We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - How to be Sexually Confident with Mae Martin
Episode Date: January 26, 20231. Mae, Glennon, Abby, and Amanda each explore their sexuality by delving into what sexually attracts each of them. 2. The sex-positive way Mae’s parents taught them about sex – and orgasm(!) �...� and how they never made assumptions about Mae's sexuality. 3. Gender as creative expression and a way to have fun. 4. Simple ways to switch up the monotony of routine; to transform boredom into exploration; and dopamine-infused alternatives for addictive personality types. 5. How fear of abandonment / fear of dependence can take over our lives. About Mae: Mae Martin is an award-winning comedian, actor, writer, and producer who can be seen starring in Feel Good, which they also created and co-wrote. Mae is currently in development with their upcoming scripted project Programmed for Netflix and stars in season 2 of The Flight Attendant on HBO Max. Mae Martin's Guide To… series about sexuality and addiction are available to listen to on BBC Sounds. Mae is also the author of Can Everyone Please Calm Down?: A Guide to 21st Century Sexuality. TW: @TheMaeMartin IG: @hooraymae To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Okay, everybody. Thanks for coming back to We Can Do Hard Things. We're going to jump
right in because we're very excited about the person who is with us today. May, March
10 is an award-winning comedian, actor, writer, and producer who can be seen starring in Feel Good,
which they also created and co-wrote. May is currently in development with
programmed for Netflix and stars in season two of the flight attendant, so cool,
on HBO Max. May Martin's Guide to Series about sexuality and addiction are
available to listen to on BBC sounds. May is also the
author of Can Everyone Please Calm Down, a guy to 21st century sexuality, which our family
has been going through like a hilarious family class for the last month. Welcome, May.
Thanks for coming on. We can do hard things. Thanks for having me. It's so nice to meet you all. This is my wife Abby. This is my sister Amanda.
You all know this is me. So we have so much to ask you about, but we want to start with sexuality,
because that's just an easy subject. We can just get out of the way real quick.
Just a light, you know, easy breezy. Yeah. And also just because we enjoyed your book so much.
Let's start by talking about why we should talk about sexuality because I loved your point,
which is really sexuality is for everybody, not just queer people and the poor straight people
never get to talk about their sexuality because it is always seen as something that is just for queer people. But you say in the book, which
I love that gender preferences are kind of the least important part of sexuality. There's
a lot of other parts. Yeah, that's been my experience. And definitely even, yeah, regardless
of how you identify, you're rarely attracted to an entire gender, right? It's to do with pheromones or the way people laugh.
I have like very specific criteria.
Yes, you do.
Yeah, I think people often forget that, yeah,
it's not just queer people that have a sexuality.
Yeah, so something that has been token,
the token hetero on this pod, I will say,
I will affirm that it didn't occur to me. We even did one on sexuality and I was like, oh, okay, I'll just listen to that one. I don't know. Yes. I know.
Yeah, that's insane, right?
Yeah.
I think it's because queer people are asked to communicate about it a lot more and to sort of
defend it and explain it a lot more.
So it feels like a much bigger part of our identity when really it should be just one small part, you know, or it should be the same size as your part. That's right.
Right. So this is what we're talking about. Okay, these are some examples of maze sexuality.
Okay. As in a few years ago. Right. Yeah. Yeah.
May really loves winkers. Okay. Yes.
That's W-I-N-K-E-R-S. May loves people who wink at them.
Yeah. Incessantly or something.
Also, die you will.
How much strategically, probably, not incessantly.
I would guess.
I'd call an ambulance for them.
But yeah, I love it.
I think it's the confidence that when someone,
I know it's kind of old school, but a wink is,
maybe I just like attention, and so it's very direct attention
of someone going, I'm giving
you attention.
And I love, yeah, I love a wink.
I can't do it.
Maybe that's part of it too.
I can.
I'm a terrible winker, but like a subtle quick wink.
Uh-huh.
It's like a bullet.
If the wink happened with like two guns, like finger guns, yeah, fingers, that's a
bro wink. That's a bro wink. no, that's a pro wick. That's a pro wick.
Yeah, that's like ace venture.
I don't think I can get on board with that.
And you also said that your sexuality is people who order you drinks without asking you
what you want.
And then also people who drive while you're the passenger.
So I'm noticing some kind of like you want someone else to be the boss of the situation,
or am I over generalizing here?
Yeah, I think it's evolved slightly, the drink thing,
because once I put that in print, now when I'm out,
people send me drinks and I'm scared of what's in them.
I know, I'm like, this is not safe.
I don't know, I shouldn't have said this,
but I guess it's all confidence for me.
And I'm, yeah, being in the passenger seat when someone's driving is hot to me.
It's, yeah, cars, a powerful vehicle.
And being like, I guess I'm going where you're taking me.
Yeah.
Interesting.
What about you too?
Because I gave them homework that they were going to have to figure out what their sexuality
was.
Yeah.
Oh, great. Sister Darrell. Sister Darrell.
I think I might have the same sexuality as me.
Okay.
Really?
Which is fascinating because my things are bodily identifying you in a group, like with confidence,
with some gesture that suggests that you know exactly what's going to happen.
Yes.
So, things like just staring at you right in the
eye just a little too long. I can't. That is electric. Yes. And the things that might
be like, oh God, other people are see, oh, oh, this is happening. You are, you are foreshadowing
something right now. Or like this happened to a friend of mine recently,
she was at a party and she was in a group talking
to other people in the group.
