We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Glennon’s Diagnosis & What’s Next
Episode Date: January 3, 2023Glennon shares from the messy middle about her new diagnosis and what’s next for her recovery. If talk about eating disorders and mental illness helps: Listen today. If it triggers: Skip today. ... CW // eating disorders If you have an eating discover, you may find the National Eating Disorders Association (NEDA) hotline a helpful resource: https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/help-support/contact-helpline 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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And I continue to believe that I'm the one for me.
What are you doing?
I just feel like my eyes look tired.
Just trying to get them to wake up.
I have a thought.
Jeez.
Yeah, good.
Yeah, that really woke me up. Thank you.
Very appreciative of you.
Well, hello pod squad. Welcome back
To we can do hard things and welcome to
2020
three
We are gonna start this year
with a doozy as we doozy.
And accidentally this is becoming a tradition for us that we can do hard things where we
start the year by making a devastating announcement about my mental health.
Okay.
So what we're gonna do today is I am gonna tell you,
pod squad, what is going on in my life of recent diagnosis
that I got that has changed my life in many ways.
And I have been kind of alluding to it in some episodes that has changed my life in many ways.
And I have been kind of alluding to it
in some episodes from last year,
but I didn't feel ready to talk about it.
And then over time, it became impossible
for me not to talk to you about it
because it is so, it's everything that's going on in my mind and my heart and my life right now
So every interview that we do I'm seeing it do that lens and I'm talking about it in terms of the work that I'm doing and
It's becoming impossible
For me not to talk about it to you. What's interesting is that I only talk to four people about this
And you pod, you haven't
really talked to me about it that much. So I'm nervous and excited. I'm skided.
Now to hear from you because I don't really know that much.
Also, do we want to give a little trigger warning?
Yes. This isn't a trigger. This is like a grenade.
So this is a content. Okay, so this is a content.
Yes, blanket.
Yes.
The content weighted blanket.
If you have mental health stuff, if you have eating disorder stuff, and if listening to
someone talk about it very openly and honestly and in the moment and in the raw way and an
unpolllished way, if that hurts you, stop listening. We will be here when you get
back. If it helps you stay, okay?
Just come to the right place.
Also, I need you to know that I have requested that my therapist, who is a renowned expert in
all of these things, is going to listen to this episode and take out anything that she feels like is inappropriate for this me to say or for this community.
So there is some protections here going in stay tuned immediately following this will be the notes that my therapist had for me after listening. So you know, our friend Lizzie Gilbert always says that you write about or work
on what's causing a revolution in your heart. And this is what has been causing a revolution
in my heart. And I don't know how to do this. I'm not a person who compartmentalizes
at all. So I don't know how to do this work where I'm bringing my whole self to it and
not share this. And maybe if I waited a year,
I would have a better perspective. But I also just think in a year, I'll just have a different
perspective and not necessarily better. And I like the idea of talking about things more when
we're in the middle, messy middle of it. Yeah, I love that. Their this world is too full of
before and after. Exactly. Going through'm kind of like going through it.
You're like, oh, I have drawn my conclusions
in my life lessons and I will impart them unto you,
as opposed to like, here I am in this big list.
Yes.
And if I waited till I was an after, I haven't,
I've never been in a, I don't know what that is.
Do you know what I mean?
Who's an after?
I'm alive, I'm in the middle of it.
I'm here.
So last year at this time,
I shared with the pod squad
that I had had a relapse of my bulimia
and that I was feeling
a little bit lost about it and not ready to make any big moves about it. Just on the landing,
I called it, go back and listen to that one if you haven't listened to it,
that I wasn't ready to make any moves, but that I was at least standing still on the landing
and not descending any further down the staircase,
but I was not ready to ascend to take any steps because I was too freaking tired of
dealing with this particular mental illness my entire life.
So I stayed on the landing for 10 months. I just did nothing. I just stayed hyper aware of
the fact that I was going to have to start doing some work.
did nothing and just stayed hyper aware of the fact that I was going to have to start doing some work.
I was open to doing some work just not that day.
Do you feel like the 10 months was long or short?
Like, do you think?
Now it feels like a blur, like short.
And then Abby and I were at this weekend with some dear friends.
And one of our dear friends was talking about her child who was anorexic.
And she was talking about the program that her child was in.
