We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Calling All Control Freaks: How to Stop Overfunctioning
Episode Date: May 18, 2023In this unplanned conversation, Amanda speaks up for everyone who’s been labeled a “Control Freak” – anyone who feels like they have to hold up the entire sky for their families or businesses ...– when what they really want is to feel supported and safe. Amanda shares vulnerably about: how she became an overfunctioner, the blessings and curses of being one, and the practical strategies she’s using to let go – and what her partner is doing to make her feel like she can finally try to relax. If this episode resonates, go back and listen to OVERWHELM: Is our exhaustion a sign that we’re CareTicking time bombs? 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 to Hi Everybody!
We are back!
Thanks for spending your time with us.
Today is a tripod, just the three of us. And we are discussing all of your questions
that just give us so much to think about.
I'm gonna surprise the two of you
and we are actually gonna start
with some rapid fire questions.
Oh, this is fun.
Oh, so I just feel like a little saucy today.
You do?
Yeah, I feel it.
I feel like I want to interrupt you a lot.
Oh, God.
And like, I don't know what that like I want to interrupt you a lot. Oh, God. And
like, I don't know what that is. It's this energy that comes into Abby where she, when
the beginning of our relationship, when she got like this, she would do this thing that
they used to do on their soccer team, I guess, where they'd be walking next to their friend.
And she would stick out her foot and try, okay.
Walking behind your friend.
Okay, she'd be walking behind me and she would try to trip me.
Like while we were in our romantic period and I was like, what is happening?
That's something that's never happened to me while I was dating.
Men never tried to trip me while we were walking.
I know.
And they just did it metaphorically.
Yes, figuratively.
Exactly. They just did it literally. I did it one time. And they just did it metaphorically. Yeah, figuratively. Yeah, exactly.
They just did it literally.
I did it one time.
And then what happened?
And then she looked at me one this way that scared me.
Well, you like to play and we have had some moments
recently, just.
Sister, the other day.
Is it the thing where you need, I do it to my kids
all the time, it's so fun, where you,
while they're walking, you like knee them
right in the knee so their legs buckle.
No, it's different.
But that's great.
And start what the hell?
No, it's different because you just, yeah, you swoop their leg.
You kick their one foot into the other.
So they literally, they kick themselves.
It's hilarious.
I want you to know that I truly at a deep level don't understand why anyone would want to do that to someone
They love. I mean for instance the other day. I was playing with her, you know, I'm trying to like
No, you were playing at her exactly
Have you ever you pair a little play? Yes, have you ever been a little kid and your brother is holding your hand?
And I could start right there. I'd never been a little bit of my brother did anything.
Okay, so, or cousin's holding your hand.
I was also never a little kid.
I've been 40 since the minute I was bored.
I was an old soul, which obviously just means
you didn't have a serotonin.
So somebody is holding your own hand
and they're forcing you to slap your own face.
Just like real light, real fun.
You hit yourself, you hit yourself.
Yeah, so Glen and I, I was having a little play session
evidently at Glennon.
And I was just like lightly tapping her face
with her own hand.
Like I was like manipulating her hand that way.
And she just let go.
And she just like hit me with her hand.
I was like, no.
I said, you hit yourself.
And then I slapped her in the face.
She goes, why don't you know how to play?
Well, it's an underdeveloped skill for us. I slapped her and I was like, wait, I looked at her face, I'm like, wait, that doesn't feel like what we were just doing.
She escalated.
You looked at me with a score.
Are you ready to play? This is my idea of playing.
This is playing with words. Yes. Oh my gosh. Exactly. Are you ready to play? This is my idea of playing. This is playing with words.
Yes.
Oh my gosh.
Exactly.
Are you too ready?
Yeah.
I mean, all right.
I can't wait to see our version of Rapid,
because it's probably going to be like a little lost.
This is definitely a real Rapid,
because I haven't seen these to which I object.
Okay, Rapid means fast.
It doesn't mean I know, but in order to go fast,
don't you have to have some advanced planning?
No, that's what we think,
but we're gonna try to different ways as you.
We're gonna see how you do
when you don't know what the hell's going on.
That's funny. All right.
You haven't researched the origins
of each of these questions.
In order to go stretch.
I mean, that's so funny, the rapid fire.
In order to go fast, don't you have to know the questions?
Also, I took a screenshot.
Okay, so we posted on Instagram our toothbrush saga.
It was my toothbrush, which is disgusting.
Abby's toothbrush, which is so clean
that it looks like a serial killer.
And somebody said, I just need to know what's,
I need a third option.
