We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Abby for the 1st Time On Divorce & Her Unrequited Love
Episode Date: March 16, 2023In Part 2 of our deeply personal interview with Abby, she reveals for the first time: 1. Her romance with an unrequited love – someone who strung her along hopelessly for years; 2. Her anguish and ...rebirth after being arrested; 3. Her sense of loss when being crowned FIFA Player of the Year; 4. Her divorce after fighting for marriage equality – inside her own family and on the public stage; and 5. The night she met Glennon. Before you start the episode, please go back and listen to Part 1 of our interview with Abby: We Can Do Hard Things Episode 188 Abby Wambach: Will I Ever Be Truly Loved? And come back tomorrow for Abby’s *very* special Part 3 bonus episode! ABOUT ABBY WAMBACH: Olympian, Activist, Author, and Co-host of the We Can Do Hard Things Podcast Abby Wambach is a two-time Olympic gold medalist, FIFA World Cup Champion, and six-time winner of the U.S. Soccer Athlete of the Year award. She was the United States’ leading scorer in the 2007 and 2011 Women’s World Cup tournaments and the 2004 and 2012 Olympics. Abby is the host of ABBY’S PLACES on ESPN+, in which she showcases what makes her beloved sport of soccer a worldwide sensation. An activist for equality and inclusion, she is the author of the #1 New York Times bestseller WOLFPACK as well as the adaptation of WOLFPACK for the next generation, an instant New York Times bestseller. She is a founder and part owner of Angel City FC, the first majority-female-owned soccer team in history, and is a member of the Board of Directors for the non-profit organization Together Rising. Abby lives in California with her wife and their three children. TW: @abbywambach IG: @abbywambach To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things.
If you have not listened to part one of this series about the Mary Abigail Wombok, please
go back and listen to the first episode.
We are interviewing my love Amanda Sisterula, Abby Wombach.
The theme that we keep coming back to in Abby's life is love.
From birth till now, relentless pursuit of love,
and all the different forms that's come in her life so far.
We've talked about her mom, her love story with her mama,
Judy, her love story with soccer, the soccer,
the love story of her first marriage.
And now we're gonna get into one of my favorite topics,
which is addiction and what it is.
And I think it can be a different thing for everybody.
What I've always thought of when I think about you and your drinking
is that you seem to like a lot of people use drinking as a way of not knowing
like a lot of people use drinking as a way of not knowing something that in your bones you know. For example, in the last episode you talked a lot about knowing
that something was missing in soccer because you got to the highest of the
heights and it didn't as you say, is your angst. You also had a knowing and this
is all the same time in your life, that your marriage was not working.
But you could not let yourself know that because you are not a quitter.
That's true.
Because you felt like you were carrying the entire queer, like, future of marriage on your back, and you couldn't let this marriage fail, because then everyone would be right, and it would be proof that gay marriage doesn't work.
Because you loved your ex-wife and so you couldn't let yourself know
That this was never gonna work and so you did what I drink you drink tell us about drinking and what it was in your life
from the beginning
So I started drinking when I was young, being the youngest of seven kids, being 12, 13, 14
years old, and brothers and sisters often college and they're doing the drinking thing and
then they come home for breaks or summer and they're doing the drinking thing, they're actively doing it.
I learned that that was what people did for fun
to like blow off steam.
And belonging,
because that's what your big sisters and brothers are doing.
Yeah, and I actually noticed interestingly enough
when I was young,
I noticed that they became more vulnerable people while drinking.
Oh, that's so true.
They would tell me their feelings, we would connect.
It looked like fun, you know?
And so I got like the memo, oh, this is what we do.
And this also supports the idea of splitting myself from soccer player
into normal person.
Like, oh, I'm going to prove that I can be a normal person
as much as I'm going to prove that I can be the best soccer player.
And so, I took drinking on as like the thing I did
whenever I wasn't playing soccer.
I did it through college and then my young adult life. And if I were to be really
honest with myself and looking back at all the heartache that I had in my life, it was the very
thing that I went to to suppress at least that's what I thought at the time to fix my heartbreak
for whatever situation I was in.