And she said, an offhand comment, like, well, obviously she does things like they have
to eat three
meals a day without any talking about it without there's no decision making. They have to eat
three meals a day and then, you know, and they said it like it was an obvious thing to me
since I had been in the eating disorder world for so long. And I stared at my friend, like
that's the wildest thing. Are you serious? That's amazing. That is something I should do. I spend most of my day
trying to decide whether I deserve to eat breakfast or lunch because of whatever happened yesterday
or because of what. So I spend a lot of my problem solving every day in my mind thinking about
whether I should eat or not. And I thought, what an amazing idea. Just to decide, you are going to
eat. That would take away 80% of my mind anyway.
I think what's interesting about that conversation you had
was that you didn't know that.
Exactly.
Exactly.
What was amazing about that is exactly that Abby.
It was that we went into a bedroom after that
and I was like, how is it possible that that sounds revolutionary to me?
I've been in the eating disorder world for how long. after that and I was like, how is it possible that that sounds revolutionary to me?
I've been in the eating disorder world for how long? And this idea that she said to me,
offhand, like I would know it,
I pretended to know what she meant.
I was like, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Of course, of course.
Like it's like mental health 101.
Exactly.
This is not advanced work.
Yeah.
Right, it was eating disorder 101
and it sounded to me like an incredible revolutionary idea.
And so that dissonance was confusing to me because I thought if people know that stuff,
maybe there's a lot of other stuff that would help me that I don't know.
Can I ask you a question?
Was the revolutionary part about it that one would eat three meals or was it that there
was a rubric, a structure that you could adopt that would eliminate a lot of the mental
English and gymnastics in your head?
It was the second.
It was the latter.
I never know.
It's former.
It's the worst.
It was the trick about that. That ladder sounds like later. It's the later latter. I never know. It's former or latter. It's the worst. It was the it was
about that. That ladder sounds like later. It's the later one. Oh my gosh. That's so good. Thank you.
Yeah. Baby. Wow. Jesus. Wow. Well, no, they don't get anything else from this pond. Don't get that.
Okay. So what sounded shocking to me about it and such a relief that I wanted to cry was like,
wait, it's like someone decided you've lost your privileges of deciding whether you're
not you should eat.
That's not, it's above your pay grade.
So we have a system for you.
And that structure liberates.
You structure liberty.
I thought, oh my God, what if there's other things?
Still did nothing.
Okay, I'm just like looking at the stairs. I tell Abby
on a way home from that weekend, I should call that friend and find out who these people
are that are working with her daughter. But of course, I did nothing. So then Abby,
one day reached out to them and said, please give me the information for the people.
Because you weren't, you couldn't stop talking about it. Yeah.
You were still so amazed and I could tell
there was a little hesitancy and I did it unbeknownst to you.
And then I asked you, I said, would it be okay
if I contact this woman, she had already contacted me back.
And you're like, yeah, of course.
And I was like, awesome.
And then I didn't write her back, right?
You didn't.
Right, yeah.
So finally, somehow, I put you on an email somehow.
I connected you.
Somehow I got into contact.
I connected you with the doctor that she gave.
Yeah.
And then you took it from there.
Yeah.
And interestingly enough, in the days before I was to have that first meeting with this doctor,
my bulimia came back hard.
Okay.
Was it already scheduled? Yeah. Okay. Oh, was it already scheduled?
Yeah.
Okay.
Yes.
It was scheduled.
It makes sense.
And I was like, what is going on?
Why am I doing this again?
Remember when you told me?
What did I tell you?
You came into the bedroom because every single time you've confessed or whatever, told
me about your relapses.
You come in and you're like so soft and sad.
And you're like, I did something bad.
That's what you always say.
I did something bad.
That's interesting.
And I knew what you meant.
And I said, what happened, you know, and you said, I relapsed again.
And I knew that this meeting was two days away.
And I just said, come here.
You're just, you're so, this is, this feels so natural to me
that like you would want to get like your last bits in before you actually start going to do
the real work. Yeah. And like we held each other and you were so sad. Yeah, it was. I didn't
understand what was happening. And then the doctor that I talked to first told me that that is the
case that very often right before somebody goes into the treatment
that they actually believe is gonna take,
because they're considering telling the truth
and doing the real work.
It's like the last gasp of like,
yeah, it's your protective self is like,
they're gonna take this thing away.
Right, it's getting high on the way to rehab.
Like that.
That's right.
Yeah, exactly.
Right, so here's what happens.
I meet with this doctor.
She's totally amazing.
Someday I'll tell all of you all who these people are.
I'm just not ready for all of that yet.
But I meet with her.
And then this this two week or longer,
it was so long this intake process happens.
Basically, I'm just like so
runjoring myself. I'm like, it feels like the people who like commit a crime and
turn themselves in. That's how I felt. Like I told the whole thing from time I
was 10 to now, all the best that I could with where I'd been all that time. And
then for the first time, they started doing all of these tests, like doctor tests,
like tests on my body and like my period.