I need to know what sister's toothbrush looks like.
And somebody else commented back and said,
sister's toothbrush comes with a spreadsheet. Awesome. Sister and Abby.
First sister then Abby.
Okay, good.
What's the one emotion hardest for you to carry?
Fear.
I would say sadness, like for the reels,
but on a topical level frustration.
Okay.
Is that an emotion?
First, I don't know, it's frustration and emotion.
If it's an emotion for you, it's an emotion.
I feel so frustrated.
I hate that feeling.
Oh, when Tisha was little, she used to sit and time out where she lived.
I know we don't do that anymore, but we were doing it when our kids were little.
She turned out good. And she used to scream, Mommy, I so flushed waiting.
And you were like, yes, you are so flushed waiting. There's one thing we agree on, honey.
What's the one emotion that's hardest for you to receive in others?
you to receive in others.
This is so rapid.
I know what it is. I'm having trouble describing it.
Just describe it.
You don't have to say it in a word.
Softness.
Like what you would perceive as weakness.
No, because I know intellectually it's not weak.
Is it dangerous?
If you come at me hard, I know how to come back at you.
If you come at me soft, I'm like,
okay, so like if someone has a problem with you
or they have something going on
that they wanna talk to you about,
if they come at you like, fuck you, you okay?
But if they come at you like, my feelings are hurt and I don't know what to do about it,
that's hard for you.
Yeah, I would like to amend.
Okay.
First is the first hardest thing to come at me is some kind of pity or or concern, or the acknowledgement
that I need any help is the first hardest one.
And then softness just generally is hard.
So like if John wants to address something in a soft way,
I just have to recalibrate very quickly and try to
get there. Example. Well, what's something John would want to come at in a soft way?
And you have to recalibrate. If he's like, I'm worried about how you're doing with X.
Okay.
And then I'm like, okay.
But now you want to talk about it?
Because I have to keep doing X.
So then I have to stop doing X.
And then talk about how I feel about doing X. It just feels like
it's such an extracurricular of, oh, this is so interesting. And also, can we just dig
in here a little bit? Sure. This is such a rapid fire. We're going to just call it fire
question. I think this is a bit of a universal thing. We've talked about like over functioners, right?
Over functioners.
That's a thing.
A lot of people are over functioners, meaning control freak.
What are some other words for over functioners?
The person who is the center of the organization or family
or whatever that has to do with accountability holder,
the accountability holder. OK, OK, that has to do. The accountability holder. The accountability holder.
Okay, okay, that's good.
For all the accountability holders who are listening,
who are juggling, juggling,
is keeping all the plates spinning.
And then the people on the outside are like,
eh, I feel like they're freaking out,
but I don't know how to approach or help what would be good for
John to say. Let's say we're talking about John and just John. Okay, so for this morning,
that happened actually. I'm very stressed out. I have a thousand things going on today and
need to be done in a very compress period of time.
First of all, I think it's nice to set the table with it. I have learned this. So I just
today, he was talking to me this morning, and I said,
I'm going to be very anxious today. I have to be
incredibly efficient today. So I want you to know that while you're talking to me, I'm going to be walking around. I'm listening to you, but this is a day
I need to be incredibly efficient.
And so that's what you can expect.
So, and he was like, got it.
And then I was sitting down to something
and he said, what can I do for you today to help?
And had this been a year ago, I would be like,
nothing, it's fine, he got it. Just, apart from, yeah.
Yeah, and I just said, these five things
would be really helpful.
And he's like, got it.
And so we are doing really well in that department.
So I think even just a year ago,
he would have been like, she's pissed at me for some unknown reason.
And the last thing that I'm gonna do is ask her about it
or acknowledge it because I don't know
what it is. And she probably doesn't know what it is, but she's just generally walking
around in a pissy way that we never would have gotten to the acknowledgement of like,
this isn't about you, this is about me being really anxious. And also, we wouldn't have
gotten to the point where he's like, okay, what can I do to take off your plate today to help you with that? And then I never
would have gotten to the third step of being like, actually, can you get this from the
attic? Can you make sure this is done in the house? Can you make that call to the doctor?
And I wouldn't have trusted that then he'd actually do those things. And so I feel like
over the last year, we've made a lot of progress in that way. But I think that's the thing. So that
versus being like, you're so stressed out, what's going on? How can, what are we going to do about
you being so stressed out? That doesn't help me because I don't need another job, which is to talk about this complex
troubling situation that I'm just stressed out. I just need to get through the thing I'm stressed
out about and I could use a little help with that. Yeah. Tangible concrete help. One of the things
that's so fascinating to me about this experiment that you're going through right now is the self-awareness
that you had to have and the responsibility that you had to take on for your anxiety.