And it was a real love hate relationship
that Drinking was.
She was my best friend at times
and also the biggest fucking bitch.
Yeah, yeah, friend of me.
Yeah, and I loved her.
I really did.
I really felt like this is a part of my identity
that I'm going to hold on to for dear life.
What did it look like, babe?
You're out drinking and then you're private and drinking.
But depended on where I was emotionally
if I was in a good place,
then it was just like free, fun, love and, you know,
like everybody's out.
We're doing really fun things.
And if I had any kind of heartache or something that I was trying not to know,
it would be like me, by myself, pouring the biggest glass of whiskey you've ever seen
as like a quote unquote nightcap.
Yeah. you've ever seen as like a quote unquote nightcap. Yep. Wife goes to bed and I'm just sitting alone on the couch with like a six finger whiskey,
a ridiculous amount of alcohol.
I was trying to black out.
I didn't have the off switch.
So until my body fell asleep, that's when I stopped consuming alcohol during certain
seasons of my life. I always was struggling with, do I think that, do I think I'm drinking too much?
And, you know, I would do it for short periods of time because soccer for so much protected me
from that part of myself. It was like this like safety mechanism that was in place.
You couldn't go too far because then yeah, when I was on the road, I'd be on the road for three like this like safety mechanism that was in place.
You couldn't go too far because then yeah,
when I was on the road, I'd be on the road for three weeks.
I didn't have a single drink.
Totally fine.
That's why they say it's not how often you drink.
It's how you drink.
Even if you only drink once a year,
but you lose all of your mind and your life
and your relationships.
Yeah, I was one of those people too
that was trying to get everybody to drink around me more
Mm-hmm. I had some friends that they could they could drink one glass of wine at dinner
And I'm like the fuck no, no, I don't I'm like the bottle is
Open you can't just you can't put that cork back in the bottle like the bottle needs to be finished
What do we do when you pop you can't't stop. It's the brinkles out there. Aren't you just so jealous of those people who can just drink? So
babe, what was your FIFA player of the year moment with drinking? Like when did you finally realize
no matter how many rungs down I go on this drinking ladder, it's never going to love me back.
Oh, man. Well, I think when she got my mug shot on the ESPN ticker,
that'll do it. That'll do it. She did me, she did me dirty.
She did you real dirty with that? Tell us story, please tell us the story.
Yes, it was a few days after I moved out of my house because of the divorce.
I was getting separated for my first wife.
And I went golfing and drank too much.
Lied to my friends, told them I was getting an Uber and I drove.
Baby, I got behind the wheel of a car and ran a red light going back to my apartment.
And I was so deep in my own, I don't know, sadness and pity that I actually thought that
I was sober.
I actually believed in my, I was like, oh, I haven't, I will not blow. So I was like, yeah,
let's do this. And then I blew into the breath laser thing and I was now convinced that the
machine was broken. And I said, this is not right. I need another machine. And of course, I was just completely fucked. And so
I remember, you know, they, I had, I had Birkenstocks on that night because I'm a gay person
living in Portland, Oregon. They issue you those, right? Yes. And I remember being in the jail cell
and the other women that were in there,
they had all of their shoelaces taken out of their shoes.
And so they just kept walking around,
they're sliding their feet.
And I kept thinking these people are crazy.
This is not where I belong.
You know?
I remember crying so much before they actually took that mug shot.
I literally couldn't stop crying to take the mug shot.
And it was a horrific photo.
It looked like I was, I don't know.
It was the worst night of my life.
I think my life is over.
As I start sobering up sitting there.
I realize, oh my gosh, you do belong here. I think my life is over. As I start sobering up sitting there,
I realize, oh my gosh, you do belong here.
You are fucked up, you are exactly them.
You just got lucky that you were wearing
fucking Berk and Stocks.
What was in the clay?
So I had been moving all of my stuff
and that morning I had went and got
all of my gold medals, my jewelry,
I got for my hundredth cap playing on the national team.
