We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - How to Create Your Own Belonging with Michelle Zauner
Episode Date: April 27, 2023Michelle Zauner on how to begin healing our mother wounds, using her sensitivity to deepen her relationships and be a rockstar, why she’s obsessed with sheetcake and winnebagos, and why she is still... “afraid of her mental health.” About Michelle: MICHELLE ZAUNER is best known as a singer and guitarist who creates dreamy, shoegaze-inspired indie pop under the name Japanese Breakfast. She has won acclaim from major music outlets around the world for releases like Psychopomp and Soft Sounds from Another Planet. Her most recent album, Jubilee, earned two GRAMMY nominations for Best New Artist and Best Alternative Music Album. Her first book, Crying in H Mart, is a New York Times Best Seller. She’s currently adapting the memoir for the screen for MGM’s Orion Pictures. TW: @jbrekkie IG: @jbrekkie To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. We're going to explain to you right away why we're a
little extra sweaty today. And that is because our guest today is Michelle Zonner. Michelle Zonner is best known as a singer and guitarist
who creates dreamy, shoegays-inspired indie pop
under the name Japanese Breakfast.
She has won a claim from major music outlets
around the world for releases like Psycho Pomp
and Soft Sounds from another planet
and her most recent album Jubilee
earned two Grammy nominations for best new artist
and best alternative music album.
Her first book, Crying in H. Mart,
is the book I have given to the most people.
Yeah.
Is one of my favorite memoirs of all time
and is a New York Times bestseller.
She's currently adapting the memoir for the screen
for MGM's Orion Pictures. Okay, Michelle's honor. I know that you're an icon and the world is obsessed with you,
but we have loved you for a very, very long time since the beginning. Okay. We have three children.
Two of them write the music columns for their high school and their college and they, so music isn't really big deal in our family. And since Psycho Pop, like since the beginning,
our house has been full of your voice.
Every car ride.
Yes.
Wow, what an honor.
And then one day we were in this little indie bookstore
in our town and I remember walking by a shelf and chase,
our oldest said, that is Michelle's honor's book,
crying in H-Mart.
And I don't know,
I mean, I knew from your lyrics
that this book was gonna be good,
but holy shit, crying in H-Mart is so flipping beautiful.
It's like your music, I don't like music
that's like too cheerful,
it's trying to trick me, that the world is not shit. And I don't like music that's like too cheerful, it's trying to trick me that the world is not shit.
And I don't like music that's too depressing, like trying to kill me by only focusing that
the world is shit.
And your music, it invites me into the singular ache and then it like widens to everybody
every time.
It's like this alone together feeling listening to you, which is the same as your memory.
So hi, Michelle.
Thanks for being with us.
And for all you work.
This has been a great interview.
Bye-bye.
Thank you so much for your time.
Bye, Michelle.
Thank you.
I'm planning.
This is Abby.
Oh, my God.
This is Amanda.
Hi.
I'm so delighted to get to chat with you all.
I feel like I always was like who is
Conan Doyle? She just lives on the New York Times best.
I was like who is this woman? She's incredible.
And the reason why you know that is because you saw your book there for 60 weeks.
I was like my neighbor. I mean, we've been together. There she is.
I mean, we live together. There she is.
I'm even neighbors for some time, and I'm so excited to put, you know, a person to the
name.
Us too.
So you are a rock star.
I work winning writer, and all of this artistic brilliance has been brewing and building
and use since childhood, but it really took off after the death of your mother.
And the love story between you two is just epic.
It just moved me so deeply.
She moved me so deeply.
And you say that she was not a mommy mom.
Pod Squad, listen to what Michelle says, a mommy mom is.
Okay.
A mommy mom is a mom who takes an interest
and everything her kid has to say,
even when there is no actual way she gives a shit,
who risks her, you away to the hospital
when you complain of the slightest ailment,
who tells you they're just jealous.
If someone makes fun of you, I did that yesterday,
or you always look beautiful to me,
even if you don't, or I love this when
you give them a piece of crap for Christmas. So Michelle, that was not your mom.
