We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Celeste Ng: Why You Feel Stuck
Episode Date: October 6, 20221. What to do when you’ve done everything you were supposed to do and ended up in a place you don’t want to be. 2. Why the question “What do you want?” is terrifying – and how to start ans...wering it authentically for yourself. 3. The power of imagining what does not yet exist in order to make space for new possibilities. 4. The gift of a “midlife crisis” 5. What a mother’s job really is. About Celeste: Celeste Ng is the number one New York Times bestselling author of Everything I Never Told You and Little Fires Everywhere. Her third novel, Our Missing Hearts, is available now. Ng is the recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation, and her work has been published in over thirty languages. TW: @pronounced_ing IG: @pronounced_ing To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. We are here with the incredible Celeste in
I've been really really psyched to have this conversation. Celeste, welcome.
Thank you so much for having me. I'm thrilled to be here.
I have read all of your books, Little Fires Everywhere, and your new book are Missing Hearts,
which my son and I read together. And I will tell you, Celeste, it just feels like all of the things that I'm working out
in my life, or on this podcast, or wherever, in my little heart, all the things I'm wrestling
with, whether it's in my family or in my personal life or in my public self or in activism
or in motherhood, you're just always
working it out in your latest book, which makes me know you're always wrestling with
something like five years before I am.
Which makes me so grateful to you.
And each of your books just feels like this.
It's not answers, but just beautiful explorations of these questions in the form of a character's life and love and
struggles and decisions. I saw this teacher say on Twitter the other day that she was so sick of
students saying that nonfiction was
real and that fiction is fake
that she now says that nonfiction is learning through information and fiction is learning through imagination.
Oh, I love that. Isn't that great? So your imagination has taught me so much. So, last, so thank you for your work in the world. Oh, thank you. That is maybe the nicest thing
that a writer could hear. I write my books always because not because I have answers at all,
but because I'm working through
those same questions, like you said. And so to hear that, you know, that the books reached
you and like resonated with things that you're also wrestling with, that is really the nicest
thing that a writer could hear.
Well, let me just introduce you formally for maybe the three people who are listening who
don't know who you are. Celeste is the number one, New York Times best-selling author of everything I never told
you and little fires everywhere.
Her third novel, Our Missing Hearts, is available now.
Ng is the recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim
Foundation, and our work has been published in over 30 languages.
Celeste, what I really want to talk to you
is about some of the themes that are throughout all of your books,
because many of the themes that we're wrestling with
on we can do hard things all the time.
So I thought we could start with a just easy,
easy, non-flammable, simple topic, which is whiteness.
And whiteness.
That's it. Easy, you know, small little, heavy-dum
for minutes. We'll just start with a soft felt. So maybe we could start by talking about
Elena from Little Fires everywhere, because in that book and then in the series that was
on Hulu, Elena was a character that just sparked, so to speak, lots of conversation. Can you talk to us about how you would describe Elena as a character?
I would say that Elena really has good intentions.
I feel like that sort of first and foremost are thing that she does.
She means well and she wants to do right.
And the problem that she runs into is that it's really difficult to know
sort of what your own unseen spots are,
what your own biases are.
And that's true for everyone.
But I think it becomes a real difficulty
if you are in a position where you have a lot of power
and authority and you don't know what those sort
of unseen spots are.
And I should say up upfront that I really,
I love Lena as I love Mia, you know,
sort of her counterpart in Little Fire's everywhere.
They're both really parts of me
and I feel that struggle as well,
even though I'm not a white woman.
I'm a Chinese American woman,
but that idea of like, I wanna do right.
And I know what's right.
And it's the moment when I say that, where I go, wait, do I?
I need to think carefully.
And that's, I think that's such a hard thing for anybody to do, right?
And in, in Little Fire's everywhere, I think Elina doesn't, she doesn't quite get all
the way there.
She doesn't stop to go, wait, do I know what somebody else's life is like?
Do I know what's actually best for them?
And that's, they're in sort of lies part of the struggle for her.
And that's part of what I think gets her into into trouble. Yeah. And I see myself in Elena.
So when I talk about white women, I'm talking about myself. I once described myself as a dormant
volcano with lipstick on. And I feel like Elena has this mask and you're waiting for her to explode.
And there's just like this lava running inside. And it feels like it's this bind of white
womanhood, which is what you said is that anger is dangerous when you have power. But where the
anger comes from is the place where you don't really have power. You're pissed off at the people, the man who lives in your house, like a lady's husband,
who gets to go out and do all the things.
Is that bind something that you are exploring in that character?
It absolutely is.
And I think that's so right.
I mean, one of the things that I think fiction can do if it's working well, is it can
make us aware of both of those things that feel like their contradictions, but they're both true.
And both of those things exist, right?
Like there are super valid reasons for many people, including white women, to be angry.
There are a lot of things that they have to deal with.
But then there are also other things that I think that often many white women are not aware
of, just as many other groups
are not aware of them.
And those two things don't cancel each other out, right?
It's not like because you have one,
you get a pass for the other
or because you are dealing with this thing,
you should be absolved from another.
They're just both there.
And I guess sort of, really what we're talking about
is just sort of recognizing kind of the intersections
of all of our different identities and the ways that sometimes you have power like you
said, sometimes you have things you're angry about and then in other places you don't.
And sorting that out, I feel like is part of sort of the experience of being human.
Yeah.
And like who you take that anger out on.
Because what's so interesting about Elena and the white woman thing is we're pissed off.
We're not exactly sure why.
We're pissed off at white men, I think.
And we know our lack of power that way.
So instead of directing our anger in the right direction,
we direct our anger at who, at Mia,
is this what was going on between Mia and Elena?