And this gentleman came over, took her hand,
put her drink down on the table
and just took her to the dance floor.
And I was like, that is my sexuality.
Like that, thank you.
And bodily awareness of not only themselves, but you, so like if someone's walking past,
like putting their hand on your back and like, hate that.
Kind of being aware.
I mean, it's something about being aware of your body and aware.
But what's weird is like all of these things become awful
if the wrong person does that.
Yeah, exactly.
Like that is so repulsive if some random creep is doing that.
But yeah, if it's someone that there's a vibe.
I have a few.
Okay.
So someone who can bring a joke full circle and land it.
Like inside a conversation,
we've been talking for 10 minutes
and then the one person who can just bring it home and tie up. That's a conversation, we've been talking for 10 minutes and then the one person
who can just bring it home and tie up, that's a thing that Glennon does. And then I'll say
this one, someone who is up for an adventure, like if I were to say, hey, let's go do this
X. And they're like, yes. And also we should also do Y. And I'm like, yes, somebody who wants to bring their yes game and also add to it, huh?
Okay. Yeah. Yeah. I'm with you. Hmm. That's cool.
I had a hard time with this one. Yeah, really hard time because you know, I've just gotten a sexuality
I would beg to differ, but yeah, you differ. So I think it's slightly true.
Like I think I shut it down for so long.
You did an excluric, I was sort of what was there.
But I will tell you that one of the things I have noticed
throughout my entire life is that when anyone approached me
that was non-binary looking, what I assume is my sexuality,
all I can tell you is that if my heart was a soldier,
it was like suddenly at attention.
Yeah, it's that sexuality.
You know, there's certain people who,
when they're around, it's like a director has said action
and suddenly you're in the room and you're,
it's those people and you're trying to be the best version
of yourself. I love that feeling.
Yes.
Yeah.
Okay, so May, I just need to talk about your parents
for a minute and how they talk to you about sex
because we actually have a lot of parents
that listen to this had.
And I think that your parents did such
a freaking amazing job of the talk, right,
which really should be an ongoing conversation forever with a family. But first of all,
didn't your mom sit you down with hand drawn diagrams of sex?
Yeah. If for when I have kids, I don't know that I would do it exactly the way they did it, but yeah, I was really young. And I think I
had a lot of questions already probably because my parents had shown me the movie Rocky Horror
Picture Show when I was very young because it was like a family favorite. And then yeah, my mom
sat me down. I think I was about five or six and she had diagrams and she's just in that conversation
said, this is how a man and a woman have sex and a man and a man and a woman and a woman and like it she really covered every base and she told me
a lot in that conversation. She told me there's no Santa Claus in the same conversation.
So that was a lot to take in and she just sort of demystified all of life in one sitting.
But she was very sex positive always and described it as extremely pleasurable
and tried to explain orgasms and stuff.
I mean, there's maybe too much,
but I mean, I couldn't really understand it at that age,
but I just knew it wasn't scary.
And I also, they never assumed that I was straight.
Me or my brother, who is ostensibly straight, I guess.
They always said, you have a girlfriend or a boyfriend or a, you know what I mean?
It was just, because it is crazy that we just assume it is, you know.
Even the pictures, even the saying, this is sex between a woman and a woman, that is so
brilliant.
Also, if you need a cheat sheet, you could explain orgasms the way that May's mother did,
which is this.
Okay, just want you to imagine some mother saying this
to six-year-old May.
Okay?
When two people love each other and they're naked and having sex,
they feel very happy, and then they feel increasingly happy.
And finally, they reach a moment of extreme happiness
and an explosion of rainbows cascades across the sky.
So poetic and so misleading. happiness and an explosion of rainbows cascades across the sky.
So poetic and so misleading.
Yes.
I mean, like, yeah, I was really, really disappointed
when the fun finally happened.
No rainbows.
The only person for whom the first orgasm
was really fucking let down.
It was a let down.
Yeah, so if I'd done it wrong, like, can we talk about the fact that you never had to
come out? Because this is something we talk about all the time, which is, I don't know
if people who don't have to come out, even know why it's so infuriating to have to come
out. Because it's sexualizing yourself in front of people over and over again, which
straight people never have to do.
Straight people don't just sit down with their parents and say, hello, I'd like to announce
the fact that I'm a sexual being and have sexual feelings towards people.
Yeah, it's insane.
Yeah, I mean, there's no other preference where you have to declare it and then stick
with you.
Like, when you're a teenager, if you were like,
what kind of music do you like?
And then you have to say it and never change it.
And yeah, I'm just lucky, I think.
We had other issues, me and my parents, for sure,
but just in this area, they really did a great job
at giving me this armor against the rest of the world kind of.
And then I encountered all of that weirdness
when I was not at home and I was like, oh, why is this a thing?
But I remember renting the movie Gia.
Oh, I love that movie.
Yeah, with Angelina Jolie.
And there's a sex scene in it.
But I just didn't know to be ashamed.
And I didn't even really know what it meant.
But I was like, God, guys, I just love this movie so much.
I just kept talking about it to my parents
and feeling like, isn't this a beautiful scene?
And they were like, yeah, okay.
And I think that was all.
And then I always brought home boys and girls.
And yeah, I think I had a pretty voracious sexual appetite.
So I don't know if that was a byproduct of how they raised me,
but probably, probably, probably.
Yeah.
I actually really remember being very attached to that movie.
Have you seen it?
I have seen it.
It makes sense.
It's all coming together now.
Yeah.