It's just medical tests.
And so it was this very blood test, bone density, all the things.
So which you did all on your own, you didn't require my help in setting up any of this stuff.
I was really impressed by that.
I mean, they really held my hand a lot, but yes.
I know, but you'd walked yourself through that.
I just feel really impressed.
Thanks, Gabe.
So, we have our first big meeting that is like,
this is our findings. You have to sit down with
the doctor and she tells you your findings and diagnosis. Right, right, your diagnosis
and your plan. So I sit down and please understand, Pod Squad, that I have come to these people
and said, I am a bulimic and I've been recovered for this long and now I'm having relapses.
And I just need to understand what the hell and how to get these relapses of my bulimia under control.
So I can be less scared and freer and not in danger.
And the doctor sits down and she says, okay, this might be jarring, so what are diagnosis
of you based on your history and all of your medical tests is that you are anorexic.
There are a couple forms of anorexia and one is anorexia with purging, okay?
But she says you are anorexic.
And I, I mean, if I could, there is no way that I denial, confusion, the shift of my identity as blemic, blemic, blemic,
an inter-exec-inter-exec-is a totally different thing, okay?
It's like a different religion.
It's a different identity.
It's a different threat.
It's a different way of thinking, so confusing.
And it shook me very deeply.
And I did not believe it.
I was like, that's just wrong.
I didn't say that, of course.
But I was just like, OK, I guess we'll just get through through this somehow and then I'll find my way out of this ridiculous situation that I'm in.
Then at the end, I said, I feel like this is an amazing overreaction.
I don't, I do not think that I'm anorexic.
I know anorexic people, I see what anorexia looks like. I don't feel like I'm anorexic. I know anorexic people, I see what anorexia looks like.
I don't feel like I look anorexic.
I don't feel like I, and the doctor said that is a very
anorexic reaction to have.
And I was like, I feel stuck right now in this conversation
because I feel like what now in this conversation
because I feel like what you're saying to me
is that if I say, okay, I believe you,
then I have anorexia.
And if I say to you, I do not believe you,
then I have anorexia.
So I don't know what to do right now.
And basically what she said was,
I am an expert on this.
We've done all the tests.
If I were a doctor and I went to a person and said,
you have a cancer small on your back, the reaction likely wouldn't be, no, I don't have a cancer
small on my back. You have a cancer small. That is not a normal reaction to a doctor's diagnosis.
And then she told a really, really interesting little tidbit that was like,
And then she told a really, really interesting little tidbit that was like me telling you that you're anorexic and you saying, I don't think I'm anorexic because I know a person
who's anorexic who's, you know, five times skinnier than I am or whatever is very similar
to calling a firefighter and a firefighter coming to your house and getting out the hoses
because flames are coming out of your house. And you looking down at the sidewalk and saying, I've heard that when houses are on fire,
the sidewalks bubble and my sidewalks not bubbling. So could you go home now?
While the firefighters are saying, but there's flames coming out of your window.
So I finished that meeting. I told Abby that night, or maybe it was the next night, we were
in the kitchen, and it had been kind of a quiet couple days, and Abby was cooking something,
and the indigo girl's song, Power of Two, came on. We were standing by the refrigerator and you just kind of hugged me and grabbed me and
there was there's that line in there that's like I'm stronger than the monsters beneath your bed.
Stronger than the tricks played on your heart. Look at them together and we'll take them apart. And I
in that moment, that's one of our songs, Power of Two. And I, in that moment, was like, yeah, it's okay.
Abby's here, she's got me.
It's gonna be okay.
And then you pulled away from me and you said,
I can't do this for you.
Oh.
Ooh. That was really brave, Abby. I can't do this for you. Oh. Oh.
That was really brave Abby.
Holy shit.
Do you remember this?
She pulls away from me and says,
I can't do this for you.
And it wasn't accusatory.
It wasn't like,
you have to do this.
It wasn't like that.
It wasn't like this is too much for me.
I was like, I do it if I could.
And I can't do this for you.
You have to do it.
It was like her having this realization in the moment,
first of all, she knew what I was thinking in that moment.
She knew I was thinking, she's stronger than the monster's beneath my bed.
She's got this.
And I think when you are a person who is a little, I don't know how to describe the word,
like is a little wobbly, you find people who are not as wobbly and then you somehow feel
like you are us.
Like I am not just me, I am us and you're not wobbly. So I'm okay.
