You said anger doesn't serve you.
Now I'm just projecting, purely,
is what else do I have?
You have a lot.
Well, I mean, I can empathize to the best of my ability, but of course, in some ways,
I'm just kind of putting myself in your shoes, but I'm still putting myself in your shoes.
And I just imagine that I would feel a lot of anger, whether I intellectually understood
that it didn't serve me or not.
And so I'm just wondering, you understand that it doesn't serve you, so you find that
it doesn't arise or that when it does arise, you're able to serve it instead of giving
into it.
I think as somebody who is a shy child and an introvert and also somebody who is very sensitive to the emotions of others. I try to put
myself in other people's shoes as well and when you're able to see both sides
even if it's somebody who's harmed you, I'm less likely to feel anger. And maybe this isn't the best strategic approach, but I prefer to drift and focus
on myself and my healing and recovery rather than direct my energy at anger towards another
person.
I mean, that sounds incredibly wise. You've referenced a few times, you kind of
made attempts to understand the condition
that can lead somebody to become an abuser.
Can you explain that?
What have you learned about why and how men
become abusers?
My gut response is they're all watching the same porn
that glorifies violence against women.
And we need more female feminist directors of porn to unpack that.
Porn that celebrates mutual pleasure and stops glorifying violence.
Going to when we are born, patriarchal structures that perpetuate violence as a norm. We've seen that on
so many levels in relationships, in the workplace, in schools, in government,
violent words, and violent acts, and of course social media, which allows for the proliferation of violent imagery and
vitriolic language, we have to make peace at more exciting violence.
I don't know how to do that quite yet, but I hope my book helps.
This goes to something in your book.
It's an incredible education and an incredible story of intimate violence,
but it's also sort of an societal indictment and it's about how violent the overall society
is.
Am I articulating that correctly in your view?
We've seen over the past year because of the pandemic and the uprisings against racism,
how ill we're just living in an ill society, how we need to elevate voices of peace and
love and comfort. But the default has been to elevate the
shiny objects, the clickbait, the sensational. And so we have a crisis of
storytelling. Because I believe that storytelling helps shape public
discourse and helps shape culture and helps shape conditioning and helps shape public discourse and helps shape culture and helps shape
conditioning and helps shape the way we behave with each other.
You've said that you really want men to read this book.
Why is that?
Because I feel like one, the book will help them too.
It'll help them understand the impact that they have with violent behavior and also to
bring more allies into anti-violence. Because we can't approach a safer and less violent world unless men and women are allied
together in this fight.
And when I said I feel like we are in a war between feminists and patriarics, I believe
that that is true.
And I think the pandemic has provided an opening.
It's like what Arun Dattiroi has written about,
the pandemic is a portal.
Like we have an opportunity to really question
the way our structures have evolved that enslave us
rather than free us to be kind to each other.
And we've seen how there has been kind of a descendancy of celebrity culture over the last year and an ascendancy of everyday heroes, essential workers and first responders.
And I'm heartened by that.
But we've also seen how the pandemic has negatively impacted communities of color
and women. And Vice President Harris wrote this opinion piece for the Washington Post,
where she talked about how the exodus of women from the workforce is a national emergency
that requires national solutions. And I think why I want men to read
my book is so that they can understand that with them as part of the solution, we will
get to this safer place. Because when women thrive, communities thrive, it's better for our world.
You close the book with a poem, and I want to just read it to you and get you to talk
a little bit on the other side about why this poem speaks to you.
The poem is from a book called When Women Were Birds by Terry Tempest Williams.
And she cites a poet named Muriel Rookaiser.
Do I have that right? Muriel Rookaiser, yeah. Okay. So here's the bit of the poem. What would happen if
one woman told the truth about her life? The world would split open. Why did you choose that? What were we going for there? By my telling my story and the stories of others, I hope that it opens up more story
telling.
Because by sharing our stories, we destigmatize our experiences and we can understand more how to craft solutions which need to happen in education from grade school on up, legislation, making sure that there are more repercussions for abusive behavior that the bar is not too high for abusive behavior to be a crime,
and also at the governmental level,
that there are more resources provided to organizations
that provide shelter, counseling, and legal services
to victims and survivors,
and especially mental health services
and restorative justice programs.
So by closing with that poem, I'm saying let's split the world open together.
As we close this conversation, for people listening who need help or no somebody who needs help, what are the resources you recommend?
Well, the book has a section. So the narrative draws people in, but then it was very important
for me to provide the reader with resources for how to spot, stop, and prevent intimate partner
violence. So there's like a checklist of the signs of intimate partner
violence and a checklist of the effects of abuse so that people can more clearly see it and understand
it and to understand that abuse comes in many different forms. It's not just physical, it's emotional, it's verbal, it's legal, it's
digital, like cyber stalking. And also to understand that there are many, many organizations you
can reach out to for help, and that if you are the friend of someone in an abusive relationship, be their lifeline.
Ask them questions that elicit answers and make sure they understand that they are not
alone and that they're not crazy.
And I have a list of organizations that are specific to different constituencies because
not everyone is comfortable reaching out
to a national organization.
There are ones for indigenous communities,
for Latinx communities, for black communities.
So it was very important for me
to have different communities represented,
trans communities, the rates of domestic violence
in trans community
or staggering.
And so that's my advice.
Read the book and check out the resources at the end.
Well, I have a lot of respect for what you're doing.
And I think it's not only courageous, but also very generous.
So thank you for doing it.
And thanks for coming on the show to talk about it.
Thank you so much, Dan.
Thanks again, Detanya.
Really appreciate her coming on.
Represents an extreme level of courage.
And it's in board story. and I agree with her that men should
read this book. I got a shift gears just a little bit before we go here to make a quick
business announcement here. We are looking for a podcast marketer on this show. If you
love this show, if you love marketing and building relationships, we would love to have you on this team to help us grow not only on this show, but also on future shows, which we plan
to start launching this year. The URL for applying and learning more is 10% dot com slash careers.
I'll put a link to that in the show notes. Oh, actually, there is one more thing I do want to mention before I let you go.
This is Women's History Month and ABC News has launched a new podcast called In Plain
Site, Lady Bird Johnson.
Fascinating story about the former first lady and her role in the Johnson administration.
Highly recommend you go check this out.
It's called In Plain Site, Ladybird Johnson.
We'll put a link in the show notes. This show is made by Samuel Johns, DJ Cashmere,
Maria Wartell, and Jen Point, with audio engineering by Ultraviolet Audio.
As always, a big shout out to my ABC News friends, Ryan Kessler, and Josh Kohan.
We'll see you all on Wednesday with a fresh episode.
We'll see you all on Wednesday with a fresh episode.
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