I think that's part of it,
is that she recognized that Mia in some ways
had certain freedoms that she,
she Elena didn't have and wanted to have,
but had chosen not to have or that weren't available
because it was kind of a person that she was. But at the same time, I think it's really easy to conflate those other feelings
of jealousy or of longing or wishing that you had that or of regret of choices that you
made that you might now make differently with what you know. it's easy to conflate that, I think, with sort of other
aspects of people. Like you said, I'm mad about these things. I'm mad about, you know, Elena
is, I think, mad about a system in which, because she chose to have children, her career
was forced to be put at home, or because she is a woman, she is not taken as seriously
as her male colleague, or she's not afforded these different rights, right?
She's angry about a lot of things that are completely valid.
But, if she directs it towards those systems, there's that sense of almost futility,
there's that sense of like, I'm just going to run into that wall and stop.
And it starts to leak out into other places.
At Mia, at her children, at other people's problems
that maybe aren't about hers,
but that suddenly becomes her for a representative.
And I do think that happens in life.
That happens to a lot of people.
It's funny, because I think anger,
at least for me in my own experience,
like when I get mad about things,
it's sort of like this opaque fog that comes in.
I don't know what I'm mad about.
Am I mad at my husband?
Am I not mad at my husband?
Am I mad at my wife?
What am I mad at?
And then I'm like, oh, sometimes I am mad at them.
But sometimes I'm mad at something larger
that is not necessarily they're doing or they're fault.
And it's hard to know what to do with that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That theme runs through all of your work, I feel like in everything I never told
you something that was fascinating to me was the Betty Crocker cookbook that was handed
down from mother to daughter.
It was actually based on your mother's Betty Crocker cookbook that you know, she came
over and she was 22 from Hong Kong.
But in addition to the recipes that it had,
it also had these quotes throughout
that told women what to want.
These ideas of this is how you reach your peak fulfillment
as a woman.
So one of them was,
is there any satisfaction more intense
than looking at a set of jellies and preserves you made yourself?
Oh, f**k.
So like these cookbooks are telling women what they should want.
And of course, women's inability to find their fulfillment in those things is what
for Dan called the problem with no name.
And just as you're saying Celeste, with this moment that we're in right now,
it does feel like so many women in this country have this anger that they don't know
exactly what it's about.
And still, in this moment, the question, what do you want to a woman might be the most
terrifying question that can be posed?
And so we don't want Betty Crocker to tell us,
but we're not real sure we can answer it.
And so in this moment where we have the ability
to fulfill our potential ostensibly,
there is still this problem with no name that is different.
Do you know what it is?
What are for our generations?
What is that?
What is the problem with no name of right now?
Yeah, I think you're really on to something there.
I don't absolutely can't claim to have the answers.
Although I wish I did, but I think you're right on in saying that part of it is that we
know what we don't want.
We don't want that.
We don't want things the way they are.
We know there is a problem, but because we haven't yet made it through to whatever is beyond
that, we don't know what's there.
It's hard to know what we do want because we don't exactly know what's possible.
Like, I have a lot of sympathy for the women of Maryland's generation.
That's the mother and my first novel who's got the Betty Cracker cookbook because in
a way, they knew enough to know that they
didn't want what they had.
They didn't want just the jars of jams and jellies.
They didn't want the, here's six ways to make an egg behave so you can make your husband
happy because obviously you need to have a husband to be happy.
And then obviously you need to make him happy by making him eggs the right way, right?
Like there's so many layers in there.
Maryland in my mind, she had experienced enough to know that's not fulfilling me. But at the time, there
wasn't another possibility. And so in a way, what she was running up against was sort of
this, this gap where what she wanted, as you said, there wasn't a space for it yet. She
hadn't even imagined that it's hard to imagine something that doesn't exist, right?
And maybe one of the things that we're talking about here
is this sense that, I guess we want to put a name
to it, we can call it patriarchy,
and particularly white patriarchy.
We're starting to realize that system doesn't serve many of us.
It doesn't serve white women, it doesn't serve women,
it doesn't serve queer people, it doesn't serve anybody
who's not, I mean, it basically only serves white men. But we don't really
know what system could replace that because we haven't done that. And so I think we're in this hard
period of trying to imagine a new space. And that's hard. Coming up with new things is hard.
And especially when we've never seen that before,
we've got ideas of what it might look like.
But that's one of the reasons that I love fiction,
both writing it, but also reading it
is that I feel like fiction has almost like a door stop
that kind of wedges the door open.
It doesn't necessarily give you an answer.
It might.
It might give you ideas, but it's just kind of holding open a space where new
stuff could come in.
And it's kind of saying to you, yes, things can be different.
We don't know exactly what it is yet, but it could be different.
Maybe it would look like this, maybe it would look like that, but there's a possibility
that the way things are now is not the way that things have to be. Because I think that, you know, like Glenn and what I hear you saying is like that's,
in a way that's a position of powerlessness of saying, we're in this system,
we don't know what to do about it and it feels like then there's nothing to do.
And I, you know, I certainly have felt that way myself. And one of the reasons that I keep
turning to, you know, to fiction, but also just art generally music and poetry is that I feel like it kind of reminds me like okay people have gone
through something like this I'm not alone which is also such a parrow is feeling and then also it's
reminding me like oh maybe there could be something else it's just holding is like putting a little placeholder in for what we can imagine later.
It feels so important to enter that space of maybe what could be through art.
And then I think there's also a space of just at least knowing not this, like figuring
out what is the sandbox that you're being put in.
Because when my kids were little and they were bugging me, I would just put them in the space.
Like we have this little space,
like some plastic things.
I'm like build a thing.