The most valuable pieces to my existence as a person
were in my car.
The car now is gonna get parked on the side of the street
because I can't drive my car.
And I like bagged the police officers.
I was like, my whole life is in this one bag.
I like need to bring
this one bag, please. And so I begged them and they had to check it in at the police
department when we got there at police station. What were the days after that? Like, what
were they like in your home? So surprisingly, my ex picked up the phone because I made my one phone call.
And she picked up the phone
and she came and bailed me out of jail next morning.
And I went back to the house that she and I lived in
and there were news cameras outside.
I thought my life was over.
Like, I thought everything that I had spent my life building
and doing, playing soccer, traveling the world, fighting for women's equality,
I now was going to be put in the category of canceled.
And so I hold up in my house, and I remember just like crying and watching the ESPN ticker
and just seeing my mug shot over and over and over again.
You're watching it.
Like you turn it on to watch it.
Oh, wow. That's very.
Yeah. And my my statistic of you. Yeah, I had to create a statement like a
public statement to put out to the press. And the one that I
first created was much more mean to myself than the one put
out into the world. I was really fucking doing a number. I was
beaten myself up like nothing like I had never been beaten up. I
don't know what was happening, but
something was happening. And then my agent sat down, my lawyer sat down at the table the next day
and explained the process and in Oregon where I was arrested. I could enter in what's called a
diversion program and this diversion program would require me to be alcohol and drug free for one year.
I'd have to take drug tests, I'd have to do victim impact panel, I'd have to do therapy that was
court-ordered and moderated. And when the lawyer told me that I could not legally drink for a year, I let out a kind of,
um, God, I'm getting emotional thinking about it, but it was kind of like the sob that, that you scream when you're a baby just born,
like you finally got your first breath.
And somebody took the keys away from me literally
and somebody took my choice away.
And that's all I needed.
Like I needed that so much.
I needed somebody to be like,
can't do it anymore, or else you'll be in jail.
Like I needed, and I needed every second of the shame
that that ESPN ticker gave me.
I needed all of the wake up call
this opportunity gave me. And it needed to be as big as it was for me
to wake up, for me to actually like see what was happening in my life.
And I remember in the moment being like, okay, I'm going to make this the best thing
that ever happened to me.
Like this is, this is horrible right now and sad. And I actually had a 10
stop speaking tour that was happening in one week to college campuses across the country.
Oh Lord. That is a kick in the shorts. I had to go out into the world in a week.
That is a kick in the shorts. I had to go out into the world in a week.
I remember actually being in my first airport
a week later and some person was standing close to me
and they had Googled me because they thought it was me
was wearing like a hat.
And I could see my mug shot on their phone.
Is that the first thing that comes up?
Yeah.
I was like, oh, so this is how it's going to be, right?
Yeah.
And I really wanted to process and proceed with all of that happened
with honesty and truth and integrity.
And I wanted to be as upfront and honest about it as possible.
And so, I don't know how this story necessarily ends, but
you know, I've been sober ever since that day, that night in jail.
That's incredible.
I'm Jonathan M. Hevar.
I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I want to talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing,
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She said, you know, for the house cleaner,
I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows
that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy.
A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
now wherever you get your podcasts.
Dave, I want to talk about one more hard thing.
One more hard thing? And then we will stop the hard things.
Okay.
But we cannot do a conversation with you about love and unrequited love.
about love and unrequited love without talking about the major romantic relationship in your life that was an unrequited love. And how would you define unrequited? It's when you just desperately
love something and it never loves you back. And I actually don't think that it's love.
So there would be more, it would be a more complicated answer than that, but like our cultural
definition of unrequited love is when you love something fully and it never loves you back. Like
drinking is unrequited love. Soccer was unrequited love, but. I'm in love with it. I'm in love with it. I'm in love with it. I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it.
I'm in love with it. I'm in love with it. I'm in love with it. I'm in love with it. I'm wrong that this was the a great unresolved
Agonizing romance in your life the one we're about to talk about how would you describe this relationship?
