We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - HAPPYISH HOLIDAYS: Our Top 3 Hacks for Hard Holidays
Episode Date: November 24, 20221. How to eliminate walking on eggshells around family, and avoid feeling badly about ourselves or our people. 2. Amanda shares the first time she broke her family’s biggest holiday tradition—an...d how it’s now one of her most precious memories. 3. Abby remembers watching her mom stress out by “perfecting” every holiday detail—and the change she made to minimize her own holiday stress. 4. How carrying around a cup of hot tea serves as Glennon’s super shield. 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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Well, on this Thanksgiving, that we can do our things, team, me, sister, Abby, Allison,
Dina, Lauren, we are grateful for you.
We're grateful for this pod squad that we get to do this life together.
We just can't believe this situation we found ourselves in with this podcast.
We love it so damn much.
And if you're doing a turkey trot.
No, you're good job.
Who does a turkey trot?
Good job.
Like keep going.
You only have a few more miles.
So this Thanksgiving, we are presenting to you an episode we loved from last year, and
it's about how to have a happy a holiday.
Okay, it's just some happy a holiday, hacks.
We've got a few important ones.
The first one is it's your Fing holiday.
The second one is eat, drink, and breathe, and the third one is be unsurprised.
These are very important things for you to remember today. So do not continue on this wonderful,
but often very difficult day without listening
to this episode to get you centered.
Don't forget, life isn't about being happy.
It's not about feeling happy.
It's about feeling everything.
And there's nothing like the holidays
to make us feel everything.
So.
So. everything and there's nothing like the holidays to make us feel everything. So, we love you. We are grateful for you. Happy Thanksgiving. Enjoy.
The holidays are officially upon us.
Ba-ba-ba-ba.
So, right after Halloween, I thought, I said, Chase, meme, we speak, he's gen, what does he
gen Z?
Gen Z.
Yeah, so we, and I'm a mom, so we speak in memes.
You speak in Gen Z and millennial?
Right, memes.
And so I sent him one that said, now that Halloween's over, we can go into this really scary
holidays where we have to go see our families.
And the truly scary holidays, yes.
Yes.
Yes.
So, every year, we as a human species, we just, we have, we're like the Tedlasa thing.
We have memories of a goldfish.
Every holiday we go into it, thinking, this will be the Folger's commercial holiday.
This will be the one where I get my family gets their shit together. Everyone is grateful and
kind and warm and cozy and then every year we are shocked and stunned. When actually we remember
that the holidays aren't for making us feel happy, they're just
making, they just make us feel everything deeper.
So if like things are good in our family, then we feel good.
But if we've had loss or we have breakage or we have whatever, then we just feel all of
those things more. So we are here, sister, Abby and I are here to help you through hard holidays.
I actually just think that this is our little like get together before our own holiday
experiences. What they don't know is the post-quad is here to help us.
That's exactly right.
That's exactly right.
Exactly right.
Exactly right.
Right.
I mean, I think it's a great thing to talk about
because I feel like part of the pressure
of the holidays is not talking about it being hard.
So it's like the phenomenon is if our
family can't be happy on this day of all days, then when can we ever be happy? And it's
actually like the flip of that feels more true. It's like it's actually harder to be happy when everything is in such a high pressure moment.
Yes, like that.
So I feel totally the same way.
I mean, I think I look back at the times in my life
that are the best as a child.
And I watched my mom stress so much,
preparing and perfecting every little bit to make sure everybody's
experience was as she wanted it to be. As she wanted it to be. So we do. All the food and every little bit
and every tradition was remembered and acted upon. And so just a couple of years ago,
remember feeling like, oh, this is what I'm supposed to look like my mom. I'm supposed to be stressed, right?
And I mean, a couple years ago, I was just like, you know what?
Like, I don't want to be that way.
Like I want to actually enjoy this.
And what I think it made me kind of delegate a little responsibility over the holidays of
like, sort of, you know, sister, when you come and visit, like, maybe you guys can make
a meal one night and, you know, we're going to try new things this year, but at the end of the day, it's like
this expectation of the holiday. Yeah, it makes expectation is what screws, it's that, it's that
thing we say over and over again, nothing that screws us up is the picture in our head of how it's
supposed to be. We were visiting our oldest at college recently, and one of the professors said,
stop saying to your kids, these are going to be the best four years of your life.
Oh, yeah. God, yeah. Because because first of all, they're actually really tough years. They're exciting, but also really tough.
Yeah. So when you say that to them and they have a hard time, they feel like they're failing. And also, who the hell wants to hear that the best four years of your life are going to be done by the time you're 24.
Like that. Just stop saying that shit. And you know what? That's the pressure we have on the
holiday. It's the most wonderful time of the year. It should just be like it's the most time of the year.
Yeah exactly. That's so good. It's the most of everything. We take it's the most sounds. It's the most people.
Colour most.
The most obligations.
It's the most lights.
Expectations.
It's just most.