And to me it feels like as women or any marginalized group
has to figure out like what's the sandbox you're being put in
because that Betty Crocker was just a sandbox
and that sounds ridiculous,
make a perfect egg to some of us,
that will bring fulfillment.
But like what's that version of ourselves now?
Because all of the, you know, freaking house obsession,
decorating every corner of our house perfectly.
And I'm obsessing with that, or body as project.
Beauty as project.
It's all just another Betty Crocker cookbook.
It's just putting us in the sandbox,
so we're not concentrating on the real stuff.
It's fake power.
Yeah, I think that's a really interesting way
of looking at it.
And that's right.
It's sort of this sense that in a sense,
it's almost like saying, here are the rules of being a woman
or being a person called whatever your situation.
Here's the rules.
So if you just do all these things, work within these parameters,
or as you said, sort of
be in that little sandbox, and you do all those things right, you follow the recipe, you
will find fulfillment, right?
And in a sense, I feel like maybe we are questioning is the whole idea that there is a series of
rules that can universally be applied and provide everybody fulfillment, right?
Whether it's make your eggs right or you know decorate your house perfectly
or get the perfect skin, whatever it is that you're doing, right? That's...
Have it all. Exactly. Have it all. I was like, we need to talk about, you know, the whole
things about parenting and the ways that you're supposed to be, you know, everything should be perfect
all the time for your child and we want that, but we're also human.
And I feel like that's not possible.
Right.
All those ideas in a way, sort of saying like this, this might not be possible.
It's not that there can be one set of rules that is going to make everyone happy.
And I think that could be kind of a scary thing because in a sense, if there's no formula
that you can follow to do it, what do you do?
There's no guideline for you in a way, and you have to figure out what it's going to
be for yourself, and that's scary, I think.
What do you want?
The terrifying question.
And that's why Alina is so pissed to me.
So let me tell you why Elena's so pissed, okay?
She's so pissed because she did the sandbox. She went in there. She followed all the rules that they told her she won.
She has the perfect, she has the huge house.
She has the husband. She and her rage comes from the discovery that it was all
a lie. And that none of that was going to make her happy.
But her relaxed reluctance to give it up is because that's the bind of white womanhood.
It's like, I'm pissed because it's not what they promise me,
but I don't wanna give up my safety and protection.
Yeah, I think that's dead on it.
And I think that's real too, because in a sense,
you're like, I'm realizing that all of the stuff
that I was told I was supposed to be doing,
actually not a lie, not bringing me to film it.
But then what?
Right?
It's almost the feeling of like, is that all there is, right?
You're just like, then what?
And then you're like, do I just go off into the unknown?
I think that's part of why Mia is so threatening to Alina
because in a way, Mia has thrown all these conventions out.
She's like, fine, I'm not going to play my own heavy rules. I'm going to live out of my car. I'm going to gov and give me a single
mother. I'm going to do these things. I'm going to embrace art and weirdness and all those things
that Alina has held at a distance because she thought that was the way. And in a sense, you know,
to Alina to say, well, I can't do that. So then what am I left with? I'm stuck here.
Right, I'm stuck in the sandbox.
And that's a huge bind and that's real.
And it's a question that so many women
are asking themselves right now.
Absolutely. 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.
And I was like, girl, why 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.
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Wherever you get your podcasts.
Maybe some people are smarter or work faster than I do, but it feels like a question of like the late 40s and 50s because you already tried whatever your sandbox was.
Yeah.
And it didn't work.
Yeah.
And so you're what next thing?
You're on the abyss of the of time. And it's also because we all deserve more grace
than we give ourselves probably.
To a certain extent, it wasn't wrong to try the sandbox, right?
Like you don't know what doesn't work for you in a sense
until you try that and you're like,
oh, and then maybe there's some parts of the sandbox
that I really like.
There are some parts of it that are great.
Other parts not so much, but like it takes time,
I think to figure that out.
And it is that question of like, what do we do next?
And especially if you are reaching a stage
where your children are older or your career has been
somewhat established to think about letting go of that
is a real risk.
And I think, you know, this is your stereotypical
like midlife crisis kind of time, which in the movies,
it's like, man, Quits' job decides to become a surfer and buys a sports car. It's that
sense of like, it wasn't that, so I'm going to scrap it and start again. And I think again,
for many people, and especially maybe for women and women who are raising children, you
don't feel like you can let go of that. And because we're not men, we don't have in some ways the power to do that.
Right?
They can kind of get away with doing that,
not to say there's not fallout.
But that like we don't have all the same ability
to chuck it all out the window
and pull a Don Draper and get in the car
and drive to California kind of situation.
Mm-hmm. Yeah, for whatever reason it is, there'll be a hell of a lot more sports cars because it
isn't because everyone isn't feeling it.
Right.
Yeah.
Because there are barriers to entry to the sports car surf or light.
That's exactly right.
And part of that, I think, is that as women, we're often told like your job is to take
care of people. And so again, that idea of like, well, what think, is that as women, we're often told, like, your job is to take care of people.
And so, again, that idea of, like, well, what you want is an important.
It's all about what other people want, what other people need.
And then you get to a point in your life, whereas you were saying, what do you want?
Is a really terrifying, terrifying question to be asked?
Because you don't always know how to answer it.
And if you do know how to answer it, sometimes you can't have that.
That's why it's terrifying.
Why would you even wanna entertain it?
If you know, it's never gonna happen,
that would make it worse.
Exactly.
And I think, you know, to go back to Alina,
I think that's part of her way of coping with this
is to say, oh, that is not an option or that's bad. I don't want that
because if I admitted that I wanted that, it would in a way be admitting that I can't have it.