How did it start take us back?
Real softball there.
Yeah.
But does it everybody have one love where someone asks them?
Oh, absolutely.
My parallels yours a little bit, I mean, I'm happy to go down with this ship too.
Well, I think that I've had a lot of time to think about this over the last almost 20 years. So we met about 20 years
ago. And it was early on in my national team career. This person was, she was just completely
unique to the kind of person I'd ever met before. Adventurous, active, seemingly like super connected.
She was just fucking cool.
And I aspired to be the kind of person
that somebody like her would love.
I felt like, oh, this person's gonna make me better.
You ever met somebody like that where you're like,
oh yeah, like me?
Yeah.
Oh, that's sweet.
So we met and we fell in love.
And I should have seen the red flags early on.
But I didn't because I was so into the fantasy of, and the idea of this love.
And was she straightish?
She was straightish. She was straightish.
She was straightish.
She was straightish.
Would that be one of the red flags you thought you should have noticed?
Well, not all the time.
Not at the time.
Not at the time.
She was straight with a side of Abby, I would say.
Okay.
Okay.
And she was painfully honest.
She had this way of being so brutally honest
that it made me trust her.
Did you ever met somebody like that?
Yeah.
Well, that's a thing with you.
You think if people are mean,
that that means they're honest and that that's love.
Yeah, I don't know.
We were living such different lives.
And I guess one of the big red flags early on
should have been that she was never able to like,
actually define the relationship with me.
I was always trying to nail
that down in some way. And it was like this elusive love is not definable and all this stuff.
But when we were together, it was amazing. And I'd see her for like a week here or a week there
for months. And then not months. We would not see each other.
This is not back in the day where texting and stuff was a constant occurrence. You'd have
to actually call the person. You have to pay for Skype minutes. It was harder to stay in
contact. I know. This was something that went on for a little while, like a year or two. Um,
and I think ended specifically ended because she got engaged. I went, gosh, when was this?
I decided after we won the gold medal in 04
that I was gonna go on a solo trip.
And so I drove my Jeep across the country.
I was gonna go to Moab and Zion and Bryce Canyon
and the Grand Canyon.
On my drive from Florida, I just like took a U-turn
and went to her house.
And I'll start my solo trip by going to visit someone.
And if every time you try to take your metaphorical solo trip and your car
veers to a certain person or substance or whatever, that might be a sign
that this is the distraction
you're using from yourself.
Yeah, I drove through the night.
It took me 32 hours to get there.
My short detour of 32 hours.
It was so ridiculous.
And so I get there and she's surprised to see me open the door
and won't let me into apartment,
which I thought was kind of weird.
And so we went and sat on the hood of my Jeep.
And then she proceeds to tell me that she slept with
somebody that day.
And that's why I couldn't come in to the house.
The person was there.
I don't know if they were there.
Honey, they were there. She would lay you in the house for The person was there. I don't know if they were there. Honey, they were there.
She would have let you in the house for God's sake. I actually don't really have vivid memories of
that whole experience, but I remember feeling pretty heartbroken. Yeah. And went on my little solo trip by myself. And I was just so sad. I was so sad and so confused. A couple
months later, maybe a year later, I don't know exactly the timeline, but I'm at practice,
national team practice. And one of my friends says to me, did you hear so and so is engaged
and so and so is this person that I've loved.
And I, like, you've never, you have probably never seen the blood drain from a human being's face
like it did that day.
I just, I shut down.
I was like, what?
How did this happen without me knowing?
We were still in kind of contact,
but not like as consistent before,
because the sleeping
with somebody else was a little bit really hard for me to accept.
Well, she goes on, she gets married, she has kids, the whole thing, and during this time,
I get into relationships and get out of relationships, and every single time I would get out of
a relationship, I would call her and there was always still this
Energy this I
Miss you. I love you
Think from her to yeah, there's vibe that was like always there and you hang in there She she liked you exactly where you were and for whatever reason the fantasy of this love was keeping me there too.