And since it's the most advertised to us,
this vibe we're supposed to have,
we are chasing this vibe that we feel responsible,
mostly parents, mostly moms, I'll say, to create.
So, I mean, our kids, do you remember last year,
Tisha's sitting in the freaking living room?
Everything's decorated, all the things,
the fake fires on the TV, the fake candles,
come on, actually gonna bake cookies,
but I have the cookie candles,
smells like things are baking, everything's going and she's like,
I just don't feel like it's Christmas.
I just feel like it's that feeling of,
I'm in what is it?
I'm in Kyoto, missing Kyoto.
It's like it's that feeling where you're in the moment
and you're still yearning for this thing.
Because the thing you're yearning for is not real.
It's created by the TV.
That's right.
Right?
So really what
the holidays are, it's just like a day or whatever where we, where it's the most, where
it brings up the most feelings. So what we know is that we can do hard things, like get through
the holidays. I mean, I don't know. I'll let you know. Actually, that's a good point.
I will let you know. Okay. So how a good point. I will let you know.
So how about this? We can do hard things like talk about the holidays for the next hour. We can talk about the hard holidays. Okay. All right. We'll take that. Let's start with the next. And also just before we
start, I just want to, I just want to say this, just got to clear my conscience. I told chase,
go have the time of your life. That was the last thing I said to him
before he left her college.
And so now I just needed to tell you that that I messed up.
Okay, so when he comes home,
you just say what I meant was go have a time.
Go have a time.
Yeah, but the time of your life.
Go have a time of your life.
You can always be having the time of your life.
If you're in that time of your life,
it's saying specifically these finite four years are the best you got. So fuck it up.
Okay, so I didn't I didn't I didn't have a bad parenting moment. No, you just no mediocre. I could
have been better. Well, I just you know, and then it's like who all the kids who don't go to college
and actually for me college was one of the worst times of my life. And it's just, you know,
I think you did great. Okay, we could move on. I've cleared my conscience and we're
good now. Now, thank you. Okay, sister, start us off because the next
right thing, as we know, is always looking at the dragon in the snow globe, always telling
the truth first. So let's start there. Yes. Okay, since we're talking today about the
hard truth of our lives and families and holidays, it makes sense to start there. Yes, okay, since we're talking today about the hard truth of our lives and families
and holidays, it makes sense to start with
the truth about this holiday specifically.
So this holiday purports to mark friendship
among indigenous people and pilgrims.
But the truth is that the first settlers
and the US governments's forced removals
theft of land
biological warfare with smallpox and massacres actually was genocide. So the population of indigenous people went from
15 million
before Columbus's arrival to
million before Columbus's arrival to fewer than 238,000 over the course of 400 years. It's just good to say that right out loud.
And so we're not perpetuating a myth.
And also I feel like over the holidays, it has so much to do with home and ritual.
So it's important to tell the truth about the places we call home.
And including acknowledging that we live on the ancestral stolen land of Indigenous people.
I live on the land of the Piscataway and you live on the land of the Tongva. So if
can I have like two minutes to tell you about this? Please. Since you're new to this, to that area. So you're living on indigenous land
that was known for thousands of years as the Tovana,
and that means the world.
So it's the land of the Tongva.
Tongva means people of the earth
because of their belief that humans were not the peak of
creation, but just part of a web that
stemmed from mother earth and they lived in constant relation and reciprocity with that land that you're on for thousands of
thousands of years and like a hundred different villages right around where you are
thousands of years in like a hundred different villages right around where you are. Until Spanish settlers arrived and they stole their land and enslaved them in the missions
that they set up there.
They were forced to abandon their rituals undecimated by European diseases.
And then the US took control over California.
At that point, they were denied their basic rights and their children were taken from them and forced into Indian boarding schools and
They were not formally acknowledged by the California government until
1994 and they've never been recognized by
The federal government or being granted land so they have no place to live or gather or bury their ancestors
But there are still 2,500 tongue-wrapped people in the region, and they are resilient, and
they do a lot around you to preserve their artifacts and heritage and resurrect their language.
So to everybody listening, we can do hard things like talk to our kids about the land that they're living on.
You can do this.
You can learn about the land where you live at native-land.ca.
Go there with your kiddos and talk about the truth about this country.
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.
Shh.
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.
Okay, let's go on to our holiday hacks. Besides telling the truth, we have more. And on this
list of holiday hacks, you will not find things such as how to get your cooking
done or your shopping done.
Those are not the hacks of which I understand.
So go to a different podcast or source to learn how to do adulting things.
Here, we talk less about adulting and more about humaning. So our hacks are about to, are about how to get through the humaning part
of the holidays, right?
And our by definition not hacks,
because aren't hacks like super easy things to do.
Yeah, I actually don't think hard hacks here.
Yeah, I think that the words people might have gotten
as wrong.
We read hacks on a meme and we were like,
good, let's get some of those.
That sounds fun.
That sounds good.
I love the show called,
Oh God's children get hacks.
Yeah.