And that's sort of it's just easier to be. It's like the old like eSupp's fables, like the
sour grapes, like, oh, well, I can't reach those grapes, but I didn't want them anyway. They were
going to be sour. It is a self-protection thing. And so I do feel, you know, I feel a lot of sympathy
for Elena and, you know, for all the characters
who feel stuck in that bind.
It's a hard place to be in, and it's a place
that I think many of us find ourselves in in one way or another.
I think something that is so powerful about those sour grapes
and about what do I want.
I feel like a lot of this generation of women with any amount of privilege that have grown
up.
The myth has been, you can have all the things that you want.
And so that no one will say out loud that that is a lie.
And I think Celeste, one of the beautiful things
I heard you say as you're talking about your son,
you love your son, you would never trade that for anything.
And yet, there are things that you cannot have.
There are things that you cannot do.
There are choices, and I think that's even part of it.
We have to in our heads kind of vilify the alternative.
We're more comfortable with that as like the Mia situation. We're more comfortable
vilifying or or shaving that other thing instead of just admitting to ourselves. Yeah,
I would actually like to have that too, but I can't have that because I have this.
Yeah. I think that's so true. I have a good friend of mine from like grade school
on his father used to irritate him
throughout our entire like adolescence.
And it went to adulthood and still now by saying
life is choices.
Anytime he ran up to something his father would say
to him, life is choices and it became a joke.
And now I say that to my kid because of like,
you know, your uncle so and so,
and he says life is choices.
But it's true. I mean, in a way, it's it's sort of what you're talking, but which is not just saying like,
oh, well, that's bad. You can't have it or you didn't, but just to say you can't have it all.
And that is so counter to what I was hearing when I was a teenager.
For the best of reasons, I grew up in the age of girl power, right? Where they're like,
yes, you can be sexy, but you can also be super tough.
And you could be in a rock band, but also you could be eat it like all of the things.
You can you can have a career and also have as many children as you want.
And I get why that was the message.
And what I don't think it was a bad thing in and of itself,
because you do want people to feel that these are options to them, but
It is also that idea like you might just might have to choose something. Yeah, you can't always have them and it doesn't mean that
One is better than the other are wrong, but just that taking one path will mean that you cannot walk down the other path
And important to acknowledge that because if you have a a theme also that I love so much, which is this whole idea of like the road not taken and when we haven't examined that and.
And embrace the end both of that we can totally put it on our kids again with a lane she gave up her career she gave up her ambition and then she drove Lexi crazy
then she drove Lexi crazy by pushing her towards perfectionism.
So that road not taken in motherhood feels like an important theme with your work.
Yeah, I feel like what it comes down to for me
is almost just sort of acknowledging
that we are humans and we're finite and we're flawed
and limited and those aren't bad things
that that is just part of against sort of what being human is. It means you cannot do everything and you cannot
do everything perfectly. And you're not even going to want to do everything. And then that
that has to be okay, right? In a sense, it's like saying that you are not this abstract superhero
who can do all the things, but that you're going to make choices. And that is natural and normal and okay.
And you might have some regrets, but you'll also get some good things, right? In a way,
it's like you said, it's making it instead of an ear or it's sort of making it a, you know,
yes and or a butt and your, I don't know if that's a thing.
We've been working on it. It is now. It is now. It is now, it's the less says it is, it's, it's sort of like
normalizing the idea that you again, I just keep playing back to like your human being,
you can't do all those things. And I feel like there's been a very long time in which we've
asked people and particularly women to be superhuman. And we've held that up as the goal.
And if you are not packing a perfect bento
lunch for your kid and also cheering all of the school committees and also, you know,
making partner at your law firm and also caring for your aging parents and have a beautiful
house, then you somehow failed, right? And I feel like normalizing that is sort of part
of the work we're doing. Which is saying like, let's give ourselves some grace because
Would you actually want to be that superhuman person?
I don't know. It not only does it sound tiring, but it sounds like you're not a person anymore.
Yeah, you're just this kind of entity
Robotic. Yes, you're humanity.
You're humanity is stripped from you. And I feel like that's what happens
Humanity, your humanity is stripped from you. And I feel like that's what happens
when women are asked to take on myriad roles,
is because you are rolling, rolling, rolling, rolling,
and you're not humaning at all.
So when you say you're a human being,
you can't have everything.
That can feel terribly depressing
or can feel incredibly liberating.
You don't have to. You are human beings.
Yeah.
You can't do everything.
So stop.
It's not possible.
Yeah.
Congratulations.
Yeah.
Sit down.
Right.
Yeah.
And I like that idea of thinking about it as empowering.
And I should say that even as I say this,
I struggle to think about that way myself
because I am still like, I need to do this.
And I need to do that.
And then oops, I forgot to put this. And I need to do that.
And then oops, I forgot to put this form in my kids backpack when he went off to school
this morning.
And I also didn't do this.
And my husband had to cook dinner last night because I was too tired and I could not
get it done.
And I felt like a failure.
You know, all these things that we feel like we need to live up to.
In a way, like you say, if you just accept like, okay, I cannot do all those things.
I should stop trying to do all those things
because it is physically not possible.
The next step for me is also saying,
and that's okay because I'm not alone in this.
Yeah.
And I feel like that's running under a lot of what we're talking
about, like when I think about Alina
in Little Fire's everywhere,
I think about Marilyn and everything I never told you,
I think both of them
feel very isolated. They feel like they are the lone safety net that's there to catch everybody.
And I think that's that's really destructive and it's also really hard. And if instead you say,
okay, but I am part of a team. I have a partner who can pitch in when I am stretched thin. Hopefully that's true or I have friends who can do
this or it's okay because the teacher at school, make sure my kid does not go hungry even
though I forgot to put his lunch in his backpack or whatever it is. The sense in a way of being like,
I'm not alone. I am in a community and that we there is is a we, first of all, and that we're in it together.