We talked about this.
One time when you were explaining to a friend,
I think you were saying at the time that you were going to a friend, I think you were saying at the
time that you were going to date a boy or dating a boy. And your friend got upset in like
a very confused way because your friend was used to seeing you date women. And so he looked
at you strangely and said, I can't imagine you having sex with a dude. And you said, which made us so happy,
please refrain from imagining me having sex with anyone.
Yes.
Yeah.
That's so weird for queer people
that every conversation is the other person
imagining you having sex with someone.
Yeah, and also besides that, it's like really you can't imagine it.
Like I can imagine anything I want.
That's right.
Anytime.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
How that's sad for your imagination.
That's right.
Early on in my coming out story, I felt like because it was, you know, 20, 20 years ago,
I felt like I was the one that was teaching everybody about gainess.
And so all of the questions would come.
And I felt like it was my unfortunate duty to have to educate.
And you know, quite frankly, a lot of my straight dude friends were asking me a lot of important
questions for their sexual lives.
And I hated it, but I also felt like it was a service
that I had to do for some reason.
It was brutal.
Yeah, that's how I feel a little bit about gender right now.
And that's also like such an evolving journey for me
and a recent shift.
And I get so many questions about it.
And on the one hand, you're like, it's frustrating,
but also I try so hard to be.
It's a new thing for everyone, sort of,
I mean, not in human history, but in recent years.
So I'm trying to be super patient
and with my parents and stuff.
You know, I think it's important
that people feel safe to ask questions,
but then, I don't know, they've got to be polite questions, too.
They really do.
And also, if it's something you can Google,
maybe do that as well. Yeah. What is the conversation with your parents right now? They gotta be polite questions too. You really do. And also, if it's something you can Google,
maybe do that as well.
What is the conversation with your parents right now?
And what is the journey you're on with gender?
Well, so I'm 35 and looking back,
I'm like, oh, I'm for sure trans.
But then, and for 10 years, I thought every day
about top surgery and I just never thought
I'd be brave enough to do it.
I thought it was such a huge deal and such a massive thing. And then I just did it at Christmas.
And it's been incredible. And I'm it's I didn't think that this type of joy or like
feeling comfortable in my body. I didn't think it was accessible to me. I thought everyone else felt the way I felt all the time.
And now I'm like, oh my god, I, what a waste of time
that I spent all that time worrying.
So I feel great.
And I think my parents can see how good I feel
and that's good.
Yeah.
And they've been, they've been good.
Pronouns are hard for people.
I mean, it's hard if you aren't in a community where
you're hearing them used a lot and it becomes second nature pretty fast. I think if you,
but for them, you know, they live a pretty quiet and sillier life and they can't really
wrap their head around that yet, but they're trying. And they said an interesting thing
the last time they visited me. And I was like swimming in front of them and I think they could just see how happy I am. And they said, we can't really understand the pronoun thing, but
we want you to know that we see you as you are. Like we can see that you're not a girl
and you don't feel like a girl. And so we do know and see you and all your nuances and
everything, but it's just linguistically we can't get it. So I was like, oh, that's a step.
But also maybe give it a go sometimes, you know.
Throw it there and yeah, for good measure.
I'm Jonathan M. Hevar.
I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class. My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot. And I want to talk about it. That's what we're
doing on my new podcast, Classy. And what did you all eat? You know, trailer food.
And what did you all eat? You know, trailer food.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing,
and strangely intimate things about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner,
I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows
that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy.
A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
I think that one of the things that has really helped me not only the fact that I'm very
non-binary and so much of my life, I just, I feel like I'm attached to the pronouns
she, her.
And so one of our children, they have a non-binary friend that uses the pronouns they
them.
And it blew my mind when I started to think of it
as just a third way.
Rather than just having two options,
there's a middle option.
And that helped me orient how to communicate.
And by the way, I still make mistakes.
They all do.
And so just moving beyond those mistakes as quickly
and as least dramatically as possible has been really kind of shifting for me.
Yeah, it's tricky because it's like when you talk about paradigm shifts on on this podcast, it is a big and challenging thing, but it's such an important thing that's happening.
It might take a hundred years for us to undo how rigid we've become in this binary, but we're definitely headed in that direction.
And it's super important and interesting.
And I think if we can get interested in it
in a historical and scientific and cultural
anthropological way, if you do any sort of research into it,
it's just very compelling.
And you start to see these rigid walls
that have been built around us and how
limiting they can be. And I mean even like right now the world's health
organization defines gender as a cultural thing, you know. It really rocks people's
world though. But even sex is not that binary, you know, when you come down to it.
It's good and exciting, but I don't
know, it really, it really people have a panic reaction for sure.
So the World Health Organization says that gender is cultural. Here's a question. So I,
every poor person who listens to this podcast, you have to listen to me talk about gender incestantly because I'm always trying to figure it out. But I can't understand gender
doesn't feel like anything that's inside me. It feels like things that I have put on
the outside of me because that's how I've been told to present in the world. But I can't
find it inside of me. So like when our son is explaining how his friend is identifying
So like when our son is explaining how his friend is identifying and he says, look, just look at that. Like there is, you know, a soul, all souls have to be them. Like when you start thinking about
human beings as not gendered, because gender is not real, you just will start thinking them,
them, them, because it makes more sense, actually. Yeah. Yeah. Which I think is so beautiful and probably right.
But then I have, I get to that place where I'm like, gender is not real.
It's not fucking me.