So here's your unhack.
Okay, here's your first unhack.
And what we're calling the first hack is number one,
it's your effing holiday.
That's our hack.
I'm subtitling it, normalize not doing shit you hate over the holidays.
Okay, that is exactly right.
Okay.
Yes.
So it might seem like an obvious one, but I'm telling you every single one of my friends,
like all three of them.
You know what, you kind of keep making fun of yourself,
but guess who's getting friends?
I know I am, I'm working on it.
I'm so excited.
So for all five of my friends, it's not three, it's five.
So when they talk about the holidays,
they talk about why they hate it.
And then they list, the reason they hate it
is because they tell me all the things they have to do that they hate it. And then they list the reason they hate it is because they tell me all the things they have to do
that they hate.
Yeah.
Okay, but so I keep thinking, what if,
like, would we hate the holidays less
if we stop doing the things we hate on the holidays?
That's right.
How would we untame our holidays in that way?
Do you have any ideas for us, sister bear?
Okay. Or I have ideas.
I'll be back. Go for it. No, sister go mine have everything to do with cooking. So sister
go I want to hear yours mine have nothing to do with cooking. Um, well, I just it's, it's
completely true. 45% of Americans say that they would prefer just to skip the winter holidays.
of Americans say that they would prefer just to skip the winter holidays. Oh, plus that is almost half of all the people are just like just prefer just bump January.
I mean, that's that's so sad.
And I don't think it's because we I think people love parts of the holidays. I just think that we love parts that don't make up
a large part of the pie chart
that we spend our holiday time on.
Yes.
I was in the post office a couple of weeks ago
and I met a new friend.
I don't know her name.
But we were talking about the holidays coming up.
Okay, this is what I
surmised in the 10 minute conversation with her. She grew up with a very complicated holiday
situation. So she desperately wants to be by herself on the holidays, doing something different.
She wants to like take a trip or something. I love her already. I love her too. But her sister can't bear the thought of her being by herself on the holidays because
her sister can't imagine being alone on the holidays.
I love her too.
Yes.
So my post office friend is going to lie to her sister and say she's spending the holidays
with her best friend so that her sister won't save her from the holiday she wants and forced her to have the holiday her sister wants for
her. So it's crazy and I don't tell my post office
written this because I'm very proud of her for just trying to get what yes that's a good
lie. But I think just why can't folks decide what feels like a holiday to them since it actually is their holiday?
I know.
I know.
Like it's a no.
And it's hard, I think, because people just feel like this is the way it's always been
done, or everyone holds so tightly to like this vision of what they think it should be. But I was thinking back, and I remember the first time
I kind of broke with our family traditions.
And this is odd because our, in our family,
growing up, the biggest holiday of the year was New Year's Eve
because that was, we have a billion teen cousins in Ohio
and it was the one time of the year where the whole
family got together. So we would drive all the way up. Everybody would meet there, all the cousins
and the aunts and uncles and all the people and we had all kinds of traditions and rituals and
ridiculousness. And I never missed one like all through college, all through law school. And then right after I got divorced,
I just didn't feel like it.
Because it's not that I didn't feel like it.
It's like I felt like doing something different.
Like I wanted to do something that just
actually felt like a relief.
I think, yes.
I think it's the idea of we act like we don't need a holiday.
I needed to go do something that filled me up.
Yes.
And I think we just think holiday insert all of these obligations as opposed to holiday is actually for the filling of me.
That's good. And of my people.
And so I, it was awkward because it was kind of like record.
You know, I'm not coming this year.
And I, instead, I went to Costa Rica with a friend
and also packed like six pairs of high heels
because I did not read the itinerary,
but we were in the rainforest.
And legit did.
And it was, yes.
And um, but missing that holiday tradition, I think about it a lot because it, it's now
one of my most precious memories.
And I think it's because I was so close to not doing it.
And I just remember watching the sky above me on the OSAP Peninsula when the New Year
bring in and like all of the paper lanterns going up. And I remember feeling so full of wonder and newness and feeling like,
oh, I can feel wonder and newness.
And that was a new feeling to me again.
And also Carlos with a K because that memory
has only about 95% to do.
I remember Carlos with a K and his dog name danger.
Yes.
Dangerous.
Carlos with a K and a dog name danger. I know where this is going. Red flag. name danger. Yes. Dangerous. Carlos with a can of dog name danger.
I know where this is going.
Red flag.
Red flag.
Green.
Green flag.
Happy new year.
But sister's painting those red flags,
green all the time.
Go ahead.
But the point is, is that I feel like,
just if we viewed all of the things that we do every year as options and experiments,
like you, you should be experimenting to see if what you're choosing to do with your
time and your family's time is working for you and your family to fill yourself up.
You know, is it actually feel correct?
Can I make an aside about that?
I feel like it's very, it just reminded me of that year after the divorce.
If anyone is listening to this and is going through a transition of life, Like any kind of breakup or divorce or you lost a job or anything that your family culture
will seem big.