I feel like then can become incredibly bolstering and can be a way of being stronger and of
recognizing like the strength does not have to come on an individual basis.
It can come as a collective.
I think as a society like we Americans are bad at thinking about collectives.
We are good at thinking about individuals.
We are bad at thinking about a team and a group.
But I think maybe shifting from that kind of thinking can be one way of lifting some of that burden off of each individual person's shoulders of recognizing the world will not end
because I cannot do all these things because as you said, you know, Amanda, I'm a human and I can
only do so much.
Other people are also there and we will help each other. For me, that's what I'm trying to change my mindset too, because I think it's
it's ultimately a more sustainable way of being.
And it's better parenting. It's better parenting because that's exactly what we want our kids to know
and believe and live as, right? Right. We want them to not have to feel like they have to be perfect.
We want them to live without shame and burden and martyrdom.
So then why are we doing it and calling that good mother it?
Yeah, that's so right, because I feel like what are the things we're trying to teach
our kids in school and in life?
Trying to teach them, get along with other people.
Work as a team.
Ask for help when you need it.
If you're going to win a game, great, win graciously. If you need it. If you're gonna win a game great, win graciously,
if you're gonna lose a game,
be a good sport, lose graciously in a sense,
which you're trying to teach them to do,
is to be with other people
and to be part of a society, right?
Whether it's the society of their team
or their school or just the largest society.
And so one of the things that I'm trying to walk the walk
as well as talk the talk, and it's hard,
but I'm trying to sort of normalize for my kid
that I am fallible and that I make mistakes.
And so he's delighted when he catches me in a mistake.
He's also, he's like kind of a tween,
so we're getting into some tween things.
He's like, why'd you do that thing?
How commuting, and I'm like,
oh, you're totally right, you're like,
because I forgot. And he's like, oh, you're totally right. You're like, because I forgot.
And he's like, he's made this look like,
I don't know, you could forget.
I'm like, yeah, because my brain is tired.
Because I got a lot of stuff going on.
But thank you for reminding me.
In a way, I am trying to think of it as also empowering him
to be part of this group.
And not just to be like, you gotta hold it all together.
And if anyone ever sees any sign of weakness, you failed because that is, that's a really
hard way to be.
You can't hide your weaknesses forever and feeling like you have to in a way is what gives
us, you know, the kind of strong man figure that pretends that he's infallible and knows
everything and without him everything will crash.
I'm the only one, right?
It's not always a man.
It's often a man.
It's often a man.
I think it's not always, but yeah.
Just usually.
When you said that about your son pointing out your mistakes,
I had this really powerful moment the other night,
because you're saying we're teaching them to be in a society.
Part of that is calling those societies and groups
to a higher standard and seeing what is wrong
and not just conforming to that society, but saying,
but why?
And why not this?
I was laying in bed with my son the other night
and he asked a very pointed question about how our family was doing something and said basically like why why are we doing it this way? A, he's exactly right. That is not the best
our family can do. And B, he is deciding that he is safe enough in this family
to call it out. And that he cares enough about this family to want us to do
better and to call us to that higher standard. And I was just like, thank you.
It's like, isn't it a James Baldwin quote?
Like, I love my country.
And because I love my country, I will criticize it relentlessly.
Like that's love.
That's bringing your guys to make it better.
I think that's exactly right.
It's sort of like you've internalized those principles so much that you can then say,
Hey, we're not we're not doing what we're supposed to be doing. That's one of those like parentary
moments where you feel like the clouds open up and says,
Oh, like, you know, you feel like you're like, Oh,
it this is the moment that I've been trying to get to you, right?
Right, but that's exactly clear. It wasn't the first my first reaction was like fragility. How dare you
criticize me.
I even working my ass off all day.
Like I get one thing wrong.
Oh my God, like go to sleep.
You know.
And then all of our first reaction.
That's all of our first reaction.
That's like white fragility.
That's all of it.
That's the knee jerk control, control, control.
If we could get past that, we get to the fact that the criticism
was a gift of trust and of the belief that what is most important to us is not control
but doing our best. And now looking like a certain thing but actually being it. Yes.
Yeah. That's such a good point. I mean, it is. It's that's your natural first reaction.
You're like, stop telling me that I made a mistake. I know I made a mistake. And you're
like, okay, but I did. My husband and I have this joke that I'm like
We should have a course like in high school or a college or maybe just every year where you just you practice
Apologizing you practice just owning your mistakes and you just practice going oh
Sorry, I did not mean to do that. I won't do it again
And then you move on because I feel like that is a thing again that like we don't really
know how to do.
There's a sense that if you make a mistake or if you apologize or you admit that in any
way you were wrong, that you've seated some kind of important territory.
And I feel like that prevents everything that could come after that.
It prevents all of the learning that we could do, right?
Prevents you from actually addressing the problem that this person pointed out.
And then it also prevents you from not doing this
again in the future.
And it's hard.
Like, I really hate being wrong, really hate it.
I don't think anybody is like, I would love being wrong.
But in a way, sort of like when my son was younger,
he wouldn't want to ever admit that he was wrong.
And I'm like, just say sorry and move on.
Just say sorry.
Just move on. Right? That's when it works when they they're five and you get older, you have to do a little
bit more. Yeah. It's like, it's not a huge injury to yourself. Not saying you're a bad person.
It just means you didn't mean to do that and that you're sorry. Just move on.
Yes. And I feel like if we had to do that for like one, you know, like one semester every month
for every year we went to school. Maybe it would feel,
maybe it would feel less hard, but it is, it's hard. And I thought colleges.