That was not my mom at all. I think a lot of my friends had mommy moms and it took me
a really long time to understand my mother's affection. And I think a large part of that were, you know,
cultural differences. My mom grew up in Korea and didn't immigrate to the States until after I was
born. And so she was really learning a lot. I think I just didn't understand that type of affection
until I was I was older. There's a lot of behind the scenes kind of like action,
which was very, very critical.
And it created a very ambitious and self-aware person
in me in a way that I really value now,
but was certainly at a young age very difficult.
I always compare my mom to my husband's mom
who is big time mommy mom.
And whenever I got like fired from a job,
friend whose Peter's mom would say like,
oh my God, like that's just so typical of the man.
They don't know what they're losing and all this stuff.
My mom when I got fired from my weightressing job
that I had worked at for a year
and I was, you know, really upset.
So I was like, I was their best server.
I can't believe they did that.
Was just like, well, Michelle, anyone can carry a tray.
It's just like very, very brutal.
But it made me a much stronger person.
But growing up with that was pretty challenging,
I think, to be a young person.
So you said her love was tougher than tough.
It saw it was best for you 10 steps ahead
and didn't care if it hurt like hell in the meantime.
That's like the opposite of American parenting.
I'm sorry.
I mean, there's something that's really important about that.
Yeah, I think so.
I mean, I think that I hope that when I have a child
that I will find a good balance between both methods
of parenting because I think that both are really important.
And I can't imagine being a parent and figuring out
the right way to do that.
For instance, I went to piano lessons since I was like five years old
and I went to Korean language school and I every Friday
when all of my friends were enjoying their weekends.
And I hated it.
And my mom would never let me quit because she was like,
you know, you have to practice piano at 30 minutes every day.
You're going to really regret not learning the language. And I hated it so much.
And now as an adult, like, those are the two things that I find myself really wanting
to excel at. And all of the things that she encouraged me to do are things that she
was so right about were things that I was going to really regret not focusing on during
this like really formative time.
But I don't know if a mommy mom had gotten that sort of,
you know, feedback from their kid,
if they're like, if you don't wanna do it,
like that's fine.
I think there would be some regret there too
that you know, at that age you do kind of need
a little bit of a push to like do some things
that you don't want to do.
So I think it's a really tough balance for any parent
and I don't know exactly what the right way is, but I can see the sort of benefits and consequences of both
styles of parenting. This might be a tangent. But do you ever think about whether that's a chicken
or an egg situation, the PNO and learning Korean? Like, do you think it is because she prioritized
those so much that you're drawn to them or is it?
Oh yeah, all the time.
Something is I'm like, maybe if my mother was so encouraging about me pursuing the arts,
that I wouldn't have wanted it so badly or I wouldn't have had to prove to myself time and time
and again that this was what I really wanted and I wouldn't have ended up doing it.
Maybe it was like part of her large ploy all along.
Oh my god. She went 10 steps ahead. and I wouldn't have ended up doing it. Maybe it was like part of her large ploy all along. To the thank you.
She went 10 steps ahead.
Yeah, she was 10 steps ahead.
Maybe she was like, if I like withhold this from her,
then she'll have to really work hard for it.
And that is what you need.
I know way to succeed at that kind of thing
and along with a lot of luck.
Yeah, I think about that all the time.
I mean, I think also like whenever someone dies,
you really romanticize like the things,
be it positive or negative that they kind of leave behind. Like I remember,
I would hate it when my mom would like, badger me to wear a sunscreen, especially in like the 90s when that kind of like information wasn't as prioritized or whatever. I'd be like, why do I have
to wear sunscreen? I'm 10 years old.
I want to like, hang out in the sun.
I want to get a tan.
And now my husband is always like getting battered by me
to like put sunscreen on and that kind of thing.
And instead of being like, oh, maybe you're like being
overbearing, I'm like, oh, that's your mom.
Like you're just being like your mom.
So yeah, I think it's kind of a sweet thing.