Just please, please for the love of God.
Like use this fleeting moment of freedom because it is like the, it's like you're playing
Mario Brothers and you just like hit the superstar.
You have this rare moment of temporary invincibility
where no one can say shit to you.
That like, use it.
Use it.
Use it.
Use it.
Use it.
And you'll get away with it and you should,
and you'll be very happy.
Yeah.
Go ahead and surprise yourself.
Yeah. I think that's that magic you felt. It's also you chose be very happy. Yeah, go ahead and surprise yourself. Yeah, I think that's that magic itself.
It's also you chose yourself.
Yeah.
And that is a magic, that's a revolution.
Yeah.
You're feeling revolution when you were looking at that
because breaking free from tradition,
tradition is what keeps us, it's an important thing, right?
There's no, this is an end both situation.
Totally.
But tradition really keeps us caged.
In certain ways, you know, it's like what they call tradition peer pressure from dead people.
It's like, seriously, like we can think it through. What if our tradition is, it's like choosing
the letter of the law over the, over the spirit of the law? Like, what if the tradition each holiday is, what do I and my family need this year
to feel free and held and fueled and loved
and relaxed and whatever?
What if that's the tradition?
Yes.
And then you move parts because families are,
or people are not static.
Like what created something beautiful 20 years ago
might very well not be what this particular person
and this particular family need in this moment this year.
Yes.
So when we use that, it's using an old blueprint
for what our family needs right now.
I totally agree.
And I think for you listener out there
who might be also experiencing some sort of transition I think, you know, for you listener out there,
who might be also experiencing some sort of transition
or divorce, my choice during my divorce
went very differently than sisters.
And I just wanna put that out there
that some people might not have the ability
to go to Costa Rica or have a life-changing experience
like you did.
I just sat in a hotel room by myself during
the holiday of Thanksgiving. One year. And honestly, it was like the saddest experience.
So, like, looking back, maybe I could have done something a little bit more productive.
And I think what sister you're saying is, like, there is a choice you have. And like, you get to choose yourself.
And this moment might not last,
because guess what, I met you and our family six months later.
And here I am having like,
totally different family holidays.
So I think you probably knew what you needed
in that moment though,
because sometimes I think we'll need to go through
something that brutal.
It's like we're, you know how crabs,
like, they, they, they they they they molt and they have to
they lose their hard shell. And they're soft shell crabs for a while because
and so when they are when they're molting when they're transforming because they've grown
it's a growth pattern. They have to hide because they're so vulnerable because they don't have a
hard shell. Oh, that was totally me. Right. They have so so they instinctively know that they're so vulnerable because they don't have a hard shell. Oh, that was totally me.
Right.
So they instinctively know that they're more vulnerable
and sometimes when we step back into family patterns,
we know, like, think about, you probably knew in your soul
that this person was going to say this
and that person was going to ask that question
and that you were not at your strongest
and you were in a moment where you were a soft shell crab and so you needed to like do the equivalent of
burrowing under a total coral reef or whatever crabs do.
This makes me feel really sad for soft shell crabs that get eaten.
I feel proud of them because they know what they need.
No, I know, but the ones that get eaten.
Yeah, those are the ones who went back to their families for the holidays.
Exactly.
They didn't listen to their families for the holidays. Exactly.
They didn't listen to their instinct, which should have said,
hide, hide.
They bowed to the tradition of crab effing families forever.
Their mother called and said, what the hell do you mean, little crab?
You're not coming back for the holidays.
And instead of standing strong, those crabs went and now look what happened.
They're dead.
Crab cakes.
Crab cakes. Don't be a crab cake.
It's all a dead.
It's all a dead.
And it's such a good point because it's not just,
it's what works for you year to year.
I mean, people who are going through grief,
something that may have, you know,
filled you up for the past 10 years,
in this moment,
yes, might not.
And you have to be able to, you know, honor your traditions and honor your needs.
And if honoring your needs makes you not be able to honor your traditions, you need to
just go with that.
Amen.
Choose that.
Yes.
And just practice.
Like sometimes it's just an extra minute.
It's like, wait, before this all starts, you know,
it's all starting, sit down and take a minute
and be like, wait, what do I want from these holidays?
What do you want?
What do you want?
It's not just like, what does my family want from me?
What does everyone want from me?
I'm just gonna go and do it.
But like an intentional moment of like,
what do I need from these holidays?
I remember trying to weed through some of the traditions that we've had.
And sit down with your kids too.
If you have them, I mean,
Tish won't let us get rid of anyone of traditions.
She's a hot life.
She's a tradition hoarder.
She is.
I mean, anything every year, if it's new that we've done it,
it is now officially a tradition in our family.
And we will continue doing this year over here.
That's why we have to be so careful starting things with her.