And it was Abby's way of saying, oh my God, I can't, this is up to you. And this is like
scary news for both of us, but this is up to you. I can fix every remote. I can go, I
can go through the house and follow you around and make sure things, everything's working,
but I can't do this.
And that was, if I could explain to you how chilled
to the bone I was by that moment.
We, I did not speak for the rest of the night.
I went to bed very early.
I laid there like, fuck.
I've never felt so alone in my own body. So I am the sick one. Apparently everyone's telling me. And I'm also the one that has to fix the sickness.
Like how, how?
So.
And for a pretty codependent couple, that was a really hard thing to experience through,
because I think I realized that maybe my proximity to you was enabling some of this in some
way, not that it's my fault or anything, but I just
think that it was really important to say that out loud for you and for me. I think it was
incredibly courageous. You're the one who got her connected to the doctor. It was almost like that
was necessary, necessary but not sufficient for her to get well, but she wouldn't have been able to get well unless she,
or started, unless she really took it on as hers.
It's like getting sober.
When you make it about you and someone else,
it's never ever, ever gonna work.
Yep.
And I pride myself.
I mean, one of my greatest identities is being your partner and being able to care for you.
In my mind, I think some ways better than you would care for yourself.
Well, yeah.
And so it's like, this was a hard thing for me to say because I had to let go of this part of my identity and get how I get my worthiness and how I feel and express love.
Yeah, for you to say I can't do it.
It was a really, I just knew in that moment
what you were thinking and I knew, I had to say it.
I had to be out loud
because you needed to take complete ownership
over this process.
Yeah. with factory jobs. And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I wanna 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, 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.
It was a big shift in thinking to me because I was like, and I don't know if anybody in
the podcast can relate to this, but I was like, I did it. I'm doing the best I can with what I have and I have surrounded my children with the people
that they need and I have created these units
of health and strength.
And that's good enough.
And then I realized, oh, I, inside here,
if I don't figure this out, I could die.
And then what good is all of this like unit Inside here, if I don't figure this out, I could die.
And then what good is all of this unit that I've created for my kids in my,
it was just a very interesting night.
Yeah, you've built a really beautiful life
to leave early from.
Right.
Yeah, so then the next morning,
I picked up the book that this doctor had written, okay?
And I started reading about anorexia. And the grief that I had the night before or the terror,
I guess, that I had the night before just intensified tenfold because I started reading this book
about what an
inter-exix life looks like. And I don't know how to explain
the feeling of reading things that you have that you thought were
part of your personality and you were. And reading that
they're actually just a collection of symptoms of an effing
disease.
So, you know, I don't know how to explain all this to the book, but it was like, it was
explaining what a hungry brain, how a hungry brain walks in the world and sees the world
and experiences stress and experiences anxiety and all the things that people who are in our exit do, like create intense ridiculous, overwhelming boundaries, like
becoming over-prepared for everything, including every moment of life, living with high,
high anxiety, trying to be un-inpeachable in every way. Just being extremely, extremely disciplined.
It's like partly,
anorexia becomes like a religion of control.
As you're reading that morning,
I'll never forget it. You just kept going.
Holy shit.
Holy shit.
Just you couldn't believe it. It was like you were reading a biography of yourself.
And somebody saying this is actually not a biography. This is just eating disorder brain.
Yeah. And it was so weird because it was like, well, first of all, it is stunning to be a person whose life and work is about self-examination.
Okay?
Like, is about discovering the nuance and my niche of who we are and talking about it every day and then not know this information about yourself. It's like
humiliating on a level. It's pretty impressive also that you could ignore this part of yourself.
I know it is interesting when you think about I'm reading this book about
anorexia and it's all brand new spanking new information to me and it's blowing my mind as if it's the first time
I've ever heard of any news order.
And the first meeting I had with the doctor after this
when I was open to this idea, she looked at me
and I had, I was in my office, I have 4,000 books behind me
because all I do is read books.
And she said, have you read all those books?
And I said, yeah, I have read all these books. She goes, do you think it's interesting that you
do not know the first thing about anorexia? All of those hundreds and thousands of books, and you
haven't read one book. You have avoided information about this disease, like, you knew you needed to. Yeah.
It's so interesting though because it's like when your only tools, a hammer, every problem
looks like a nail, I'm sure there is some deeper psychology to you knowing at some level
and avoiding it like hell.
And if you thought because you were diagnosed when you were 12 or whatever, with bulimia, you
thought that the periods where you were quote unquote sick were the periods where you were
exhibiting that and that the periods in between when you were exhibiting that you were just
yourself.
Exactly.