Because maybe a year ago, you would just
spend like, I gotta do this all on my own.
But like, you were still enough and conscious
and aware enough to be like, I'm gonna be
fucking on one today.
And so I need to let him know that I'm gonna be on one.
And that it empowered him to come to you,
then it empowered you to start trusting
him with holding some of that.
That's a miracle to me.
Yeah.
And makes him understand, oh, God, this isn't about me.
Yeah.
The whole time.
Right.
This isn't about me.
And we can be on the same team.
Wow.
So, job.
Do you think that there's a type of person, our over functioners just the person that everybody defaults to give them their shit because they
feel like they can't do it or whatever, or is the overfunctioner personality type only
comfortable when they have all of the things?
Both of those.
I think it's a cyclical situation.
I think that whatever reason overfuncturers have,
nature and nurture has figured out a way
where they view the world as if it's within their sight line
is if it's within their sightline
that they have some level of accountability
to ensure that it goes right. And that can be a blessing and a curse.
I think it's a blessing and a curse, right?
Because I think one of the greatest things
that you can have in life is this sense of
tremendous self-efficacy.
Yeah.
Where it's like, I can impact everything around me.
I can take care of things.
I am not scared of handling things.
I believe in myself to get it done.
That's a great thing.
But then it can over index to the point where you're like,
because I believe that,
there is nothing
that can happen around me that I don't feel a role in making sure it goes well and making
sure it's done.
But I think that what happens is over function is step into a place.
I know in my relationship, the impact on John has been, why would I bother?
Yes.
Because every time I start to do something, you swoop in and decide what's wrong with it
and make it different.
So I'm just not trying anymore.
This was something that we struggled with a lot. And so then that person who would otherwise
be doing things is like absolutely fuck it
and they don't do it anymore.
And so then you have even more to do
and then you get better and resentful
because you're like why aren't people doing things?
But it's because you would swoop in and redo it or undo it
or criticize the way it was being done.
So then the person who's the under-functioner
maybe didn't start that way,
but they sure as shit didn't start as an over-functioner.
That's so interesting. 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 and strangely intimate things about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner, I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy. A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
So what happens then?
Does the over-functioner have to begin to accept the price of having everything done as well as I can do that, do it.
Is becoming so high on my own self and like this relationship where the other person feels
frozen to try, that now the goal is not going to be an A plus anymore, but it's going to be like a B plus or an A minus
with things that need to get done.
That will kill me because I'm an A plus person,
but it will kill me less than the A plus life is.
I'm trying to rethink that a little bit
because when it all comes down to it,
there's a little bit of hubris, a little bit of fatal pride in even that model of looking at it, which, you know, I'm a strong advocate of that belief system, but I'm trying to adjust it because I realized recently in our relationship,
we were doing something with respect to
the way that my son was behaving.
And I came to a realization about it
that we were not guiding him the way that he should be guided.
That there needed to be a shift in the way
that we were dealing with him in a way that
it was impacting him and his relationship.
So we were letting certain things go.
And this is a whole complicated situation because of his brain structure.
It's very hard to know like how much to really crack down and hold the line and how much
you need to accommodate the way that he was made.
And so that's been a tricky line for us the whole time.
And I came and sat down with John and I was like, oh my god, we've been doing this wrong.
I just came to this realization and we cannot be letting these things slide. We need to stop this
because there's a difference between having the freedom of all of these emotions to feel versus the freedom to act in any way you want. And we have got to help him define the line between
feeling and acting. And he said, oh yeah, I've known that for a long time.
Didn't he listen to our Q&A where you're not supposed to say it after. He did not. He did not.
And it is impossible to overstate my emotional reaction to that because I was so enraged
and felt so betrayed because I felt like, oh my God, I might be fucking up all of this,
but I am at least showing up with what I believe is right,
with like all of my heart and my might
in trying to do what is right that I might find out later is wrong.
But I sure as shit, I'm not doing what I know is wrong
because I'm too afraid to acknowledge it
or bring it up.
And I was so pissed because it just felt like it was like,
you're alone, like not only alone,
but you're sitting over here knowing we're fucked up
and you're going along with it
and you're guiding our children the wrong way,
even though you know it's wrong.
Like it felt so upsetting and and we came to this place of a new understanding
where I realized that my over functioning, my strong wilderness, my, I've known that it's wrong. And also,
I trust you, and you have great ideas, and you seem to think this was right. And also,
this is what ends up happening anyway, is what you think is right, because you think my shit is B plus.