It's really. But I also want to suggest that there are small things like,
yes, not, you know, because so many people are like, I can't not go to see my family. I get that,
you know, there's, there's that. But there are small things you can do for us. I remember
having this, my parents are with us every Christmas and they are gift people. So they spend like
all year creating these beautiful gifts. And so what would happen is that on Christmas morning,
there would be this time where they were presenting their gifts. And it was so important to them
that it would end up stressing everyone out because it needed to be this very big presentation.
But we kept doing it every year, every year,
we kept doing it until we figured out,
okay, we're not gonna, that's a beautiful tradition,
we're not gonna throw it away.
But what if we give mom and dad Christmas Eve?
What if Christmas Eve is when they do their presents
because that's a calmer time,
like the kids don't have other gifts around
so they're not distracted.
And then Christmas morning is the free for all, right?
So I just feel like if there's moments in the holidays that are creating misery or stress,
sometimes it's creativity and not just throwing the thing out.
Right. And there's so many little, just because it's working for everyone else doesn't
mean that it's working for you and all those little microchangers
like I have a friend her parents were divorced and basically she was like time clocked on,
you know, you go, Chris is wanting for here and if you, that's got to be for two hours and
15 minutes and then you got to make sure you get in the car at this time and go here
for two hours and 15 minutes and not make.
So her thing is my immediate family gets the first,
like three hours known as loud in our house
with your extra agendas.
And then after that, there is no agenda
because her kind of core, you know,
trauma around Christmas was,
oh, it has to do with equitable splitting up
of all the minutes.
And so it's just knowing yourself enough to know what actually is going to feel like
I can breathe well.
Yes.
Also not for nothing that just deciding on quantity.
Like 70% of people, their primary feeling during the holidays is stress over not having
enough time and stress over not having enough time and stress over
not having enough money. But we get to choose how we allocate our time and we get to choose
how we allocate our dollars. So it's not like a, it's a trap to go in without intentions.
But if you're just like practicing, that's not gonna work for us this year.
We're, here's the four things we love to do over the holidays.
And that's what we're doing.
And also here's how much money we're gonna spend
and we're not gonna spend more than that.
Yes, yes, it's like the energy difference
of like the energetic difference of like,
I just, I don't have enough time to make everyone happy.
And like, I don't have enough time to make everyone happy. So like I'm not going to try.
Like not a problem, just not a problem. You literally don't have time to make people happy. Yeah.
Our kids are not allowed. They have their little Christmas lists and they're locked by Thanksgiving.
Nobody's allowed to add another thing to their Christmas list after Thanksgiving. It's coming
up so they're like, obviously, you know, friends are finishing.
They're, they're, they're strong right now. They're like, oh! And they, and, and because
then you, they're not spending, we're not spending a moment of our freaking rest of our weeks. What do you want? What do you,
so it's so ugly here. And my kids always two days before decide that in fact, the one big
gift that they'd been asking for for six months is in fact not the thing they want, which
I've already wrapped. And, because the advertising is so...
The YouTube told them.
Yes, and it's never been more intense than in December.
So if they mentally know there's nothing else, like that's it, then it's sort of like
a resistance to all of that.
You know, and for us then we're not worrying about it, it's like, I don't know, that's
just a little thing.
It's a smart idea. That's a smart idea.
That's a hashtag hack.
Is that a hashtag hack?
It is.
Hack lists do by Thanksgiving.
Yeah.
And now I'm trying to hack it out, and I don't know how hacks work.
But I'm really excited that that might be a hack.
I think it is.
Great, great, great.
Okay.
So, it's your E effing holiday with number one.
Number two, and I don't have a whole lot to say about this
because I haven't nailed this one at all,
but I just want to talk about it,
which it's the fact that the holidays for people who have
food and body issues.
What I can say is for me, the holidays are a shit show
of like all of the food stuff coming up.
And I think it's a combination of a lot of things.
It's like that there is so much food wrapped around
in the holiday stuff, but it's also because
when we go back into tradition or to family
or to anything that like drives us toward the old, that brings up all of the patterns
that kind of led us to eating disorders anyway.
So I just think there's like an awareness that we have where we are people with eating stuff
are kind of soft shell crabs during the holidays.
So we don't have our hard shell and we're maybe out of our structure, whatever.
So knowing that, I try to eat big meals.
I try to eat a big breakfast, eat a big lunch,
and eat a big dinner.
Like, that makes me, I think what we do sometimes
is when we're worried about food.
We're like, okay, I'm gonna, it's a Thanksgiving or whatever.
And I'm gonna have a huge dinner.
So I have to starve myself.
I have to not eat.
And then I'll be okay to eat dinner.
Like, that whole, that ritual that everybody on the planet does,
it's so close.
Yeah, it doesn't help us because it brings back
the scarcity feelings and the, it's just like,
what I'll say is for me, it's important to feed myself,
feed myself, feed myself, feed myself again,
feed my, I deserve to eat every day of the holidays, even if I had a
big meal the night before, even if it's just a time to let yourself be juicy and human,
and trust you, your appetite, and just, and then I constantly, I actually do this every day of my
life. So it's maybe not a holiday hack. It's just like a human hack is that I constantly carry around
a cup of tea or coffee all the time. It's like my hands around a mug remind me of the fact that I am.