You know, like this wasn't just a horrible one side of like she's a horrible person,
and I'm like the good person here.
Like I was also a part of this toxic experience.
Granted, she was married with children and probably should have had the integrity to say,
I'm gonna, I can't do this anymore because I have this whole other life.
And she knew that's what you wanted more than anything in the world.
So she also knew that keeping you hanging there with her would allow her to have the thing
and have you and would keep you from ever having the thing. Yeah. And have you. And would keep you from ever having the thing. Yeah.
And you would only have this 10% version of her. Yeah. Do you think that there's any part of this
that has to do with growing up queer in the time you grew up in? In terms of this tragic
like broke back mountain. This idea that queer kids are taught that like the,
since they can't have out in the open love
that the only kind of love that they can have
is like dark and brooding and incomplete.
And that what we tell ourselves about that
is that that's better anyway.
That that's the only real love is the mystery.
The dark underneath, mysterious love.
And so you stay there because you don't think you can ever have the other thing
and you just tell yourself that that's what's real.
Yes, and also a PS sister broke back Mountain was
and is one of my favorite movies to this day because it reminded me so much of this unacquired love.
It made me, I feel like every gay person,
at least my age understands that movie
on a totally different level.
And in your head, you're like the love
that that person has, like broke back love, is
they just feel like they have to do this family thing, but their real love is with me.
But you actually don't know if that's true.
That could be true.
And in some of the stories that is true.
And in some of the stories, those people have their real love in that family or that other
relationship they're living out.
And they're just super interested in this drama and having the best of all possible worlds
by having this undefinable, can't get me in trouble because I'm not technically doing anything
wrong love on the side.
And that's a very big reason.
Because that's not real.
Because that's not real.
What I have here, that's not real, but you were very real.
Yeah.
I have a question too.
Did you call when you and your ex broke up was my ex wife?
Yes, your ex wife was so and so the first person you called.
Yep. Yeah. And I hadn't gotten so and so the first person you called. Yep, yeah, and
I hadn't gotten arrested yet, I hadn't gotten sober yet. So I was, I made the phone call
after a long drinking night out. And I actually, I think in my memory, because I was pretty intoxicated, I asked her to leave her husband and
to be with me.
Thinking, oh, this has to be the thing.
This is the thing that's going to fix me.
This is what my problem has been all along.
God, we so badly want to make sense of ourselves, right?
I did the exact same thing.
I did the same. Yeah.
Yeah, she said no.
Obviously.
Like she had been saying for 15 years or how?
Wow.
She was saying no, but yeah.
But I love you and I miss you.
So I don't know how to,
I guess the way that it kind of ends
is when I get sober with some like real
helpful therapy, I was able to call her and tell her all of the way the years of being the hang,
being, what is it called? Like being the strung along.
What is it called? Like being the strung along?
Strung along?
The side piece, we call that.
Well, I mean, there was nothing physical that ever happened.
After she got married, there was no physical,
it was just this emotional thing that I think
that I realized maybe I was experiencing on my own.
And for the first time as a sober person,
I got the courage to call her and say,
this is bullshit.
And the fact that you have strung me along for this long
has prevented me from living a full life.
And probably in many ways prevented me
from having a real life. And probably in many ways prevented me from having a real relationship.
Yeah.
I told her it was unfair and she agreed. She agreed with everything that I said. And
was kind and I told her that I never ever wanted to talk to her again and not
out of like meanness or self-protection but like I don't want people like that in
my life. I don't want people like that that say one thing and do another. I don't
want somebody that says that they love me but won't ever do anything to prove it.
Because that was a whole relationship that was provably making me believe that I was
unlovable over and over and over and over again. He weren't worth choosing. Yeah. And I know that
that gainess and sexuality played a little bit of a role in this whole thing,
but I'm good enough to be chosen.
You know, and I had to actually say those words.
I had to actually be intentional and say the things that I really meant.
And I really did love her.
And in some ways, this fantasy of the love
kept me company for a lot of years.