So your only point of reference was that is the indisha that I am sick when I am
purging. And all the other times is just I guess who glutton is. And so you didn't realize
that the whole time you were sick and the way of thinking in between those periods of was also diseased thinking. Yeah. And it was just punctuated by the bouts of purging.
You just thought that was you.
Exactly.
And more than that, I think what happened
is that I solved my bulimia with anorexia.
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
Like, yeah.
I...
So a bulimic, and I was bulimic
That's like a no-brainer. Yes, but it's like becoming a dry drunk
If you're comparing it to alcohol. It's like you don't ever figure I was
Horrifically bulimic for a very long time and then I got pregnant and I was like done. I was like, done. I am done with the shit.
I am done with the shit.
I never, not once, went back and really figured out
what the hell happened to me.
I just wrote, I was overly sensitive.
And I, this is just who I was.
And I didn't excavate.
I didn't look at things.
I didn't do the work.
Had I done the work, perhaps I would have discovered more of this,
but instead I just used control and discipline and willpower
to crush my bulimia.
And that happens all the time.
Think of the people who have been traumatized by an infidelity,
and then they go on and have relationships with people who are emotionally unavailable
so they never have to risk having an intimacy in a breach again or make themselves
invulnerable to connection and they're like, look, I have this relationship I got over that, but you're like, did you?
Yeah.
Because you're creating a world in which you never actually have to go to that place again.
Yes, that's what I did.
Yeah, believe me, it was obvious.
The purging, it's just an obvious, that's the thing that makes it, anorexia is a little
bit more confusing to diagnose.
But in retrospect, the anorexia is obvious too.
I know.
I kind of feel a sense of responsibility of that too because it's clear.
I'm not trying to self-centralize this, but we do so much interrogation of like you
are a little kid and you're going through all of this and how come we didn't all bring
it out in the open and deal with it together. And it's been very clear that your restrictive controlled eating
for years has not been a source of ease or joy or peace for you. And I look at pictures now,
part of the embarrassment of it is looking at myself and feeling like maybe it was obvious to everyone else. I can't even
think about that. Like I look at pictures now and I'm like, I look at pictures of me before
the untimed tour and I'm like, what the f-? Oh my god. Like it looks so obvious. It's like
embarrassing to me. And you know, some of the other thing is like, the heart, my heart rate is way too low.
My period, my hair, my, like, I don't know, all of the bones, all of these things.
And also the couple of people that I've told, what makes my heart go bluff is that when
they don't look surprised, they're not like,
wow, they're like, it feels like bulimios is like being an animal.
And then I fixed it by becoming like a robot. And I feel like, you know, thinking about the embarrassment
of it, thinking about, okay, this writer of Untamed was like anorexic the whole time I
wrote it, like it's so freaking weird. But I just keep thinking about how hard it is to be both the detective of your life
and the mystery of your life.
Yeah, that's fair.
Cause a mystery's job is creating a mystery.
Exactly, that's the mystery's job.
Exactly, and I am good at it.
I am like a great criminal.
I am a great mystery.
I'm like, no, there's more turns.
And it's like my mystery of me just outpaces a little bit.
The detective of me, because I'm a really good detective too.
I'm just not as good as the mystery.
Yeah, and you're a really good writer.
So you're like, how it works is,
as long as the mystery stays just one step ahead of the detective,
then the detective can be good and so can the man.
I have a question.
So you said there's this embarrassment thing and I wonder what's underneath embarrassment
of it all because I know that your intellectual mind and your body and your emotions around
it, they're very heightened.
But I do think embarrassment is giving a lot of out there power. So what would you say is like
underneath the embarrassment that you feel or that you've been feeling around? Because,
you know, the patriarchy has its fucking talents in all of us. And so the fact that you do this
excavation of yourself and the fact that you want to be honest and work into the minutiae of yourself,
you didn't write untamed and at the end of it are like, well, now I'm untamed and I'm free.
Well, I think what I did is what I wished for other people to do, which is that I wrote
the truest, most beautiful self I could imagine. And that freedom, I can taste it, it's right there.
You know, it's why I'm willing to do this work
because I'm doing this for my 50 year old self.
That's why I keep telling myself.
Like I am doing all of this right now
because I love my 50 year old self so much already.
And I want her to be a little bit freer than I am right now because I love my 50 year old self so much already. And I want her to be a
little bit freer than I am right now. And I hope I truly at the moment, I really hope that this
is the last last mystery. You know, I mean, it's like take the step and the path will appear. You're like, I'll take this next step,
but only under the assumption that it's the last fucking step.
Yeah, I feel done.
No more.
I've been in the zone with surprises.