I don't know, cozy, loved. It's like the warmth of it just makes me feel good. It's the oral fixation of having something right there.
It makes me feel strong and loved and okay.
It's a shield of some sort.
And I don't, I wasn't gonna say that because
I don't know how to explain it.
It's like shield.
I feel serious about myself.
Yeah, exactly.
And I could throw this tionny if I need to.
Yeah, come at me. Yeah, it's hot. It reminds me ofny if I need to. Yeah, come at me.
Yeah, it's hot.
It reminds me of like, if I'm going into a social situation, I will sometimes, especially
if it's a wedding, I will chew gum.
Huh.
I don't know why that feels like a shield to me.
Yeah, because you're like, look at me in my jawline.
I am serious.
Well, and it's like, I can't talk because I'm chewing gum.
You don't want to.
You don't want to call us. You don't call us. Just call us.
Don't call us.
Literally.
We know you're not supposed to chew gum at weddings.
We know we're not.
I don't care.
That's a tradition.
If I have to chew gum at a wedding, I'm going to, I can't drink.
Are you kidding me?
Yeah.
So you can have six vodkas, but I can't have double mint.
Yeah.
That's right.
I was just going to say T-thing is a great call
and a for sober people.
Cause I feel like that's a whole
another huge aspect to the holidays.
Yes.
You know why y'all can handle this?
You know why you can get through this?
Is cause you are wasted.
Yes, can we, that's a hack.
Sober people get to do whatever the hell they want.
I mean, Abby and I will never be anywhere past nine o'clock.
Because when people start drinking, bless you.
We love you.
We love you.
We do not judge you except a little bit after nine o'clock because everybody thinks they're
hilarious.
Everybody saying things that maybe they wouldn't say.
Just get a little more obnoxious and like nothing ever after nine or 10 o'clock, like nothing
good ever, nothing good happens after nine o'clock or nine o'clock.
Right.
Well, you're having different experiences.
I have the same thing.
Like I really just everyone who is sober listening over the holidays, like you get to, you get to be odd too.
Okay?
Yes.
Because it's not just you being odd, everyone's being odd.
The person over there, she's on a 12th string,
she's saying some crazy shit.
If you wanna go sit on a couch in another room,
that's just as odd as what everyone else is doing.
That's right. So just what everyone else is doing.
So just do, I have given myself blanket authorization
to do whatever I want.
Because even being a sober person over the holidays
is a thing you're actively doing all the time.
And everybody else has their strategy
of just drinking to survive.
You get to use your strategy.
And you should, and you should, which is leaving, which is removing yourself, which is whatever
you need to do.
I love that.
There's this one weird thing that I want to say that I do that is strange because I'm
not an outside person.
But there's something about holiday days that makes me need to go stand outside
in the cold, cold, cold, maybe every couple of hours. I don't know what it is, but
whatever home I'm in, it's beautiful and there's so many people there.
So if everything's happening, but I have to step outside. It's take a deep breath and just give my, it's
like not enough to be in a different room. I have to be outside. Little breaks outside
for a few moments and deep breaths out there. If you just, just try it.
It's like almost like, you know how they say taking cold showers.
Yeah.
Like wakes you up, you know, like sometimes it can get really daunting being with a lot of family
during the holidays that like getting outside.
If it's cold where you live, like it's like a good splash.
Yeah.
Like it's like getting yourself like woken back up to like, Oh, what, what are my boundaries?
Where, why am I here? Like, am I good? Are you okay?
Checking in with yourself.
That's what it is. It's a little meeting with yourself, where you're reminding yourself
of who you are, of, um, all the good things, right?
Yeah, because it's very easy to get wound up and to get wrapped up in all of your familial
remembering.
Now you can loss all of those ways, like, oh, oh, here,
here's my brother and sister, they're teasing me again,
because this is the way of my family.
Or here we go down this weird road again.
And I don't love this road.
Yes, like Jesus.
It's like the touch tree.
That's what it is.
The leaving is the like returning to my touch tree when I get a little bit lost.
Yeah. Yeah.
So, so work in those those touch tree moments where you get to check in with yourself.
One thing that just to circle back to the food bit, one thing that I've done.
So the first Thanksgiving we spent together, I made from scratch because that was like my value add to our family is cooking.
I made from scratch all of the food. Oh yeah. And I spent three days not only
cooking it, but prepping it. It was like a whole week, like buying all the food,
then prepping it, then making the plan for when and how we were going to do this with like one
little oven. And so long story short,
what we ended up doing was, okay, it's still important to me to cook the turkey. So I get a pre-cooked
turkey and then I, you know, jujured up in the way that I like to put some butter and cook it.
But then what we've decided, and yes, this is a privilege position, but like we just go get like already pre-made holiday sides.
And that has freed up an entire week of my life.