Oh, when he said, I know he meant,
yeah, I've had that hunch.
My opinion is that we have been doing it wrong,
but I just, my pattern is to default to your opinion
because I have trained myself to trust you
even more than myself.
Yeah, yeah, exactly. And so what I realized is that first of all,
it was really helpful for the anti-gastulating because it was like, when I felt like it was just me
at the helm, that's because it was just me at the helm, yeah. And we had this conversation where it was so helpful to hear him say that because it went from a
betrayal of
Him to me and him to our kids to being
The betrayal of the way that we had set up the leadership of our family
to our family
And I had to be like I actually do need
Every one of your ideas and every bit of your wisdom,
whether it looks like pushback or whether it looks like
contribution, we need that because I am not always right
and I'm always think I'm right,
but I am not always right.
And so I need you to come in and be like, no,
not okay, this is what we're doing.
And I'll push back as much as I,
because I know myself and I'm gonna push back on that.
And then we need to end up in a place
that has the benefit of both of our wisdom
because what I've been assuming was an A plus is not.
And it was freeing for me
because I'm not steering the ship on my own.
And it's freeing for him because he's like,
I am responsible for steering the ship.
Yeah.
And so he expressing that to me,
I was like, I need you at the helm of this with me.
I'm not asking you to do the job by standing down
and being a crewmate.
You are a captain. You you to do the job by standing down and being a crewmate. You are a captain.
You need to do this.
And so all of that's a really long way of saying, I am not looking at it as the A plus B
minus anymore.
I'm looking at it like no one has all the answers.
And you need the benefit of the full wisdom to get there.
And then you need to empower.
the benefit of the full wisdom to get there. And then you need to empower people to feel like
their wisdom matters because it actually does.
Yes.
Damn the same.
The job.
You're a holy crap.
Okay, first of all, did he have the same
realizations as you?
I remember in my first marriage,
because I had a situation a little bit like this.
I felt like I was the only one.
I remember saying, I'm gonna run this ship into the ground.
If nobody, like, says anything,
I don't know what I'm doing.
I know if I make a decision,
we're going that way fast,
which makes it even more important
for people who are high functioners,
lots of agency, lots of leadership
to like have a strong person
on the other side. So after that conversation was he tracking with all of those realizations that
you just had? Like would he? Yes. Okay. And he was at first, he did not understand the betrayal part
of it. Okay. And so we got to the place where he's like, I get it. And then I think it was deeply moving to him
to be like, I need you.
There's a level of overfunctioning
that's like who's gonna pick up the kids
and who's gonna make sure we have dog food.
And then there's a level of overfunctioning
that like you said running the ship into the ground,
that's where that deep loneliness
and I think deepest level of resentment comes from
because you're like, I can't handle and don't want
to be in charge of all of this.
I need to know that I am not in charge
and I need to know that I can tap out
and I need to know that you are leading
just as much as I'm
leading. And I think in many ways he was like really eager and ready to stand and be like,
put me in coach here. And he has been and it's and he's been doing it. And I have been checking
myself when it isn't a decision I would make, I have
to be like, well, maybe that's something I haven't thought of. Maybe that's a new way.
We have two children. We have completely different personalities and people. There isn't like
a script that we're trying to follow here. What we're trying to do is raise two people
with two people who are thoughtful. Yeah. And becauseing or marriage or whatever is about like the combination of two
full human beings who are expressing themselves completely like if you're paint and he's paint,
your life is whatever color those two paints make together when they're both pouring themselves
on the page. It's not about right or wrong decisions, right?
Sometimes it's just about seeing the color
of both of you.
So cool.
I also think that in marriage,
you know, the way that I think about the way we kind of operate
is like, Glennon has extraordinary strengths and so do I.
And I am so grateful for her strengths and you're
grateful for mine. But they're just so different. And so each kid is going to require a different
circumstance and a different set of decisions to be made. I'm the daily, you'll get completely
tapped out if you have to be the one that's making all the decisions. I also think it's important
for those listening is to encourage whatever the strengths you see
in your partner embody them and pump them up.
Like be like the freaking motivational.
Like, hey, you know what you're so good at is like this.
And I appreciate this so much.
And I want you to like hold this for us.
And that will, I mean, literally like his brain
will blow up like, I mean, literally like his brain will blow up.