I thought colleges doing that in my third grade class last I thought I taught college.
You did sure did. That's like I wish I wish that were taught like every and every year too
because I feel like you just need to know how to do that. I mean, half the arguments that I have with my husband, they are not important
arguments, but they're one or the other of us just needs to apologize and move on.
And I know, but I was right to do that because you didn't turn over the laundry at the,
you know, there's all we really need to do is you're right.
I totally should have done that.
I'm sorry.
Try not to do it again.
Yes.
And then we could move on, but we get stuck on the little bump of the apology. Yeah. I love that you taught that to your class. Did they get it? Yeah. So I was using
this beautiful way of teaching. I think it was called like responsive classroom or something, but
they did, they taught us that we should teach the kids how to do apologies of action, which I think
about all the time. So it's like not enough to apologize. You have to do something or make it right.
Because if something's broken, you have to fix it. So there was a bunch of different ways we would do it.
But yeah, I mean, it's amazing what we don't teach kids. Like I've had to spend a million years
teaching my kids about hieroglyphics, which are great. They also might want to learn how to, you know,
deal with their emotions. Yeah, relationships.
One of the things that I'm really happy that my son is learning in his school is they have,
they have a health class and a large part of that is sort of socio-emotional learning.
Basically, they literally sit down and talk about like self-esteem and how to deal with what
happens if someone says something to you that hurts your feelings.
On the one hand, I'm kind of tickled by the fact that like there is a curriculum about this. But then on the other hand, I'm like, no, that's really important. Like you need to know what to do
if somebody hurts your feelings, you need to talk about things like consent, right? You need to,
you know, in all kinds of ways. Like if someone wants to play with you and you don't want to play
with them, you don't have to do it. You can be nice about it. But you write, I mean, even that level of consent,
it does, it feels like these are the sorts of things that in a way they allow us to do all those
other larger conversations. That's right. We don't have those. It's really hard to, you just,
you get caught up in the feelings of it and you can't get to the part where you can actually sort of
learn and learn and grow.
I'm dying to talk to ask you about armisting hearts. I freaking love this book's last.
I love it so much.
I cannot believe that you're releasing it at this moment.
It's just like you always know exactly what we're gonna need
two years now.
You know, I could summarize it and tell you exactly
what it's about, Celeste, but maybe I should let you.
In case you have differing opinions,
in case I'm possibly wrong.
Can you just now, for the listener, tell us what it's about and why it's so important
right now because it is so important right now.
So, Armisting Hearts is the story of a 12 year old boy named Bird, it's his nickname in
the family.
And he's living in an America that's really governed by fear.
And in particular, there's a lot of anti-Chinese sentiment.
There's been a lot of social and economic turmoil
and the Chinese are the scapegoat of this.
And as a result of this, there are new laws in place
that say that anyone who's seen to be acting un-American can have their
children taken away from them. And in particular, this is often applied to East Asian families
or anybody who's sort of speaking out on their behalf. And when the novel opens,
Bird's mother Margaret, who is a Chinese-American woman, his father's wife, she's left the family
some years before kind of in the wake of all of these laws.
And he doesn't know a lot about her,
but he gets a letter from her.
And it kind of leads him to want to try to find her again.
And he kind of goes on this quest to find her
and to understand what happened to her
and why she left the family.
And then also sort of how he can keep going
in this world that is really kind of frightening and dark, how he can hold on to hope. So for me,
it's really a story about parents and children and how you can still give hope to the next generation
and whether or not the actions of one person can actually make a difference
even when it feels like the world is a very dark place. And it just asks such beautiful questions
about what is a mother's responsibility? Like in a crumbling democracy, in a hurting world,
what is a mother's responsibility? Is it just to stay home and make things as perfect as possible as the world crumbles?
Is it just to prepare the child for the world?
Is it to go out in the world and change the world for the child?
Is it just the responsibility of the child in your home or is a mother someone who
nurtures and heals all children?
I mean, yeah, it's big.
And these are the questions that I've been asking myself over, you know, the past few years and particularly during the pandemic. I'm thinking about these
questions like, what should I be doing? I mean, as a writer, especially when the pandemic first
hit and everything was closed down, I was thinking like, I feel really useless. I'm here in
my office. I'm really lucky, really privileged. I get to make up stories about people that don't
exist and tinker with words. And if I were a doctor, you know, if I had I gone to med school,
I could be out there, you know, trying to save people's lives and instead hear him in my little office with my computer.
And I felt very helpless and also useless.
And I started asking myself these questions, is there any role that art can play in trying to make the world into a better place,
especially in the face of these really huge kind of abstract global problems, like a pandemic, or like global warming,
or bigotry, right?
They feel so massive that as one person,
it feels very difficult to do anything about it.
And I was thinking about this, of course, as a parent too,
like you're saying, Glenn,
and how do I prepare him for this?
What is my job?
Should I just make a safe space for him here,
which feels important, and I don't think that's wrong. Just say this is a place where you will
be safe. Is it important for me to try and make you aware of what is probably going to be out there
for you in the world? Maybe also, yes. Right? Is it important for me to try to change that?
Yeah, maybe also, yes, maybe all of these things. And how do you reconcile that? And so that's very
much one of the questions
that Margaret Bird's mother in the book
is trying to figure out is what is her job,
what does she need to be doing, and what can she do?
It's a dramatic response or it's in conversation with
or it's to the other women in your books.
She's so far out of the sandbox.