So if you have the means to be able to do that, to be able to buy some of your time back,
do it.
Well, ended up being cheaper.
It actually did.
Then make buying all the right. And it's not just a privilege thing. Like
that we do it for Thanksgiving with our we basically do like a
pot luck situation. Yeah. And I think it's like it takes a hit on
your part because you're like, I am not presenting the thing. But
the same thing I was like, no, thank you, ma'am. Like I am
delighted to have everyone over and that's
what I love to do. And also everyone bring a thing. Yes, that's right. And guess what? It doesn't taste
that much worse or better. No, it tastes better because I'm making the one thing they know
out of me. Yeah, exactly. Well, remember the year before you came, you were kind of appalled by this,
but you said, what did you do last year? I said, we got our dinner from the grocery store. He was, Abby was like,
oh, did you, like, you did that package where you ordered it? And I was like, no, I went to the buffet.
The day of Thanksgiving, I went to the buffet. And I stopped to the hot bar. And I took you to a bunch
of shit into plastic containers. And the turkey was like slat, like little cuts of, you know, that you'd
become a fish.
It was already sliced.
It was already sliced.
There was stuffing in there.
There was potatoes.
I mean, brilliant.
And I just, and I put them on the table
and I just, and it was fine.
Yeah, totally.
Totally.
Yeah.
Okay. Great.
So number two was the number two hack was eat drink breath. Okay?
Eat drink breath.
Good luck.
It's okay.
Now, I feel strongly that this is the most important one.
Yes, it is.
Sister Bear.
This is the most important holiday and perhaps life hack.
We can all have for you.
Yes.
Pressure's ones.
Okay.
And we are calling number three, be unsurprised.
Sister, can you just start us off with this one?
This is my favorite ever.
Okay.
So, 100% we know what our family is.
Right, like the key, maybe to life and,
but to the holidays is not allowing ourselves to be surprised
about what is 0% surprising.
So in order to have peace and integrity
and not walk away from holiday events
and the holidays in general feeling like shit about ourselves
and maniacal about our families,
is just picking our 10%.
Okay, so our 10%.
Okay, so our 10% is what will inevitably go down
with our families over the holidays,
that we will for sure act to ourselves as if it's shocking.
Okay, okay.
And then they are the kind of things, if you're trying to think of these, the kind of things
that we will leave feeling ick about ourselves, they will be the kind of things that we carry
with us, the kind of things that we have to get in the car and immediately talk to the
person in the car about, and debrief on.
So they're, so like the comments about why we're not married yet,
how many wait watchers points those potatoes might be only because she's super curious. And
also like anything that's a dog whistle, yes, homophobia, racism. It's like we have to pick those 10% of our family stuff that insults our soul.
Okay, so these are the mountains we're willing to die on. Yeah, and the good news is we do not have
to die. You're right. You're right. You know, that's like, they're just the things that
Oh, that's like, they're just the things that,
by thinking of them and preparing for them in advance, we don't spend the whole time walking on eggshells,
holding our breath because they wouldn't dare do it.
Because yes, they would dare, they would dare.
They double dare you every time.
They're gonna do that thing.
And so we just, then we don't have to be scared about And so we just then we don't have to be scared
about it happening. And then we don't have to leave berating ourselves for not saying
what we wish we would have said. And just think about in the shower for the next six weeks.
Exactly. So basically what you're saying is you're gonna spend the time preparing the
retort anyway. Usually what we do is we do it when it's too late.
It's happening back then.
Yes.
We spend the whole year preparing the retort.
We should have said before.
Afterwards, so what we're going to do instead
is we're going to take, even just, it's going to be less time.
Yeah, we're just going to do it ahead of time instead.
Prepare for it.
We're gonna prepare
our retort to dog whistles to racism to homophobia to the thing that our aunt is gonna say about
not being married to whatever we know is gonna happen. We are gonna be ready. So instead
of eggshells dreading, we're almost gonna be hoping that shit comes. Yeah. So you can say
I think and we're not mad about it. I'm not mad that two plus two equals four. Okay.
We're not mad about it. I'm not mad that two plus two equals four.
Like, do we're not mad?
We're just like, Dorothy.
Dorothy.
Here's my response to Dorothy.
And, you know, and that's brave.
That takes some courage.
Right, but we think in advance of it
and we're not trying to be courageous.
We're trying to have ourselves remain intact in the moment.
We're trying to make the outside self and the inside self
one be integrated.
Right.
Abandoning ourselves by letting things go that we should not.
That's right to me.
And it feels like that's the part that makes us feel
equal when we leave our families is because we let that 10%
chip off of us and then we're wondering,
am I really 100% me?
Because in that moment, I wasn't.
And so I think also that's a service to ourselves,
but it's also a service to our families.
Because the 10% that we choose to
make our existence in that space align with our beliefs and our boundaries and the way we view the world.
Making ourselves show up in those 10% of the spaces is what moves families down
the field.
Yes.
And it makes it makes dread it.
You will dread family interactions less.