Like, yeah, I think that that's so cool. I also think there's this fantasy that we live in,
where we're trying so desperately to make things be okay for our families that were like,
if I just stay vigilant, if I just do the thing, if I just keep everyone on the same page,
and I figure out what that page should be, and we do it, then things will be okay. And partnership is the hardest shit that I've ever done. And I think
what often happens, at least if you're partnered with someone like me or if you are someone like me,
is that people might be following the page, but it's like you driving it and then it's like a
ghost of a person following the page.
And what you really don't want or need in your life
is a ghost of a person.
That doesn't go well for any damn body.
And so if you try the other way,
maybe there's some shit you wouldn't have written on the page.
Maybe there's some stuff you think is actually wrong.
But then you have a non-ghost.
You have like a full-ass person with all their experiences,
with all their wisdom.
You picked them.
You picked them for a lot of reasons.
Then you're like, I, here's the person I picked.
Please leave all of your experience and all of your insights
and all of everything at the door and jump on my script.
Yeah.
Why?
You're losing the full experience of that person and you have to be humble enough that you don't know all the answers.
And also that like you need wisdom outside of yourself
if only because you are going to be bitter
and strung out and afraid.
I realized how afraid I was in that moment
with that what I thought of as a betrayal.
I realized no wonder I'm afraid
because when I feel like I'm truly
the only one leading this family,
it's because I have set up this family so that I am the one leading this family.
Yes.
And that serves no one.
And I feel less afraid right now.
I feel like I'm like, everybody's on, everybody's focused, everybody's doing the best they
can. And are we going to make mistakes?
Yeah.
But also, we were making mistakes before when I was dictating and everyone was scared and you were alone.
And I was scared just of all.
I was scared just of everyone.
Yes.
Because I knew at a deep level that it was me and I know at a deep level that I don't know everything.
Yeah.
And to all like you and everyone who, like, you give yourself grace for this pattern because
I think what happens is people who have this personality that, whatever we're calling
overfuncturers today, know that that's what they have. So people who like that tend to be drawn to a partner who maybe
is more relaxed or maybe is has a different set of like way of being in the world that offers
a little more chill. And that's what you yearn for. And so you match yourself to that person because
of that thing, because some subconscious part of you thinks
they're gonna add ease, they're gonna add relaxing,
they're gonna add this part.
And then of course we know what happens
when the love drug wears off,
what's left is that thing that you fell in love
with drives you about shit,
crazy and scares the shit out of you
because you're narrative about yourself
that you're the only one that can lead, that you're the only one that can lead,
that you're the only one that can be dependent on you.
And then you see the other person's ease as not caring,
as laziness, and then you forget that's what you wanted.
Yeah, life.
And I think in some cases,
people are genuinely partnered with people who are passive and don't give a shit.
And I think in many cases, people are partnered with people who appear to be passive and don't
give a shit because those people are smart and have read the room and know that what is
happening is what the overfunctional determines is going to happen. And so they polarize into this side where it's like,
well, just gotta like sit tight and support the script.
But when they are invited, when you say to them,
I need you.
Yeah.
I need you to be leading.
I need the benefit of all of you.
You in your full glory not just supporting
what I think but bringing what you think and pushing back on me when what I think is
wrong in your opinion, then they're like, holy shit, great. And then they step up in
a way that you've been wanting them to step up the whole time and wondering why they weren't.
So let's say that in the over functioners who's trying to undo this vicious pattern.
The other partner steps up and does something.
And let's say it's like, I don't know,
something where there's mistakes in it.
Like say it's-
They plan a birthday party.
Okay, they plan a birthday party and it's like sucks to you.
I mean, that's a bridge too far.
Okay, they send an email.
Nobody who's not an overfunctioner is planning a fucking
burn party.
So they send an email.
They send an email.
Yes, they send an email.
Okay, I'll give you that.
Right.
And this email is like, whoa, there's like three typos.
It's got some crap in it.
It's like, you're looking at it because of course,
you've asked to be seaside.
And you're like, this does not
represent because that's still going to come up, right? That the over function like this does
not represent my A plus family. So what does one do? Does one during this exercise of letting go
and whatever? Just the over functioner tried very, very hard to let that go because it's the price of correcting it and shaming it is higher than the price
of allowing a B plus email to go out into the world.
I will say two things. My suggestion to the overfunctioner is that you come to a mutual understanding
with your partner about what the end result will be.
The end result is that we get this kid enrolled in this class.
The end result is that the kid gets a ride home
from baseball practice, okay?
And then you don't wanna to be C.C. on that email. You don't want to see how the
sausage is made. You want to say, deliver me the sausage. And then you just let it go.
But if you don't agree on the final outcome, then saying, make plans for the weekend.