Like maybe we can't do all the things because we're
doing the wrong things. But maybe if we reject all the sandboxes of white supremacy and patriarchy,
we find those three things that you just said. Maybe that's what's next is changing the world.
next is changing the world. One thing that I found so amazing in this book is that even your frontliners are librarians. Like that's so wild right now. I mean, I know that I always are,
but right now the librarians are the ones who are protecting the written word, protecting
marginalized communities who write. that's so amazing.
Yeah, I wish that, you know, reality we're not bending closer to the novel, but it's, I mean,
part of that comes out of the fact that I feel like librarians have always been unsung.
Yes. I grew up going to public libraries with my parents and I even as an adult, I will take my
laptop to the library and work and I hear and see sort of what the librarians are doing.
And their job is really, if you want information, I will help you try to get it.
It doesn't really matter what it is.
You need to do your taxes.
I will help you figure out which forms you use and help you find the right books to fill
it out.
And I'll help you figure out where to send it.
If you need to get on the internet, if you're questioning your sexuality and you want to read more, I'll help you find some books that maybe will help you sort that out. And I'm not going
to tell anybody because this is your information. There was one time that I was at the library and I
sat near the reference desk and I heard the reference library and coaching someone on the phone
to get directions from where they were to someplace which turned out to be actually quite close
by on Google Maps and spent 20 minutes walking through how to do this. And in the end,
finally, I was like, would it be easier for you if I just told you the directions and you
could just write them down? This is sort of small silly story, but the sense in which
they're like, if you want to know, that's enough for me. I'm going to try and help you.
It makes sense in a way that in this
world, the librarians would be the ones who are like, there's information that you need,
you are trying to find out, you know, what's going on in this world, how to fix it. I'll
help you with that. And it makes sense that in our real world, the librarians are the ones
who are like, no, I think it is important that children or people, not always even children,
but just public libraries are under attack too. They're like, it is important that children or people, not always even children, but just you know, public libraries are under attack too. They're like, it is important that people
be able to access this information. And so in a way, it's sort of like, of course,
they're the ones who are going to be the front line. We just don't think of them as heroes like that.
My husband works for the trucking industry and it's always fascinating because they are
a leading indicator of the economy. Because when people buy less
companies ship less, the economy is turning down. That's how banning books is. You know, like banning
books is a leading indicator of a really dangerous, powerful ideology that's coming. If you're not
paying attention to the banning of the books,
you are not taking care of your future self
because that's just the leading indicator.
Like it is coming.
They are the people protecting people's desire
for information, which is power.
So they're removing the power
and the librarians are the warriors trying to keep
our ability to have power through information.
So scary.
["The World of the World"]
So how do you talk to your little boy about surviving
and thriving in America?
How do you, because it's three, you said,
it's three parts you're making a safe space for him.
Your art is out in the world.
This book is going to open hearts and minds, 100%.
So you've done that.
Check, check.
So the middle one.
It's in the rest now.
The middle one.
How do you prepare your son for all of the macro
and microaggressions he will experience
in America?
It's really hard.
I think that many families and black families in particular have wrestled with this for
a long time, but the idea that you have to have a talk at some point and you have to kind
of lay out for your child.
Here's how the world tends to work and here are the things you have to be careful of.
And they're sort of warring impulses,
at least in me, a feeling like,
I don't want to tell you these things.
I want to keep you protected as long as I can.
Right?
Because you don't want to tell your child,
hey, so there's some people out there
who are going to want to hurt you.
Nobody ever wants to tell their child that.
But at the same time, I also worry,
if I don't tell you this, I don't want you
to learn it out there. I don't want you to learn this when something happens, right? And
so it's a sort of delicate balance. And I feel really lucky that I have a kid who is pretty
milled, but he does think about these things. And so when we've talked about this, so for
example, when the Black Lives Matter movements started taking off and we were
talking about what happened to George Floyd, I tried to explain it in sort of age-appropriate terms.
And also yet to give him a sense of like, hey, these are things that happen. They've been happening for a long time and we're trying to fix them, but this is kind of the ongoing work that we need to do.
Even though you're not Black, this is something that affects all of us, right?
And then to talk to him a little bit about experiences that I had with racism, so that he
has a sense of what's out there and not to scare him, but just to, to slowly kind of paint
in the context around the world that he's got. Like, I think when you're a young child,
you've got like a small world, and then as you get older, you zoom out like your aperture gets wider and your picture gets bigger and it fills in more
around the outside. And if you zoom out too fast, sometimes you get kind of whiplash, but if you kind
of gently paint in more and more of the picture, I don't know that I'm doing it right for sure.
But you know, I think that sort of the struggle that many parents have is how do you kind of balance
what they can handle with what they need to know.
And it's very slowly kind of talking about it as it comes up, but also talking about
it.
It would be way easier to just be like, well, it's just talk about the movie that we watched
and not talk about this over dinner.
But sometimes we do.
And I'm fortunate that my partner or dinner, sometimes if we start talking about this,
he will join in.
And he'll say, you know what?
Like, these are things that I had not had to think about for a while because I'm a tall
white man.
But it's still important to me.
And here's why.
Here's why this kind of system is bad for all of us.
And it's always unclear with kids.
You know, I'm not sure how much of this is sinking in.
Totally.
But I feel like in some ways, creating the space
for that conversation to happen,
and making it so that he's aware that these are things
that exist, then he will be ready to have those conversations
when we do really need to have them.
At least that's my hope.
Do you think that writing fiction
makes you more compassionate person?
Because I was listening to you say at one point a while back
that if you have a character
like you were in workshop or something I think it was about Elena it all comes back to Elena for some reason but today your
workshop people were like you need to we need to understand why Elena's like this because we're not feeling very sympathetic so you said when
people can't understand why someone is a certain way, you, as a fiction writer, go back,
work your way back and put a breadcrumb in the beginning
so that they can see why they turned out that way.