So did you say your mom
wanted you to take the piano lesson? Because wasn't your interest in music a source of tension
between the two of you? Was it the kind of music? Because your mom didn't want you to be
into music? Is that correct? Yeah, this is the thing I like do not understand with Asian parents
a lot of times. Most of them will force you to learn an instrument, but God forbid you do something creative with it.
You know?
So yeah, I don't know why.
It's so essential to play piano or violin
in Asian culture, but I think a big thing was
I never liked piano.
I was like very impatient and I'm not very good at it. And I think that when I was
15, I started baking for a guitar because it was so much cooler. And my mom was kind of
like, I've dropped thousands of dollars on this piano lessons you never pay attention to
why, why are we going to start doing guitar lessons now. And I get it because I feel like, you know,
even with friends of mine, I'm like,
this is a fleeting interest.
It's like hard as like a loved one to just be like,
do you really like, you know, totally?
Need to start a crop garden or whatever,
or like skateboarding in your 30s, like, give it up.
But yeah, I mean, I think that she just was like,
I've watched you like, discard so many passions. Like, you probably watch your kids, I mean, I think that she just was like, I've watched you like discard so many passions like you probably watch your kids, you know, go through all the time that I think it was hard for her to be supportive of this thing.
At what she felt was like a very crucial age, which was like 16 and things are ramping up for college and you have to really double down to like get your life together, that she was just like, we've given you everything and I don't think you really know what's at the other side
of living a life of an artist.
And she felt like it was her duty to kind of protect me from that.
And I totally understand it about the time I was like, you are like a tower of evil. Yeah, keeping me from my true calling, you know.
And so that was sort of the beginning of our tumultuous
teenage puberty years.
So there were a bunch of years that you said
that you kind of missed each other, anger, separation.
You were feisty, she was baffled.
Tell us about that time and how it kind of impacted your relationship.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's no surprise that I grew up with two extremely loud,
opinionated, independent parents.
And they were so shocked when, you know, their kid, like,
doubled down on that in her own personality.
My mom grew up in Korea and married a white guy, moved away from her family,
hardly spoke the language and took off and let a life of her own.
That was pretty rebellious and independent on her part.
So, yeah, I had that kind of spirit in me,
and I grew up in the Pacific Northwest
in Eugene, Oregon, in a small college town
that had very little diversity
and really wanted to strike out on my own path.
And there's like a really wonderful music community
in that town.
It's a very like artsy creative kind of town,
and so I was naturally sort of drawn to that. And it was the only thing that sort of felt like it had meaning in my life around the age of 15 or 16 when you're like so full of like these really intense emotions and I just knew that that was sort of what I wanted to do at the time. And you know, around that time,
my grade started suffering and I was saying crazy things like, I don't know if I want
to go to college and my mom was like, this is World War III. She's out of control. She's
out of control. And I think she just tried to double down and trying to at least like protect
me from that and make sure I went to college. And neither one of my parents went to college.
It was very, very important that I go. and here's this woman who feels like I've given this person every opportunity
I never had and and she's really bunkling this and I need to I need to fix it
And that was really
Hard for me and and her love was very
She could be very critical and I had never seen other parents
sort of so brutally honest like that about just,
you know, she hated everything I wore.
And there was no just like, oh, this is a facial grow out of it.
It's just like, why do you torture me with wearing this ugly shit?
All the time.
We just really bought heads.
We were two very strong women that were not going to lay it down.
And it went on like that until I went to college. And I think she sort of felt like,
okay, my job has come to a certain kind of end. You know, she's out of my house and I did
everything that I could and now she's on her own. And I was kind of like,
how do I do laundry?
So I'm going to do it.
Just one more thing.
Just one more thing.
Can I do laundry?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I think I just was like,
oh wow, mom does a lot.
You know, like, huh?
And I was a young, confused feminist.
My mom was a homemaker
and I think as a teenager
I sort of looked down on that.
I just didn't respect her in a way,
and it wasn't until I went to college
that I began to see all of this invisible labor
that she was like talking about
and understood just how much she provided
for our family in this way that we were very privileged
to have and how cruel it was to mean that, you know, all my life.