That's that's too much. That's too much. We need to say,
maybe we're going to make plans to get home from baseball. Right.
Great. You got that? That's clearly in your bucket. No ambiguity.
No ambiguity. That is you and not me. Then you just have to let go.
I will say that you have to again, let go of the hubris and imagine that there
is something that is outside of the way that you're thinking that is possible in the way
that you're other person is thinking. So we had a whole thing go down where God bless Johnny Lynch. He was very concerned about the safety of
the bus stops of where our kids were being picked up on the bus stop and there were no sidewalks
and it's a very busy street and he was like, I am dealing with this. And I was like,
oh God, oh, so nervous. We're talking about like principles,
we're talking about like really high up people
in our school system.
I am so afraid.
We're using all of our like family,
at the age and the over functioner thinks
we need to put our best foot forward here
with these people.
Oh my gosh.
What is me?
No, this is like big stakes in my little world.
These are big fix it.
Yes.
He didn't talk to me about it.
He didn't ask me.
All of a sudden emails are flying, all of a sudden.
And I was just like, I have to swallow very deeply.
This is his thing.
He has decided this is his thing.
And he is the parent of these kids and God bless him.
And wouldn't you know that like three days later,
he is a full on solution that every day
when we go to the bus stop, I'm like,
God damn, I would not have gotten this for our family.
Wow.
And the kid's safety was the issue.
Yes.
And so it's just like, that was open to interpretation,
obviously, but his interpretation was strong.
And I just had to let go if I would have done my over-functioning thing where I'd been like,
no, no, no, no, no, this is what we're going to do. That's not important. Here's what's important.
A. it would have stifled his thing where he knew that was something that was important to him
for our family. And B. the outcome wouldn't have outcame.
Wouldn't have outcame.
No.
Do you feel like all of this way in all of your situations?
Do you feel this way at work?
Because you and I are kind of running some family.
You know what I mean?
You and I are in a similar situation to you and John.
I feel like, you know, in our little team, the folks that we have on our team are so accountable
and so trustworthy.
I used to feel like that before Dean and Allison were with us because it just felt like,
oh my god, oh my god, any ball could drop.
And I have to be searching the skies for the balls at all times and making sure they're
not falling.
And I'm so stressed out and I can't sleep.
I know that the two of them are so more than accountable and capable and devoted to their
universe of balls.
And they take care of them completely.
And I don't even think about it. I do think that it is something that pervades
every aspect of my life though. It is such a blessing and such a curse because
the problem with me is I think that everything and everyone is my business.
And the gift of me is that I think everyone and everything is my business.
So that can be obnoxious to other people and it can be obnoxious to yourself when you are taking on the emotional regulation
of everyone within a myel vicinity of you. And it can be a huge blessing because you're seeing
things out in the world that are little things that you can just connect with people and help people
out and be part of the world that you're living in.
So I think it has to be seen as like a really positive thing too.
I think it's really good in a lot of ways.
What are some things that we could do
because we're in a mile of that orbit for you?
What are some things that we can do like John
to be able to share the responsibility with you to make you feel like
We've got this with you to make you less scared and afraid
Or do you feel like you have leaders? Yeah totally totally that happens all the time like recently when we were
planning for my parents 50th, and I wrote to one of
you, I was like, can you handle this itinerary and glad you were back in your like, I think
we should do X, Y and Z. And I'm like, no, that's not what I was asking. I wasn't asking
for your feedback so that I could plan the itinerary. I was asking, could you take this
ball and carry it? And so it took a lot for me to be like, nope, I'm not asking for you to like,
give your edits and give me back the ball.
I'm asking you to like take this ball.
So I don't need to think about it.
And then you guys took it and did the whole thing.
And it was such a huge, amazing relief.
And it was beautiful.
And so I think that it's getting to a place
where you're like, I don't need
to control and monitor and quality control this thing. I just need to know what is mine to do and what is someone else's to do. And then if you can actually give and ask people to do things
and then not control it in the process, then that's what everyone needs.
Cause no one wants to be responsible for things,
but not accountable for them.
Like, let me tell you,
they want to know that theirs are not.
Can I just tell you,
I like walked on air that day that you asked us to take on.
No, she's so excited.
That responsibility.
I was like, sister called me in.
This is so exciting.
Because here's the thing, like,
and I'm sure John can relate.
Like, when you have somebody in your life
that is so good at what they do in so many ways,
when they ask you for help,
that is such a sign of trust.
Like, hey, can you do this thing?
I felt like we got closer.
I don't know.
I really did, and it really touched me.