And then I have a dear friend who's trans and is like, oh no, thank you.
That's not correct.
I am a man.
Interesting. And I'm like, where is, what is it?
Yeah, that's super interesting.
It's a minefield.
I mean, I feel similarly to you, I think,
where my personal experience is when I sort of free myself
from those things, I'm like, I don't identify
with any of it, really.
But then, I don't know.
I guess in the performance of it,
like I do identify,
I feel more comfortable being masculine presenting,
and I kind of enjoy embodying those tropes sometimes,
like playfully, and the people that I idolize and stuff
and growing up wanted to be like,
or are all, you know, river Phoenix and people like that.
So I don't know, if we can just take the heaviness out of it
and be like, it's a form of self-expression,
there's creativity to it.
We can do whatever we want.
And so yeah, sure, if you feel like a man
and you identify with that, then great.
That's fun.
Yeah.
And then people should respect it and treat you that way.
But yeah, I think it's scary for people to think
that there is an element of creativity,
like it's scary to give yourself that power, you know?
Yeah, it's good.
It's scary to consider that there's an element
of creativity in it.
Ooh, and it's just so amazing that you can get to,
oh, now I've got it.
Now I've got it.
Gender is not even a thing.
It's not even real.
Yes, that is evolved.
And then somebody's like, that's totally wrong.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
I mean, I wrote that book about sexuality and gender.
And then I did a book tour and I was going into high schools.
And by the time the book came out, it was outdated.
I was using the wrong terms,
and people were teaching me,
so we just had to be all curious and interested
and patient, and yeah.
Constantly curious, strong opinions.
That is interesting.
It's just any time that you kind of
affix some kind of immutable to it
is when you get in trouble.
Maybe you're like, yes, it absolutely is horseshit.
I know that with certainty.
It's like maybe you're in trouble
because if it is part of your creative expression,
then someone might be certain about themselves
in this moment.
And maybe in the next moment,
they have a different certainty about themselves. So maybe you And maybe in the next moment, they have a different
certainty about themselves. So maybe you get in trouble when you ascribe any kind of meaning or
certainty for others. Whereas if we just were more concerned about interrogating our own
creativity and identity, and only being concerned with that.
Yes. I mean, that's where it would be rich.
Yeah, there's a really interesting book called
Can the Monster Speak?
A speech given to a college of psychoanalyst
by a trans man called Paul Presiado
and that sort of rocked my world.
It was really interesting,
but he talks about how we're...
I think part of the reason people are so reactive
is that we're still attached to this kind of Freudian way of thinking where our gender is a huge part of our identity and
our psyche and this sort of 200-year-old white guys being like, but you know, and then want to
fuck their mothers and like it's like, that's a huge part of our identity. And we have to undo that. And then it's a much less big deal.
If you want to be in some gray area,
or you want to be a bit more fluid,
it doesn't have to be such a huge part of your personality
and your cultural roles and things like that.
And it can be more part of for some people.
For sure.
Because I think we live in this world where you either,
that has to define everything about you. And you have to go out into the world and you're, you know, your first,
your first stand up, your gay may. And I'm like, no, I'm a comic. Why am I gay may on stage?
You know, or there's people like me who because I never had to do any kind of interrogation
of myself because I was never asked to or forced to, it was just kind of like assume the position,
literally and figuratively.
Here is, I have an underdeveloped sense of that,
because I was just kind of like, check the box,
no questioning here.
And so I think,
imagine if you went on an interview
and the first five questions that people asked you
was about your sexuality.
Right, you'd be like, what the fuck, but that's all that happens.
Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So what happened today?
So what happened today?
Yeah, I do feel lucky that I've, like, from when I could even think I could sense that
the things I was being told were immutable objective truths didn't fit with how I felt
inside.
So that was very confusing, but I feel really grateful because it made me challenge all kinds of
other things as well and learn about myself more. I want to ask you what other things
it helped you challenge and look at differently. And also, I just want to say, I think it's
cool to think about for me, because you said maybe only be certain about yourself.
And that hasn't worked for me.
I want to not be ever certain about myself, because I surprised the shit out of myself,
you know, six years ago, you said it at one point, you don't have to be gay to be gay.
And that was for sure true to me.
Like, yeah.
Right.
You never know.
And that's a beautiful thing about sexuality.
It reminds me a little bit about faith.
Like we're thinking about faith.
It's just this like ongoing evolution of ideas that's fluid constantly.
But what did this whole breaking down of everything in terms of gender and sexuality, what else
did it help you deconstruct?
Well, I think I had a kind of existential spiral in my teens and spun out and was a bad
teen.
I think a lot of it came from that feeling of, yeah, questioning the systems around me.
I dropped out of school.
I'm not recommending that.
But I guess I saw options that other people weren't seeing. Like I saw
that I could do comedy and I loved doing comedy, so I did that. And I don't think I would
have done that at such a young age if I hadn't already been thinking what makes me happy
and where do I fit in? It's like monogamy. I've been recently, I've been thinking a lot
about and yeah.
What do you think about that?
It's working pretty well for everybody.
So just wouldn't say, yeah, I'm shocked
because the day this suggests,
you're just straight up broad about that.
I know, I know.
It is pretty wild.
I don't know.
I listen to a lot of astro-parallel.
Like, I'm very into people doing
what works for them and not reactively assuming that open relationships aren't as valid as
closed ones. I think you just have to continually interrogate it and not get stuck. We only have
one life. So if you're miserable or stuck, then there's other options.
There's such a gift in not fitting in.