I feel like, you know, five years ago,
I thought I was a straight,
bulimic, Pisces.
And now I'm a bulimic Pisces. And now I'm a queer, anorexic aries.
And I just feel like, I don't want to next year to go to some therapist and find out, like,
I'm actually a Republican or something.
I just, I feel like that would be a plot twist.
Right.
That's when I'd come to the pot and say it's over.
Women in their 50s and 60s right now are giggling
because they know that there is still
so much more to uncover.
But let's just think about today.
Let's think about today.
Yeah.
Today.
Yeah.
What's also under the humiliation of it,
and I'm getting through that, I mean, humiliation,
it's humble, it's of being of the ground.
Humus is the root of that.
It's we're all made of dirt.
We're fucking dirty.
We're messy, we're dirty.
Yes, you are.
Being humble is just admitting
that you don't know exactly
from where you came and where you'll be going.
And that's where I am right now.
I think that being a woman who has made herself public
and talking about this kind of thing
and knowing what might and will come on the other side of it
because I'm so grateful for the pod squad right now.
Like I feel like I'm gonna speak for myself to you
because I want you to know.
And then I'm not speaking to anybody else about it.
To family meeting.
It's a family meeting.
And because of that, they will say what they're gonna say.
And that's just like part of it. I haven't worked it all out, but it's just part of the fear,
right? The embarrassment. And also, I'll say to the people who would say, oh, telling
everyone to get free and she was anorexic the whole time, that is a person who doesn't
understand what untimed is about. Because it's the same person who would say, she wrote love
where in the left or husband.
Of course, when you get to the path of the love warrior and you
understand the next step is that you do it because it's the thing
you need to do.
And if you stayed because you were the love warrior, you actually
wouldn't have been a love warrior to begin with.
And you go through the untamed process
and you're peeling back and you take that brave next step.
And the next step appears and you either tell yourself,
oh, I'm not going to take that because then
that will give someone ammunition against me.
Then you're just as cages you were before.
Like, you have to allow yourself to take the next step
the next step and that is actually what untaming is.
That's exactly right.
And I also want to say this, because there
is the element of part of the embarrassment is like,
you know, the refrain of untamed is,
you're not crazy, you're a goddamn cheetah.
So getting to this point in my life of untamed is you're not crazy or God damn cheetah.
So getting to this point in my life and having yet another
whack-a-mole manifestation of mental illness come into my life
because that's what it feels.
It's like my whole life is like, it's addiction.
It's bulimia.
It's depression.
It's anxiety.
It's anorexia.
It's like, it just keeps popping up in different forms.
One could start wondering if it's like, I am crazy and I'm a god damn shit.
I'm not, right? So there is that element, but I will also say this. I am thinking about all of this on a very wide level.
I am thinking about the fact that I have always been an extreme version of what is happening
to all of us.
And there is a part of that, and I'll talk about this on another episode, but I'll talk
about how this treatment is going for me.
What I will say is how the treatment is going for me. What I will say is how the treatment is going for me
is a little bit like when I lost the dogma of Christianity.
And I was so discombobulated that I didn't know what to do.
That is what this treatment of anorexia feels like to me.
It feels like the discipline, the discipline,
I just kept thinking in my first couple months of treatment,
analyzing the discipline with which I have led my life,
the discipline in body, the discipline in beauty,
the discipline in work, the discipline in parenting,
the discipline to, and I just kept thinking,
if you are committed to discipline, that means that you are a disciple
of something.
What the fuck am I a disciple of?
And what I think that I am a disciple of or what I think that anorexia could be looked at as a discipline of is white supremacist capitalist patriarchy.
Stay quiet, stay good, stay perfect, stay hustling, stay grinding.
It's like, you know, that quote from Naomi Wolf that I've always loved so much that a woman's
thinness is not about beauty.
It's about obedience. It's about being a soldier, a warrior for control.
And there is something underneath that that all of us, I hope, I don't want to make disciples of that.
I hope I don't want to make disciples of that. I don't want to be that. I don't want to live
in fear of anyone in the world seeing proof of humanity on my body, seeing proof of joy, seeing proof of indulgence, seeing proof of deliciousness, seeingion against all of that. Yeah, but when we when we are addicted to
this idea of thinness, it's like refusal to prove ourselves human as women. I was walking
on the beach that I've been doing a lot of walking. And I was thinking about-
I was thinking about over walking, you're not allowed to do that.
No, just quiet walking.
Yeah, yeah, no, not like, I'm not allowed to do that.
And I just kept having this thought of like,
I'm gonna have to replace my religion of control and discipline.
Mm-hmm.