So I was working really hard and I was like,
doing the photos and I was like, I'm doing this, you know?
And I know that some of my emails are not A plus.
Well, kill.
You're amazing.
Using this as an example for all the PUD Squaddie people
who are trying to work this vibe out
and their lives or their work.
So you asked Abby to do it.
Does the over functioner still want to get in there
at the end and make sure everything's good?
Because you're still doing that, right?
You're still sending me emails.
No, no, what I'm talking about is the trip.
When I was talking about that, I was talking about the trip.
Oh, okay.
Remember the trip that they're going on?
And I was like, can you take their, their, their,
their, their, their for that?
And that's when you were back and we're like,
I think this should be the plan.
And I'm like, great, can you do it?
Yeah.
Like, yeah.
But for that, what we're doing right now,
that I just want to contribute and be like,
what are the last minute things?
Are we buttoned up on this?
Because what I would say about that, from the other perspective.
So, Potsquad, what we're saying is plan to party,
Abby plan the party, sister still,
all, you know, everybody's like contributing,
but Abby's been doing all the emails.
But then at the end,
sister's still stepping in, you know,
lists of things, have we thought of this, this, this, this,
some of which we hadn't thought of,
will make the party better.
But it's still like on our end, and probably not you.
I was probably like, oh, God, are we not doing
what we're supposed to be doing?
A few of the things that you listed in the email,
probably will make the party better,
but probably would have been okay if they weren't there.
So the question is, will it be a new era when you're like, okay, we're going to just,
like they took it, and I'm going to see how it goes. It's interesting. I think there's two things happening there. One is the PTSD of being in relationship with a over-functioner.
Like you're saying, you're like, so is the fact that she's writing this email right now
suggests that we were not doing something or fucking something.
Right.
So that's a whole phenomenon that I get and that's certainly probably very alive in a lot
of relationships. But when I feel like everyone is sharing a load so well,
that's the beauty of the shared load.
That's what makes things magic, right?
Is at the end, these,
because I guarantee if I had been doing that whole thing,
I wouldn't have thought of those little things at the end
that are gonna make it better.
So I don't think it's like,
now I can't touch this thing.
It's like that's the sprinkles
that are possible with capacity
when everyone is carrying it
in a way that isn't possible.
Sometimes, when we're doing something for work
and Allison will have worked 10 hours on something
and then all working hour on it to massage it,
then we take it to you and you're like,
oh, what about this? And sometimes it's like, God damn it, we've it, and then we take it to you and you're like, oh, what about this?
And sometimes it's like, God damn it,
we've been looking at that for 12 hours.
But then it's like, no, it took this process.
Yes.
It's like, we had to get from A to B to make C possible.
And so I think that there's something about that
that's like, that is all necessary and good
to get to the place where you're like,
that's where the magic happens. So you weren't like, dammit, these things aren't done.
No, my God, no, I was like, I'm here, I've got, I haven't done any of this stuff, I want to make
sure I'm contributing to help out with these last minute things. And in the process,
thought of these other little things and added them in.
There was a zero part of that that was like an angsty, resentful thing. It was like a gratitude.
So what as you're working on this with John, our team, the three of us with our parents, what is the dream for the over function or in relationship and in leadership?
What does whatever you're working towards look like?
For the part that you can control, I guess. The total dream and what I think,
John and I are working towards and what I feel now that I didn't feel before is which the
reason I didn't feel before was partly of my own creation is that I am not alone and that I have the of my wisdom and perspective and judgment, and that I have
confidence and trust in whether I am unable to or dare I say unsuitable to a certain thing that it will be done in a way that's in the best interests of our team.
And that's what pieces to me. It's like you can sleep because someone else is carrying the sky with you. Yeah.
That's right.
I remember, so in my first marriage,
I was really confused about money
and I think I still am working out a lot of that stuff,
but I kept throughout our marriage,
giving away all of our money.
We didn't even have a lot of money.
I know it was a teacher,
but I don't know if I had shame or I don't know what it was, but three times.
I remember that. There was that orphanage and...
Yeah, I gave all of our money to...
We gave all of our money to...
Literally all your money to...
All of our money.
Our entire bank account because I found out that they were going to shut down or something.
I don't know.
And blessed Craig's heart, he came home and I was like, this is what we're supposed to do.
And P.S. back then, I was an evangelical Christian accidentally. So it's just different language.
So you got back news, got a message from the judge.
From God.
Say goodbye to your bank account.
How I can argue with that? That's the language I used. I feel called to do this.