Like I think this is what people don't.
Like when we think, we always joke and say
our favorite people are queer people,
but it's because there's some kind of personality
that's forged by the gift of not being rejected
by mainstream at first.
Because you're like, oh, I guess if I can't join
them, I'll just be free.
Yeah, or you think, well, everyone in my class is listening to boy bands and girl bands,
but I can't find my, who I'm even supposed to be attracted to or identify with.
So I guess I'm going to listen to Nine-inch-Nale or the Pink Floyd and then that kind of
grateful that that happened.
But yeah, I mean, there's drawbacks too, right?
Then that's when you end up with sort of battle wounds.
And but yeah, any kind of otherness, I think,
is a gift for sure.
The creativity kind of seems at the core of all of this.
Because if you're getting at the place
where you're like, well, what the world is telling me
about gender is clearly horseshit.
What else is horseshit.
What else is horseshit?
Okay, maybe this whole idea that I have to go to school
for 12 years and then for four more
and then to get the job that I hate, maybe that's horseshit.
And you start to get creative.
And then even with your idea of monogamy,
it is so wild that there's this kind of compulsory monogamy
as the option.
Like, where do you think the creativity
shows up in relationships that makes different types
of relationships possible?
What is the creative way that you think?
Is it about playing with jealousy?
Is it about playing with like your ownership
over the other person?
What is the place to be creative that opens up
different forms of relationship?
I mean, I'm still figuring it out, but I think that where I've been most successful is where
we've like constantly remembered that we're two individuals
and communicated well and had a sense of humor about it and not, you know,
felt like we own each other's total metric of attraction and everything. I don't know. I'm not a particularly jealous person.
It turns me on when people are attracted to the person I'm with or with their flirting.
it turns me on when people are attracted to the person I'm with or with their flirting. I feel like it keeps me on my toes and I like that. I'm still figuring it out though.
But I think just communicating. I don't know. I mean, you guys are successfully doing
relationship stuff. So you're the experts. No, I have so much abandonment issues that
monogamy is the only way for me. For sure.
So I know that.
I ask her even now, we're like six years married.
I'm like, are you ever gonna leave me?
Please tell me you're never gonna leave me.
I have to start each, if I'm like,
I need somebody to do the dishes.
I have to start the conversation with,
I'm not gonna leave you.
I just need you to put your cup in the dishwasher. That's so funny. Well, I sometimes
wonder if my fear of codependency comes from a fear of being a band and like just don't let
yourself get to that place because then what happens if you know, if it all falls apart. I've
definitely, yeah, it ebbs and flows. So I was, who knows? It's so hard to tell what part of our personality is a coping mechanism
that was formed years ago and what's like our actual personality. You know what I mean?
Yeah. Yeah. Totally get it. Are we just the sum of our coping mechanisms basically?
Thanks. And that's what's the hard part when you're trying to get like, I'm trying to be
the truest me like most authentic to myself. Am I like get, like, I'm trying to be the truest me, like most authentic to myself.
Am I, like, am I just saying I want to be the most authentic reflection of the accumulation
of my traumas?
Yes.
It's like, well, who would, it's totally, who would I have been if I'd never met another
person?
If I'd grown up on a beach, who would I have been?
I don't know that I would have done comedy.
I don't, I'm pretty introverted.
I think I was trying to cheer up my mom probably. But it's worked
out. It all comes back to where I'm just trying to cheer up our mom. Totally.
That's right. Our mom or our dad were just trying to make them happy still. be still damn. Yes, yeah.
You do say you have an addictive personality, so Abby and I are both, that's another reason we relate to you.
What is that like?
Well, you know, now I'm just really vigilant about when things start to become habitual or start to dominate or start to feel like self-medicating. I always talked about it like I have this
little shrimp in the back of my head that's this and when it wakes up
It just devours everything else and so I'm just trying to keep that shrimp asleep
And like gently so that and keep it asleep so it doesn't wake up and
Yeah, but I I'm in a pretty good place now
I think it was a big thing for me was because I had a big drug problem in my teens and then I got clean and so I always
relegated thinking about addiction to just substances and I thought well I had that problem and
now I don't and you know I can never touch that substance again but other than that I'm all good
and then once I realize that addictive behavior permeates all aspects of life and you know
relationships and that it's not just about substances and
12 step programs and then that was big.
And then I tried to have just in general a healthier or balanced thing.
I don't know.
Now I do a lot of escape rooms and I try to get adrenaline healthy places.
I do like horror escape rooms where there's like an actor dress like a clown in a dungeon
and you're trying to escape.
It's psychotic.
You're trying to create like the dopamine hit and they like, yes.
Is that how you do all the things?
Yes, baby.
That is risk.
Like, you risk and drinking and drugs are like that.
It's producing the same chemical reactions in my brain.
She's always hurtling herself down mountains
and out of like just the escape room.
A adrenaline junkie.
But I imagine a lot of athletes have that, right?
Because that's the endorphins.
I only just started getting into working out
at all in the past few years.
And it feels good.
It's I completely get it.
How yeah.
Yeah.
This is where wethead comes in for the rest of us who
maybe aren't as thrill seekers. That's maybe your version, Glatton. You could try that. What is it?
I really recommend it, especially with kids. It's a game called Wethead that you, it's just a hat that
has a bucket of water on it. And then it's like Russian roulette where you pull out, you take turns pulling out
and you trade the hat around
and you pull out these pegs that are fastening the bucket
and one of them is gonna douse you.