It was a source of all, a lot of heartbreak.
It was also the source of a lot of joy
because having those in love feelings
is wonderful at times.
But I needed to stop it.
I needed to quit.
And good old, broke back mountain fashion. It was hard to stop it. I needed to quit and, you know,
and good old broke back mountain fashion.
It was hard to quit her, but I finally did.
Oh.
Did she put up any resistance?
Like did she try to rationalize with you?
Like, oh, but we can still keep in touch.
She should know she got, okay.
She understood.
She knew what was needed.
So where we are in your story right now, just this one lens we're looking at it through. You have now lost soccer, ended soccer.
Yeah, because I retired soccer ended and drinking really ramped up.
So soccer is over, your marriage is over and the drinking is over. Yeah. This is where
we are right now. Yeah. Many of your unrequited loves is over. Yeah. This is where we are right now.
Yeah.
Many of your unrequited loves are over.
Can you talk to us about the night at the Palmer House?
It's a seemingly normal event.
I have to go do.
I'm just about to publish forward the memoir that I wrote soon after I retired. And I'm traveling with a manager kind of person
and they hand me the book of information of the other authors who are going to be there who are
also trying to promote their books for their upcoming releases. And so I scan through the authors
and I'm like, nah, and then I see love warrior on there.
And I read the little bio that Glenin had.
And it had something in there like about being sober.
I was newly sober.
And I remember being like, oh, that's a sober person.
I've heard of those people, but I've never had one.
Yeah, I'm going gonna talk to that person.
Because the truth is, I really swear to you.
Like, I had never really met a sober person before.
She didn't have a single sober person.
I'd created a whole life around me that it was just people
who partied to support my addiction, my habit.
So we walk in and we're
like running a little late, which is like my biggest pet peeve. And I had said I don't want
to have dinner. And I guess all the authors who we were all going to be up on the stage,
giving little talks about our books to the librarians of the world. We love you librarians. So I walk into this back room backstage
and all the authors are all in there eating.
And I'm late.
I didn't know that this was like a private backstage event
before the event starts.
Is a table with George Saunders, Terry McMillan,
Maria Semple.
I didn't know any of those people.
I don't know any of those people.
I don't know any of those people.
All I cared about was meeting the sober person there.
And so when I walk in and somebody stands up in the room, that was me.
I recognize that it's the person that I actually am there to hopefully talk to at some point.
So I walk around, we hug,
and then I sit down in my chair
and the way that we were seated,
she was away from me and kind of at a weird angle.
So she was in like the peripheral of my vision,
not in my clear path.
And so I kept talking to this one author
and he seemed kind enough,
but I kept looking over to her like,
more interested in wanting to know
what they're talking about over there with her seatmate than I was interested in talking to my seatmate.
So then the dinner ends and all the authors like want to take a picture together.
We walk outside and Glennon's like nowhere to be found. I'm like, where is she? You know,
this is so she's the reason why I want to take a picture.
But now that you know me so long, you would know where I was now, right?
You were in the bathroom. I think about them as many times as possible and just hide there for as many minutes as it won't seem weird.
Yeah, you're in the bathroom and then you came back and we all took a picture. So when we are walking to the stage, I finally get the seconds that I'm like hoping to talk to you
about because I had yet to figure out
what I was gonna include in the memoir forward.
And so I really wanted your advice about,
I just got the DUI, I knew I could talk to you about it
because you're sober.
And you just said some things, like you touched my arm,
it was just like electricity.
I was like, oh, like a shock something happened to my system.
And I kind of didn't pay any real attention to it. And then when we sat on the the day as we were seated next to each other.
And I was so glad to be seated next to you.
I don't know if you remember what we were talking about on that walk, which is that whoever wanted you to write that book,
like the shiny version of you. Yeah. Just when you talk about your two halves. Yes. Everybody wanted you to write it just as your shiny soccer player. Sock yourself. Yes.