Like I feel like what are we, and so then and then I started a preschool in my basement
and I used all of our money every we just saved up again to but luckily the preschool
was so lucrative that way. Yeah, because I promised Craig that we would have students who
would pay, but then I didn't charge anyone. Anyway, I'm not I'm not proud of it. I'm actually
really not I feel like I was confused. I was had to shame about money or whatever. So I just kept emptying, giving it all away.
When Abby and I,
like a year into our relationship,
we were having some kind of money talk
and I brought up this.
And she looked at me and she goes,
I just want you to know that will never happen again.
You will never give away all of our money again.
And I looked at her like someone had saved me.
Someone had saved me from myself.
I don't know why I keep thinking of this moment when you're talking,
but I felt like, yes, thank you. I am not good at this.
Like, I have, and people just let me sink this ship left it right. Yeah. Yeah. If I keep being,
I will burn this ship to the ground. That is what I mean. Just, or this this is why John and I have talked about so much is that the people who are the over
functioners are often labeled as the control freaks and the people who can't let go. And what on
behalf of over functioners everywhere, what I want to say is what we desperately want more than anything is to acquiesce control, to not be in charge of everything.
And whether it's from our own lived experience or whether it's from the circumstances of
the relationships that we have chosen or whether it's from the polarization that we have
enforced on our partners because we have been so over-functioning
that has forced them to the passive end of the spectrum.
We genuinely feel like we cannot give up control.
We genuinely feel like love looks like continuing
to hold up the sky with exactly the same vigor
that we always have done.
And what feels like the greatest offering
you could give someone is to say,
I am here.
You are with me.
You are not alone.
And I am here watching over every step of this with you.
And I am not going to let you make mistakes. I am not going to let you make mistakes.
I am not going to let you be in charge of this whole thing.
That's what we want to hear.
I am not going to let you control this thing forever
because what we want is someone who will be accountable
for it with us.
That's what we want.
Even though it looks like that's the last goddamn thing
we want.
And the person has to say accountability is going to look different.
Your idea of accountability is not necessarily our idea of accountability.
So whereas you might say, I'm going to be on fire today, I'm going to be whatever the
other person might say, I'm going to mistakes and I'm gonna do this my way
and we're gonna get to our goal,
but it might look different than the way that you would do it
and you're just gonna have to be okay with that.
Mm-hmm.
Oh my God, pod squad, just so you know,
that was questions.
That was a rapid fire.
That was a rapid fire, which was only supposed
to be the five minute introduction
to the pod squad questions that we were
going to get to today. So you should have told me the questions in advance. I wouldn't done it
if I had been fired. I'm so grateful. I'm so grateful. I think this idea of overfunging and especially
as a woman because you know men are never called control freak because that's a gender thing.
And like I just I want to hear from the Pod what about this? I want to know if you have ideas for how to make
this a system of like undoing, getting the over function or off the hook a little bit
and creating atmospheres where other people can bring their full selves again, because
they don't feel afraid. And how we can get more people at the helm of the ship so that
everybody can feel safe and less alone. It's a big beautiful deal. And, Sissy, thank you for being
so open. Oh my gosh, of course. I think it's the greatest gift, honestly, of the last year of
our lives, because I, you look also at your partner differently. You're like, I need you. He's the one I need.
I respect you and I trust you and we need you. And also I can breathe because I don't think the happiness and
safety of this family is predicated on me not breathing. Yeah.
dedicated on me, not breathing. Yeah.
So whereas everyone else does a rapid fire,
we do a slow burn.
And that's how slow burn was for you today, Potsquast.
Sissy, I just wanna say to you that your sister and I
love you and we think that you might need to hear from us
that we are a part of this and we've got this together.
I know that girl, you know I know that.
I just want to be clear,
because it seems like the communication bit's really important
and you're a self-awareness.
I just am so happy for you.
I'm gonna delete all my texts I started that say,
I'm just concerned that you seem stressed out.
Ha ha ha.
Do you know what's weird?
A while back, I was getting ready to send you a text
and just Abby was like, what are you doing?
And I literally said, I just feel worried or concerned
or something.
I feel like you're stressed out today.
And Abby goes, don't say the word concerned, sister.
I was like, what? Concerned?
She's like, I just don't, it's just not.
Is that so safe?
Concerned?
Concerned?
It is interpreted as me as there is an additional problem of what you need to be aware and
address.
She said it feels Genji.
Interesting.
Okay, Pod Squad, we are not concerned about you.
You've got this, along with the help of other people who will equally hold the sky with you.
Perhaps we love you.
See you next time.
Bye-bye.
Bye.
Wow.
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