And it's very simple.
I mean, it's called wet head.
Like it just couldn't be more simple and fun.
And you can't wet head.
Wet head.
Wet head.
So if you, you know, have a coke problem, try wet head.
Try wet head, yes.
Gotta work out for you.
I bring it to dinner parties and stuff and people are like,
do we have to play wet head tonight?
I'm like, yes.
We just ruin someone's night.
So I was lauding your parents and saying they were so amazing,
but there's one little sentence in your book that says,
listen, they weren't perfect.
There's reasons that I washed my face five times a day
and have fear of abandonment.
So let's go back to that. How did they fuck that? Why did they make you
wash your face five times a day and have abandoned minutias? They kicked me out when I was 16.
And I thought, you know, I don't know. I hit puberty. I had an amazing childhood. It was,
I'm so lucky, I'm privileged. And then, yeah, just as soon as Puberty hit,
we bought it, it had a lot.
And I was doing drugs.
And I was not in a great place.
And I think they reacted with rage,
like being lied to.
And just sort of shut down.
And they did a tough love thing that was difficult.
I think they probably regret aspects of it.
We haven't really talked about it.
It's very strange.
We're so close now, but we don't really talk about that time.
But it must be very hard to be a parent.
It is.
It is.
Yeah, I can't imagine.
And everybody, now I really see them as three-dimensional people
with doing their best in the moment, with their own trauma and things like that
So yeah, but it was it was tough for sure. I'm sure we have lots of people listening
I mean, I think people reassessing and actually
Believing that they can be comfortable in their own bodies
Because of stories like yours because of progress it people at more and more families are going to be in a situation like your parents where their kids says no
What could be done well in that situation like you once said that when a parent finds out their kid is gay they should just
Pretend that they just found a forleaf clover
My parents have always been great about sexuality
and gender.
I think that stuff's just about listening
and not doing that thing of going, oh my God,
well, I'm fine with it, but I'm just so worried about you
and the world and immediately making it negative and heavy.
And I would avoid doing that.
It's the same.
People feel so comfortable doing that. I was talking about adopting. Like I would avoid doing that. It's the same. People feel so comfortable doing that.
I was talking about adopting.
I would love to adopt and it's so crazy
how comfortable people are going,
you bring it up and you go, I'd love to adopt and they go,
wow, you know, it could be really hard.
I'm just, and you're like, yeah, I know.
But like, what's the alternative?
No one adopts, like, it could be hard anyway.
It's crazy how comfortable people are going to that
negative fear place.
But my main thing is with if you're kids doing drugs,
I feel strongly about that stuff,
that if you feel like they're self-medicating,
you want to create an environment where they can talk to you
and come to you and not feel like they have to hide it from you.
And I think the more we understand addiction and where that comes from, because so many people
do drugs and not everybody gets addicted to drugs, right?
There's something going on there underneath usually.
So it's maybe having empathy and looking at not the method of soothing, but why is that
person self-suiting?
Yeah.
But I guess it must be impossible as a parent.
You'd feel so worried and betrayed and all that, but yeah, I think just trying not to
get angry.
And I also think that what I have found in parenting, because I just got to parenting
seven years ago when I got together.
That's amazing.
And what I have found is I have a fear inside of me of being a poor parent.
Our kids are amazing, but if they ever have an issue, I am now projecting that I am the
reason why this issue is happening.
And so that could cause, I'm sure there's a lot of parents out there who might not be so
introspective to be able to to let that feeling come up and not act on it whether it's kicking your kid out of the house or
punishing them or grounding them. I was brought up in a authoritarian home where what my mom said went and
I have to fight some of those
inclinations and urges that I have, and then also fight this fear of me fucking up my own kids in the moment.
And it's almost impossible to do.
I need to have somebody who can call me out on that.
I mean, maybe not in the moment that it's time to go.
Right.
I had a laugh.
Yes.
Conversations later, that's like, hey, that sounded a little bit like fear, your mom,
projection.
Right.
And so then I've had to go back and apologize
for our kids for some of my instinctive reactions
to some stuff that they've brought.
It's the hardest and most confusing,
and it changes every day.
You're like, oh, my kid is, I think that they've got it.
And then the next day, something else happens.
I think all of the parenting stuff comes down to,
like if you could look at your kid as a human
instead of a referendum on you or a reflection on you,
I think that whole thing, that's like what you're saying Abby,
it's like you are going through this thing,
therefore that means something about me.
Yes.
Or you are doing amazing and art amazing athlete therefore that says something about me. Or you are doing amazing and are an amazing athlete, therefore that says something about
me.
Like you suck, that's an indictment of me.
You're amazing.
That's a compliment of me when actually none of those things are true.
It's just a person who's living in your house.
Yeah.
That's so interesting.
If you change the language in your head in the moment to like, what, how would I react
if I was a mentor, then some of the emotions not attached to it.
And you can, yeah, but I mean, it must be impossible.
I think you have to, everyone knows, like I will fuck up my kid no matter what.
And then, and then you go from there.
Yeah. Except for a friend call since my kid came out, my kid is none,
by no, my kids, whatever.
I do think that's a bit of a referendum on parenting in a good way.
My first thing is already always like,
congratulate your populations as parents
because you've created some kind of environment
where this kid feels safe telling you who they are
or even exploring it, even being like,
I actually am going inside and not just listening to,
like there's some kind of badass free,
full of integrity environment to even be presenting that.
Yeah, definitely.
You use the word rage to describe the reaction to that period of your life.