So I just have to tell you the story's list
is that I am in the middle of adapting
untamed into a TV show.
I was sitting in a meeting recently with a producer,
the wonderful producer. We had just
pitched this whole thing about, you know, the deforestation, the bellania, and the mental health,
and the coming out, and the whatever, and the producer sat there quietly, and then he said this,
I just have one question, and I just think it's going to be what a lot of people have,
and so I'm just going to say it, and you know, with all due respect. My question is, what is Glennan's problem?
And I was like, huh, I'm gonna go back and add some breadcrumbs to that.
The last, I can't add any breadcrumbs.
I don't know what it is.
Yeah, I think that it is true that when I'm writing,
I always think I know the characters,
and I always think I'm being really compassionate to them.
And then other people,
well, sometimes reading, go,
you know, it really seems like you are not portraying her
in a nice light at all.
She just seems awful. And I do firmly believe that you can
understand people. It doesn't mean that you excuse anything. It doesn't mean you agree, but that
in a way, you can be like, okay, I understand how from your point of view, that sounded really
different. Or this looks really different. And I feel like that's the point that I'm always trying
to get to as a writer with all of my characters. And in life as well, although it's hard in real life to go,
okay, you're really, really, really bothering me right now.
Let me try and see it from your point of view.
I'm still not gonna agree with you,
but at least I can understand,
and maybe we can reach some kind of an understanding
if I can get into your mind frame somehow.
And hopefully vice versa, you'll try and get into my mind frame.
So I do think there is something to that of saying like if you can connect with somebody,
and it's usually on a very, very human level, then you can start to understand
Then you can start to understand what their problem is. Right?
But in a sense, there's all kinds of ways that I think that I get sad.
I don't know.
I just don't get her.
There's lots of reasons we have to not connect with each other or understand each other or try to sit in someone else's position.
It's protective.
It can be a scary thing to do. But I do feel like
again, it goes back to that question of humanity. Like if you can connect with someone on a very small
level, oftentimes what it means is like, oh, you're also a person like me. And we have this one very
small point of resonance. There's enough to be the same. But just, oh, I also know what that feels like in some level.
It seems really small, but in a way, it's a way of saying like, okay, so you're also a person.
Yeah.
And that means that you also matter to me, which is so basic.
Again, it goes back to the things that, you know, we're trying to teach our third graders
and our young children, but it is that sense of being like, oh, what happens to you is also relevant to me.
That sense of like, what happens to you is not completely divorced from what happens to me,
and that there is a point of connection. And I feel like whatever the form of art is,
whether it's a novel, whether it's a TV show, whatever it is, it's, you know, a memoir,
it's always about trying to find those moments of resonance.
Not necessarily the same.
It might not always be exactly the same
because everyone's experience is gonna be different,
but that feeling like, oh, I hear what you're saying.
I felt something like that.
Yeah.
It's like they say it's not the same, but it rhymes.
Or like, I think it was Dr. Maya Angelou said,
I'm human, so nothing human can be foreign to me.
Right?
There's something that connects.
Well, I always think of it as being like,
if you got like a tuning for like one of those
like old school like in cartoons, tuning for,
and you ring it hard enough,
other things that would be at that same frequency
will also resonate a little bit.
So this is like the science behind why like, opera singers can sing and if they sing it just
the right note, the wine glass will break because it's shaking so much.
But that idea that if you hit one note, other notes that would be in harmony with it or
the same note, but a different octave will also shake just a little bit.
That feeling of being like, oh, it's not the same, but like you say it rhymes. It's some kind of
resonant frequency that happens. I feel like that's, if we can get more of that in the world,
there may be a little bit more space for understanding what other people are going through
without it having to be exactly who they are. That's just a little bit more grace for everybody. And if there are people who don't rhyme with us at all,
we can just plant a fake seed.
We can just be like, you know what?
I'm just going to make up some crap that happened to that guy
so I can make it through the day and be sympathetic.
I'm going to make sense of your life through a deed to completely
the point that you'll never know I believe about you.
And there goes.
Yeah.
In a way that's sort of what fiction does, right?
It's sort of like, I mean, you're saying, okay, so these people don't exist.
This is not happened.
They are not you and they're not me, but I'm going to ask you, what if if they happened,
if they were real and this happened to them, does that open up anything for you?
And that idea that maybe it's an opportunity
again, as we were saying at the beginning, to kind of prop the door open. And be like,
huh, so I've never had that experience. I've never met anyone that had that experience.
But now I'm thinking about it. And I know that that is a thing that could happen, right?
In a way, it's this kind of gentle, prying open of what had seemed to be a really sort of closed box.
Now, you're like, if I've planted that seed in your mind
that maybe a person could be like this,
or maybe this is an experience someone could have,
it's in there, and my hope is that eventually,
it'll start to kind of widen up and let some light in.
Well, armacing hearts is going to shake people in that
opera singer way. I find it to be an
truly powerful act, not just of art, but of motherhood. Like, you
have just mothered the hell out of your kid through this
book. You have mothered the hell out of the world through this
book. I think it's going to ask questions that change how people are looking at
mothering and their responsibilities in the world.
It's really special.
And that's going to be our next right thing.
Everybody go get our missing hearts.
Sister, really important book for this moment and Celeste.
Thank you for teaching us through your imagination.
Thank you, Lennon, so much for having me on.
Thank you, Amanda, for
this amazing conversation, and thank you also for those kind words about my book. It means a lot
coming from you, and I hope you're right. I hope it just gets people thinking and feeling.
It will. I'm about to read it again, so. Okay, Pod Squad. We love you. We will see you here very soon.
Bye.
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