They did not want you to include any of what you call your shadow side, which was really just
all the real stuff. Yeah. In the book, because they thought that would t call your shadow side, which was really just all the real stuff in the book,
because they thought that would tarnish your Captain America reputation. You said to me,
it was like you were revealing the deepest darkest secret, but the first thing you said to me was
you probably know what's going on, because you just got in the DUI, and I was like
you probably know what's going on because you just got in the DUI. And I was like
about what? And you were like, well, it's all over ESPN. And I was like, that doesn't help me.
And you said, I just got a DUI. And you said you were thinking about including all of your struggles inside your memoir. But you were afraid that people wouldn't like you anymore or something.
Yeah.
I mean, I think I was afraid of tarnishing the soccer,
Abby legacy, the soccer star legacy.
And when you touch me, you said,
sweetheart, oh, sweetheart, we in the real world,
like real people.
And it was just like this really simple thing that I think like my intuition
and my sober, my newly sober self was like feeling. And when you said that, I was like,
yes. It was an invitation to integration. It was an invitation to say to you, you don't have
to be these two things anymore. That's right. We want both of you. In fact, what the hell is a memoir if not
All this stuff. It was an invitation from the soccer world into the real world where you'd get to be your whole self. That's right
That's interesting. I've never thought of it that way. Me neither until now. You gave me an opportunity to integrate my two selves
in that second and
my two selves in that second. And then you went up and talked about your book that you were publishing. And I was so excited. First of all, you like made me laugh and cry and all the
things. And there was just like this unmistakable, unquestionable energy that was happening between us.
But it felt like for the first time somebody was seeing the whole of me
and not wanting to discard what I would have called then the shadow side, like the bad abbey, good abbey, bad abbey. You were like, no, like that's the good stuff. You've got this all backwards.
And so yeah, I went back to my room that night,
and I read Love Warrior until one or two in the morning.
I was a little disappointed with the way that it ended.
So was I, babe.
So was I.
That puts us completely full circle back at the beginning of the
Conversation we had in the last episode because when we were talking about how Dr. Franco says that if you're holding something back
You can't accept love because you don't trust it and I wonder if
the Palmer House was it was
or if the Palmer House was, it was the opposite of that moment because there wasn't anything you could do to hold back at that point or keep it in.
It was all over ESPN, it was all over the ticker.
And since it was all out there, if someone were to love you in that space, then that would mean that you could trust it,
whereas before when you only had shiny Abby at the front and shadow Abby, you would never
be able to really accept and trust love because you'd be thinking, yeah, but you don't know
about shadow abbey. That's right.
I think that's why I have so much feeling for your first wife.
You're amazing at talking about what a great love we have and me and why you love me so
much.
And we do have an incredible love story, an incredible love.
But what was different than was not just that me,
was not just that I was a new person.
It was that for the first time you were fully and completely present.
Like you were fully available. The drinking was gone. The soccer was just like
all of you there. All of the unrequited love was also because you weren't there fully to love.
And I know there was a moment where your ex-wife asked if you were having a conversation with her and you explained
that you were in love and all the things and she said, have you stayed sober?
Yeah.
And you said yes and she burst out crying and I just have such feeling.
I know it was messy, I know there's a lot there, but I do have this big love for her because
I feel like she knew in that moment
that you were gonna be available in the next phase
of your life in a way that you weren't available
in the last one.
I feel like everybody has that in their life.
The things that went wrong
and then you know the person's gonna be better
for the next thing, but you're the one who did all of it.
Struggling.
And I don't have any tender feelings
for the one that left you hanging on all the time.
I'm just gonna say that,
but I feel like you are who you have always wanted to be.
The way that you love,
it's like watching someone who is like
the greatest painter in the world.
And since they're painting you,
everyone's looking at the painting,
thinking she's amazing.
Look at her.
But the person's sitting for the painting
only looks that good
because the painter is so freaking amazing at painting.
That's how you love me.
And I feel so grateful that I get to be the one who
is loved by you. Because you were right all the time. Your whole life, you were right. You were meant to
love big and love huge and love with all of your being. And what you needed with somebody who would be fully present
in there and be in it with you and be 100% with you.