And it made me think of Liz and how she used to tell me,
I used to have such a problem with this to 12 steps. And because of the page share, the idea is there. And
she would say, you just have to decide, you have to create your higher power.
You have to create one that you can get behind following. And so on a deep level right now, like that's what I feel like I'm doing.
I'm doing treatment, but I'm also wanting a new God that is not control, that is not
I'm not good enough, that is not self-restraint, that is not self-denial. I think what's so interesting about that of everything you just said with
Disciples of weight patriarchy and all that. I think your disciple of control and
You came to that because you were so desperate because of your love for your kid
To control your bulimia. And you control the hell out
of everything. And you have so much love for your family, for this community, for everything
that you thought that if you just applied what you knew about control in every aspect
of your life, you could keep yourself safe from, believe me, I've heard everything, you keep your people safe.
And that could be what you could do to know how to get there.
And when women are controlling themselves,
when people are controlling themselves,
what they are not doing is reaching their natural intelligence.
Sonia Renee Taylor tells this beautiful story
about Marianne Williamson.
She retells it from our framework of radical self-love
and Marianne Williamson talks about an acorn falling from a tree
and that no one trains the acorn to grow into a tree.
No one controls it and teaches it how to be a tree. It just has the natural
intelligence. And we trust that that is true. But we do the opposite with ourselves.
We control the shit out of ourselves. And when we control the shit out of ourselves,
we cut off at the roots or natural intelligence. And when we cut off the roots are natural intelligence,
what grows in place of that is white supremacy. Because what is going to take that down is
unleashing our natural intelligence, our full power, our full liberation. Because when we do that,
there will be no structure of white supremacy being upheld.
And so what I might suggest you become a type disciple
of is your own natural intelligence, your own appetite, your own joy,
your own going towards that.
Like you've always said, what feels warm because that is the thing
that you have controlled out of yourself.
I think that first of all, thank you for everything you just said because it's so freaking
beautiful and exactly right on.
And I think we're saying the same thing about the last part.
When I think of creating the higher power, the reason why Liz is saying create it yourself
is so it's an expression of your natural self, right?
It's not like I'm making up this God that I think
will then be flying in the sky. That's not it. The higher power is everything that you can think of
in terms of beauty and goodness and freedom. And then that higher power is inside of you.
And so when you're looking for wisdom and joy and your best natural expression,
you are looking at your truest, most beautiful,
best natural expression as your own higher power.
I also think that it was probably really confusing
for you for so long, because you were getting
positively affirmed with your control.
And of course, and your success.
Nothing that were worth it.
And the kids are well adjusted and good,
and all of the things were making it really hard.
It was just like all this evidence was stacking in the controls favor.
Well, the world loves a sick woman.
The world loves the sick woman.
The only negative symptom of a woman who fully controls herself is that she feels crazy.
Yes. And that negative system helps the outside system. And so you have to say,
notwithstanding all evidence to the contrary contrary that is affirming the shit out of my controlling of myself.
I don't want to feel crazy because you're not crazy. You're a goddamn.
Like the craziness inside of you is is whatever your particular thing is With you, it was controlling the shit out
of yourself, which was making you feel crazy because you wasn't you. It was hunger brain.
Right. Because following directions, if you're following directions well of our culture,
you will be sick and feel crazy. Yeah. But I will keep insisting that it's just following directions.
It's just being an A plus student of what the world tells us women should be. I think we'll stop there.
And I want to continue this conversation for the Pod Squad because I do want to tell them
what it has looked like for me.
And I want to assure them of what the work that I'm doing and
I just want them to know right now. It's too much to get into right now
but I do want you to know that I'm doing all of the work and I do know
One of the things that when I was sitting on that couch reading that book that I read was that
Anorexia is the second most deadly
mental health disease in the world,
second only to opioid addiction. So we understand, I am wanting to do this work for me, but also for all of us.
I so value and am constantly amazed by this community.
And just the fact that we all get together here together. And I know that listening to my voice means something to you.
And I want to help us all not be disciples of pain.
You know, I've been sitting here and for whatever reason, I never do this,
but I was just like listening to you and thinking.
And I've been right here with
you watching you go through this. And I'm just so grateful to whatever kind of God you
are creating right now, and the learning and the difficulty that I have seen you go through during this process is for me feels miraculous
and you've taken a huge leap of faith in yourself. And you know, I think I'll speak for
the pod squad here. Like we want you to stick around for a long, long, fucking time.
And I was just saying little thank you prayers to whatever
God is because I think that so many factors had to be kind of perfectly laid in this path
for you. And for you to actually hear or acknowledge that these little whispers life
was giving you takes an extraordinary amount
of courage and you are rewiring your brain and you are redeveloping a sense of yourself.