I'm just curious what your relationship to rage is now
and what role that plays in your life either inside of you or people around you.
I think I, I think it would probably do me a lot of good to do a primal scream in the
desert. I always fantasize about going to the desert and doing an insane primal scream.
I definitely feel that and feel like I suppress anger a lot. I'm not a very angry person.
I don't know.
I have periods.
I made a show, a sort of semi-autobiographical show, and it made me look a lot at my life
and my teens and things like that.
And after making it, I had a period of healthy rage for sure.
And then got some therapy.
Anger is an interesting one.
I just grew up on Star Wars,
so I was like, anger leads to the dark side.
To be a comedian, it must be confusing,
because everybody puts you in the funny box,
what, happy, funny, and then happy,
but like comedians, I have found.
And Laura, or Laura,
are like super in touch with their feelings,
all of the sad feelings too.
So I'm not surprised that there's some stuff that's happening underneath.
So I asked you before what, you know, things we could do or not do with our kids and you
said, um, don't bring them that I love you, but I'm just so scared for what's coming
to you.
I think that's so good.
That's just such a good little tip.
So in terms of other things we should or shouldn't do.
So let's say you were being interviewed by three podcasters. And let's say that those podcasters had just
seen a post that you had put up where you were on a red carpet with Elliott Page. And let's
just say that those podcasters were a little bit obsessed with Elliott Page and you. And
so let's just say that they had studied those pictures really well and seemed to tooth brushes in one of those pictures.
Would it be appropriate or just completely not
to ask you if you and Elliot Page are friends
or the kind of special friends that might require
tooth brush carrying?
I need to look at this tooth brush thing.
No, hang on, just getting the photo up.
I met Elliot when I was 19 actually in a bar
in Toronto. We were both sort of sketchy Canadian people and then we reconnected a few years ago and
no, we are very much bros but I'm kind of enjoying the speculation. Yeah. So I think that that is
the reflection. That is what I said. That is what I said. And I said that is not a reflection. There's no way that's a reflection.
It is what I do. I think toothbrushes. I said I said it. And I think yeah, that we were getting
ready and Elliott's in Elliott's hotel and I think that's one toothbrush. But look, he's hot.
He's super hot. It was fun being his date for sure for the night.
So you heard it here first.
Elliot is still available.
Not sure about me.
Okay.
We're gonna find out if that's an appropriate question to ask.
Is it?
Is that an appropriate question?
I'm always available.
Okay, yeah.
You're always available.
No, I do try to keep that part of my life.
Yes.
Good call.
Just because then it's so embarrassing
if you're like, yeah, I'm so happy and settled
and then it ends and you're like, I erase that.
It's so embarrassing.
Nothing's a mutable, man.
We already talked about it.
Nothing is exactly.
It's just creative expression.
I just moved to LA in May.
I've been in London for 12 years
and that was a big change
and it's been fun being kind of a free agent. Uh, in, in LA.
What has that been like?
I didn't know you moved back to LA.
I just knew you were in London forever.
What is that?
So long.
I grew up in Toronto and then I moved, I was in all my 20s and, um, in England and then
I don't know.
I'm trying to get to know this city.
It's, it's crazy.
I don't have a driver's license or drive.
Oh. It's, it's kind of a tricky city in that sense,
but I'm making lots of friends.
It was so cool meeting Teg and Stephanie,
and then you had them on your podcast,
and then I'm doing improv with Stephanie tonight.
And they're so, I saw that.
Yeah, they're so great, both of them.
And yeah, so I'm trying to manifest my dream friend group.
And it's, yeah, so I'm trying to manifest my dream friend group and we got to hang out.
Yeah, absolutely. I love TIG and Stephanie. Do you know what we talked TIG? I couldn't figure out TIG's
email, sense of humor. Yeah. And so every time TIG wrote to me, I thought she was mad at me.
Yeah, I can totally see that. Yeah.
And so I kept telling my sister, I never do this with people's
emails, but I kept reading them to my sister and saying,
is she mad at me?
Or so I'd have to create responses that could go either
what?
Why, where you could be playing into the joke or you could
also be apologizing.
Exactly.
That's really fun.
And it was really confusing for a while.
So what do you do now?
What's next?
What are you into?
What are you working on?
What are you trying to let go of?
What's 2023 going to be like for you?
Those are all good questions.
I'm about to record a new stand-up special.
I mean, Netflix special, and I'm excited about that.
And then I'm writing this new Netflix show and then two movies I'm writing.
Yeah, just having fun, trying to enjoy my new body and it felt good wearing a suit the other day.
Abby talked about the suit. Abby's obsessed with the suit.
I was actually talking to these two about how my sexuality is in some way that suit.
Like, right.
But it's not because I'm thinking, ooh, I want to, you know, fuck who's in that suit.
I'm thinking that looked like something I want to wear to feel sexy.
So I think that sexuality is both the way that we see it and the way that we feel about our own body in it.
Yeah, completely. Yeah, completely. And then I did have a question. but the way that we see it and the way that we feel about our own body in it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then I did have a question.
I wear suits and we have to go to an event on Thursday night and I'm thinking I'm going to wear
a proper tux. I've got a tux shirt, but I don't want to wear a bow tie or a tie.
I mean, neither.
There's something about it that makes it,
that then I will for sure for the rest of the night
be called a man, which is fine.
That doesn't necessarily offend me,
but I also just use the pronouns she heard.
So, yeah, is it with a proper tuck shirt
with the wings at the front?