And I get to be that.
Yes.
And I think for a lot of my life, I just thought that there was going to be some other thing
that's like other love that was going to fix me and make me feel lovable. And I think that what I've learned from our relationship
and the work we've done is
the only source of
working through that heartache or that like
emo angst.
I don't know what it is that like this seeking for more.
I had to figure out how to love myself. And we had a very amazing, intense love story, but we've also created a lot of space, a lot
of safe space for each other to be able to learn how to love ourselves really deeply.
Because in the end, I think that that is what I've been searching for.
You've been like this beautiful space giver and the safety net that
almost like I needed somebody strong enough and safe enough.
And that would love me so hard and so well that I could
fake myself into believing that it was possible for me to do it myself.
You gave me this like runway of love ability.
I keep looking at you and I'm like, okay, maybe it is possible.
Maybe I am actually level.
She's pretty smart.
You think she could be on just something?
Abby, you mentioned in the first episode how you were at FIFA, and that's the moment that you got the
best player, the world award.
And the love didn't sink into you and you realized, well, if I can't feel the love after this,
then soccer is never going to be able to fill that void.
Have you ever had a moment where you have received love in the moment and you could feel
it immediately like click that sinks in, I get that.
This takes.
Yeah.
Well, it happened a couple of months ago.
An unsuspecting Christmas morning, the kids are going around,
they're unwrapping their gifts
and all of a sudden,
Glendon's like, Abby, it's your turn.
And I was like, adults go later in the morning, you know,
what's happening.
So I'm opening up this present and it's this letter from a lawyer that is essentially Glenin has
started the process with consent from Craig that the kids want me to adopt them as their parent legally.
And there's like a lot of mixed feelings in that because,
you know, we've talked before that like there's a grief that I will live out with the rest of my life for not biologically caring a child of my own, but that gets completely
overshadowed with like the love and the joy of parenting these three children that Glen
and Craig brought into the world.
And I guess it's hard to explain for like a step-parent who might not have like a
biological connection to their stepkids or bonus kids like we call it but I
don't know it's like one of those moments it was like one of those moments in life
that no offense honey but it's one thing to have your romantic partner show you tell
you marry you and make you believe that you are lovable person when these three children, 14, 16, and 19 at the time,
and their father and Craig, you know, I'm like, it's essentially like the most crying,
I've ever, like the hardest crying, like the whale cry.
Like there's a similar cry when I first got sober,
like, I don't know how to describe it well enough.
It's just,
if it makes sense, there's like brief moments in a person's life where all of your heart
ache makes sense.
Like every single heartbreak and issue that I had was because I didn't know that I would
be chosen.
I first had to figure out how to love myself well enough and I had to find a love.
But like, the kids don't have to do that.
Our life would have been, but have gone forward with no problems.
Like, they want that. They'd like, they want me in a person way,
in a parent way.
And so that happened.
And so we're in the process right now of getting me added
and not taking away any parental rights of Craig or Glennon,
but getting a third parent added to our kids for certificates.
And it was just,
obviously it means a lot to me.
It just,
I don't know how,
I just don't know how I'll ever thank you all.
And I know that that's not how love works.
It's just I told Glennon, she better not leave me because now I'll take the kids.
The kid said, the kid said, three Christmas's.
I don't think it's for you to think them.
I think that was their way of thinking you, Emmy.
I just, so much of my life has felt like there was a,
life has felt like there was a thread of sorrow, or shadow, or process. And I needed every bit of it to feel that moment of love. Wow.
All right, Pod Squad, here's what we've decided to do.
We can't just break that news of the Christmas adoption moment without explaining it more.
So tomorrow, we're going to give you a bonus episode where we talk about how the adoption has come together
in that moment in our family when we told Abby
and what happened, and all the implications of it
for our family and for other families
because it's turned into kind of a big deal
and we want to share it with you.
So come back tomorrow for a short episode
where we give you the deeds on the adoption.
We'll see you then!
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