Well, I remember Alex said, because I was like 46, seriously, 46, we're going to start this
shit over. We're going to end 46. And she goes, yeah, but this is probably the first time
you've ever been stable enough in your life
to do this kind of work.
When were you gonna do it in the middle of your last marriage?
When were you gonna do it?
When you were building this thing?
When were you gonna do it?
When you were dripping with children?
Like, this is the first time where you've had someone
so stable next to you that you were able to fall apart. So,
you know, it's important not to judge the timing of our lives because it's maybe exactly right on time.
And I just want to say back to you what you've always said about there's no such thing as one way liberation and I
Have just noticed about myself in the past couple months that
Watching you be so brave with this has changed me too and it's been like an exhale
of in an exhale of not only about you and saving your life, but what I'm allowed to do with my life and my hunger.
And I just think that what you're doing is so personally powerful.
And I think that me as a pod squadder, that what you're doing is revolutionary because
I think we can all take a deep breath and be like, we're not doing that.
We're doing a new thing. Yeah.
It's doing a new thing.
I love you both.
I love you, Pod Squad.
Thanks for being here with me today.
Thanks for listening.
Let us do a new thing.
See you next time.
Hi, everybody.
I'm back with a new segment that we're calling.
This is what Glenn and Therapist said to tell
everybody after listening to all the things she just said about English order. So I am asking my
amazing therapist to listen carefully for anything that could be triggering or wrong.
In what I'm saying, because I'm fully committed to making this a helpful, safe conversation to have and not
anything that could be hurtful.
So my therapist listened to the episode that you just listened to, and here were her notes.
First of all, she noticed that when I told you all about the diagnosis, I said that my
doctor said you are anorexic, okay?
My therapist said that she would highly, she highly doubted that that's how my doctor would have said it to me.
That is likely what I heard, but what the doctor would have said was that I have anorexia, that I am a human being who has anorexia, who is suffering from anorexia, but that we don't, she doesn't like to put a disease name after
I am, which is so interesting that I did that because my entire book is about never putting
anything after I am.
So she actually said the words to me, what we tell ourselves is important.
So instead of saying, I am anorexic, what I would say is I have anorexia,
and maybe one day I will not have it. Okay, another thing she noticed is that I said, you know, I was
bulimic, and now, well, maybe I was never bulimic enough, I'm anorexic, and she said, these things
morph. Okay, it's just like, this could be just like gender or sexuality and things aren't on a
binary, things aren't this or that that often these things just morph and change in our lives.
She also says she does not call anorexia disease, she calls it a disorder that we can be reordered
from. She also noticed, which I thought was interesting,
a little bit of me disavowing my sensitivity,
is what she called it like.
I was saying, well, I thought I was just sensitive,
but actually it was all these things
in my family and in the world.
And she said, maybe it's an end both,
that I actually am an extremely sensitive human being,
and that that should not be discounted.
And then it's actually a very strong, beautiful thing to be.
So there's an end both there, not an either or.
And then the last thing she noticed, which I love,
is that she noticed when I talked about learning
that being in her exit is a lot about control and discipline and
wanting to be what am I going to replace that with now?
What am I going to replace it with?
And what my therapist is often talking to me that is my tendency to be extreme about
things.
So I am either this or that.
And when I'm trying to undo something, I tend to do the opposite of that thing
and go the opposite way in extremes.
And that what is going to replace that discipline
and control is balance.
Not that I'm looking for the absolute opposite
of that thing to run towards it.
Like, I don't know, day four with her where I told her,
I was gonna cut all my hair off
and get rid of all of my clothes.
And she said
Maybe we slow down and look for balance because in lots of ways rebellion
It's just as much of a cage as obedience and what we're looking for is this elusive balance
Maybe one day. Thank you, Potsquan
Maybe one day, thank you, Potsquat. I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle.
I walked through fire, I came out, I made sure I got what's mine
And I continue to believe that I'm mine I want the line
cuz we're adventurers in heartbreak so
man a final destination We stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
Through the joy and pain that our lives bring.
We can do a heartache.
I hit rock bottom, it felt like some time, but I'm finally fine. Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak so mad
A final destination will act
We stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find a way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache.
This world finished her rose and heart breaks on land We might get lost but we're only in that
Stopped asking directions
Some places may have never been
And to be loved we need to be long
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard things. Yeah, we can do hard things.
Yeah, we can do hard things.
We can do hard things, is produced in partnership
with Cadence 13 Studios.
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