Is it okay to open the top button and just go a little
bit cash or should I button the top button with no bow tie? I mean, I think you can do whatever you
want. You're Abby. You're the coolest. You're like, they're just lucky that you're there. No,
you took great answer. I don't know anything about fashion. I know that Gucci dressed me for that event. I've never been dressed by anyone.
And it was so thrilling. And they were a little bum that I wasn't wearing a tie for sure,
but I couldn't do it. I feel constricted. I just, yeah. And so it felt good to, but that wasn't a
tux shirt. So I don't know. I think you can know, no, it'll look like it'll look like at the end
of a wedding. And you know, that like slightly more relaxed.
Yes.
Yeah.
It looks confident is what it looks like.
Yes.
Yes.
It looks relaxed and confident.
I'm thinking about maybe getting a bow tie and just hanging low.
Yeah.
Just thinking that.
That's pretty cool.
That's cool.
It's like you all should have for the party, but I should have for the after party.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I just can't rock a bow tie, but Elliott looked amazing.
So I'm so jealous of of people who can, but I just I know me the reason I'm like it's too much
close on a whole thing. It's almost too formal. I'm like in a proper tux, but I'm like a bow tie or tie. It's too formal
completely far people. I want to get to a place where I can be adventurous and dress like Harry Styles and
where like, but I'm still trying to figure out all that.
But yeah, one day I'll be wearing sequins.
In the last minute we have here, what's an idea or a belief or a way of being that you're
trying to leave behind?
Hmm.
Hmm. I'm trying not to do and things out of habit.
There's this, I think it's Emily Dickinson.
There's a phrase that she wrote that's like when the skeleton of habit upholds the human
frame and it just was so bleak and I think about how so much of our life we just are
on autopilot and even things like just the way
I walk to work, like take a different route.
It's that thing about creativity, just making sure everything's a conscious choice.
I have to get better at saying no to people and be less of a workaholic.
I've been doing a lot of music and I'm really shy about it because I'm not very good,
but it makes me very terrified.
And I think, well, I'm a comedian.
I can't do it. So embarrassing. And I've been trying to go, well, I can get rid of that label too.
You know what I mean? And just do things that scare me all the time.
What kind of music? Yeah. Like emo, you know, I don't know, embarrassing acoustic guitar music.
So good. I love it. Yeah, it makes me happy. And yeah, I don't want to monetize it.
I just want to do it and experiment with it.
Yeah.
Well, it's important not only because it's going to be great for you, but also all the people
in the world that look like you that don't want to adhere to or want to look to the
boy bands or the girl.
You know, like I think it's important that there's people that look
like us that are actually doing things in all the industries. That's so cool. Yeah, I do. I mean,
growing up, there was no one that looked like us and it is exciting, but then you don't want to
get paralyzed by the pressure. The pressure, you must do it for the sake of the future. No, you just want to have some joy with it.
That's right.
I get that because I'm a writer, but I secretly inside of me.
Oh, here we go.
Just want to be a poet.
Oh, I thought you were in the same position.
No, no, no.
I mean, you know the poet thing.
Yeah.
But like, I'm so scared to be like, wait,
am I going to write a book of poems?
Like, no, I'm just going to, like, you, am I gonna write a book of poems? Like, no, I'm just gonna, like,
you should.
Completely, I totally relate.
Yeah.
The only difference between being a poet
and not being a poet is writing poetry, right?
It's the same with, yeah.
Exactly.
Except good.
May, you're just a damn dream.
Yeah.
You are, thank you so, this has been so nice.
I, last night, I told my friend I was doing it
and she was like, are you gonna cry?
And I was like, am I?
I don't know, do people cry?
And she was like, I don't know, it could get deep.
And I was like, oh my God, but yeah,
you guys are so amazing and thanks so much for having me.
Yeah, we'd love to hang out sometime
and show you nothing in LA
because we don't know anything about LA.
Let's have a game's night.
Yeah, that's all I want to do.
What?
Yeah, yeah.
And coming from somebody who didn't have any representation to look towards, I just
think what you're doing and all the ways that you're doing it, your work matters and
it's changing people's perspectives.
And so I just, I want to thank so much, because you're helping me even.
You know, I know you got me, I'm gonna cry.
Thank you.
I just think that I know that you've had to forge yourself
to be in the position that you are in so much of your life
and have had to deal with a lot of ups and downs,
but here we are and what you're doing is heroic to put your work
out into the world and do it in the way that you are. It's beautiful. Thank you so much. And
Ditto. Yeah, thank you. I also think it's very cool that you're inspiring in a different way too,
is the whatever the opposite of creative scarcity is, because what I admire so much is that after two seasons of feel good
You even though like could it kept that going kept going creatively?
You were like know that is how I want to end that and I believe that there will be abundance
For me in other things and I think that was so
special and probably gave a lot of folks the invitation
to do that one mostly in Hollywood. It's a very hard to stop something that you can keep
doing. So thanks to you on that. That was awesome.
Yeah, I didn't want to torture that couple anymore. I felt like I left them in a good place
and it would have been too mean to you'd have to break them up again.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Somebody happy ending.
We love you, May.
The rest of you, your responsibility this week
is to figure out three things that are your sexuality.
Yes.
Completely.
Doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter what you are.
Everybody has a sexuality.
So you figure out three things.
OK.
We love you.
When things get hard this week, don't forget. We can do hard things. Thank you, May. Bye.
Thank you so much.
Yay!
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