Yes.
And you will break terrible old familial patterns that need to be broken.
Because racism and homophobia and all of that shit, those are traditions.
Yeah.
I mean, listen, my mom and mom, I love you so much if you're listening, just turn
up the volume a little bit.
Down. Turn it up. No, turn it up. I want you to listen to this.
Because I'm going to have a moment. Almost every single time that I'm on the face time
with my mom, I haven't done my hair, right? I have basically what's called a mohawk.
I shaved the sides of my head.
And this is not a look my mother loves
because it's evidently more gay to her or something.
I'm not sure exactly because I've never had
this conversation with her.
But at the end of the day, she always says,
whenever I'm not, I have not done my hair so that you
can see the shapes on the sides. It's fallen over the shave. It looks like kind of like a
normal short haircut, right? Like a bob, a bobbish. I don't know. Yeah, a short bob.
She's always like, oh my gosh, I love your hair like that. So much.
And she doesn't understand that I know
that that's like her dog whistle to me.
That's like, please don't wear your hair in the really gay way.
You know what I mean?
And I don't think that she thinks of it like that.
I don't think that she's conscious of it.
I think that she's just trying to like compliment me.
And it's this backhanded thing.
So it's like, maybe one of these days,
I'm gonna get the courage and be like,
mom, this is who I am.
Whether my hair is this way or that way.
Like, I am gay and proud of it.
And also like, stop the charade of like,
you thinking that you're gonna somehow
control my way of being.
And that's just like at the end of the day,
it's like we just gotta keep accepting people
through who they are.
So this is a long story.
It's so exactly right.
Yeah, at the end of the day,
it's like I need to get brave enough to be like,
Mom, I really love you.
And I know you mean well here,
but please stop commenting on my hair
because it's too loaded.
Yes.
It's too loaded.
That's a good.
There's too much loaded in it for me
that I always leave those interactions
feeling bad about myself.
Mm.
Yeah.
And that's I think like what we're kind of saying
with some of this family, like that little zinger,
like and mothers with like,
oh, I love, have you lost weight or?
Yeah.
Or this.
You look so great.
And fly.
You look like shit for the decade before.
Yes.
No, no.
Yeah.
And they're so much loaded in what we say to each other.
And I'm not perfect either.
Like, but I just think that there's a little bit of consciousness
that we can bring into some of this.
Yeah. And there's your 10% right? I mean, what you just said, it's loaded for me, that's a little bit of consciousness that we can bring into some of this. Yeah, and there's your 10% right?
I mean, what you just said, it's loaded for me,
that's your 10% of preparation
because actually babe, when you got off the phone
the other day.
I talked to you right away.
You were like, you said to me, she said it again,
she always says it.
She always, always says it.
And so it's like, wait a minute, if we know she always says it,
why aren't we more prepared?
Because then we have to spend so much time afterwards.
It's so true. Thinking of what we would have said, but then we don't we more prepared? Because then we have to spend so much time afterwards.
It's so true.
Thinking of what we would have said,
but then we don't say it again.
Yeah, and the surprise.
Be unsurpassed.
Be unsurpassed.
Yeah, we unsurpassed.
And be prepared.
So like when your uncle says the racist thing,
when your mom asks you why you're not married,
when your aunt asks you if you're still gay,
when your brother asks you if you're starting a diet.
You're still gay.
When your mother-in-law asks if maybe you've ever
considered brushing your children's hair,
like just be prepared.
And that and both end.
So be unsurprised and be prepared for the 10%.
Like that is yours to do, right?
And the other thing that is yours to do
is then let your family do what they do,
that's right.
You're going to adjust your focus on that 10% and then the rest of your focus is on letting
our families be exactly what they are.
That's right.
Exactly as regrettably and delightfully as they are because we are being unsurprised
and we are letting them be.
Right, we're not changing them.
We're not changing them on Thanksgiving.
No, we're not.
But we are also not changing ourselves.
I love it.
All right, so in short, you have three next straight things,
this holiday season.
Number one, remember that it's your Fing holiday. Okay? Number two, eat, drink,
what you're supposed to drink, whatever that is. Breathe. Okay? And number three, shit,
what was number three? Be unsurprised. Be unsurprised when the holidays get hard. Don't
forget. We can do hard things.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlyle.
I walked through a fire I came out the other side.
I chased desire, I made sure I got once money And I continue to believe that I'm the one for me
And because I'm mine, I want the line
Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak So I'm out of final destination
And I'm we stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our away back home Through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache
I hit rock bottom It felt like a brand new star.
I'm not far far away
And I continue to believe
The best people are free
And it took some time
But I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers and heartbreaks on that, a final destination
with that, we stopped asking directions, some places they've never been 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 spring
We can do a heartache.
This perfect, generous and heartbreak's on my mind. We might get lost, but we're only in that.
Stop asking directions.
Some places they've never been to be loved we need to be long
We'll finally find our way back home
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 Kaden's 13 Studios.
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