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 wanna talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore. You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing, and strangely intimate things
about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner, I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy.
A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
So you have this tommet.
You go to college, you come back and at some point you're sitting in the car
and she says to you,
I just never met someone like you before.
And hearing that from your mom was deeply healing for you.
Why was that so healing to hear that from her?
I've always like made this reference and I don't think it's ever gone well,
but it's so important to me.
But there's a scene in the sopranos where
Meadow and Carmella are fighting.
And Tony says to her,
like, don't worry, Carm, she'll return to you.
And I feel like that's such a thing with a lot of mothers and daughters.
I know a lot of mothers and daughters that sort of get to that place
and you have to kind of go away in order to return to one another and really see each other for the first time.
And I think that was sort of what happened for us is like, only until I was out of the
house that she was able to sort of reflect on a lot of things.
And I was also able to reflect on a lot of things and we were sort of able to come together.
And also the age of being in your sort of early 20s.
And finally, I really felt like I saw her not just as mom, but as a human being with
agency and her own passions and her own desires.
And I think she also felt that maybe this thing wasn't a passing phase because I kept with
it.
And she could maybe start to see how important it was and see me in this new light.
And so her saying that to me was moving such a strange thing to say to a person that you made.
That's why it was so valuable. It was like this moment to me when
I read it was this moment like where it felt like there was a
magical shimmer around that moment where it was like a moment of
individuation for the first time. Like she looked at you like you
had just appeared. Like for the first moment, you weren't just a
reflection of her.
You were your own being,
and she saw that for the first time
what a beautiful thing to say.
I'm, oh, the problem this whole time
is just that I've never met anybody like you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I had the opposite reaction.
When I read that,
I had the win-knocked out of me
because I was like,
oh, it feels so alienating.
Like the person that's so connected to you,
feeling so distinct and remote from you,
you know, if your mom doesn't even intuitively get you,
how is anyone gonna get you?
Wow, yeah.
But then I hear what you're saying.
It's like, for the first time,
you weren't just something that existed to oppose her wishes.
You existed as your own being.
Thing, it makes me think of the question, like does love exist without understanding?
In that moment where she was saying, oh, I've just never met anyone like you. That made me think that she doesn't
understand you. But maybe she was just understanding you for the first time.
Well, I think that is a really beautiful interpretation that I haven't encountered.
And hearing that question can love exist without understanding my initial, my immediate
responses, no. But then to look at that relationship
that is clearly untrue,
I know that my mom loved me very deeply,
but there was a lot of misunderstanding there.
You know, there was a real struggle for both of us
to understand one another.
And I think we certainly loved each other all along.
But yeah, there was not a lot of understanding.
So yeah, I think that my initial, my immediate response to that question is like, no, how can you
love someone that you don't understand?
But I think that I've had experiences where that's not the case.
But can't you understand somebody like thematically without understanding the details?
Like, she could have looked at you and suddenly understood like your switch from piano to
guitar was like her switch from Korea to America
that your individuation was just like her individuation. There can be understanding
without the details being the same where she can respect woman to woman, right?
Yeah, I also think so. Right. You can tell we've discussed this before.
We spent a lot of time talking about this because the family I grew up in, my parents,
they often didn't understand me,
but the way that they expressed that
was in this critical way.
Yeah.
And in the way that the sentence for me
felt when I read it, it is like this,
this curious way.
I just never met somebody like you,
rather than, where did you come from, Abby?
Yeah.
You know, like those are kind of very different situations.
I want to talk a little bit about your sensitivity.
You are described yourself as so sensitive.
I also live with a sensitive person.
What does it mean to you?
I think it means so many different things. I'm just deeply impacted by very, like,
ordinary things. I'm impacted by obviously, like, the intense emotional stuff, but I'm
also very moved by, um, sort of, ordinary circumstances, I think. I've just always been
that way. Things that normal people are supposed to sort of adapt to and adjust to
bring on like sort of this monumental way of of feeling for me as I navigate them.
I think my sensitivity is an artist can also be like hearing the most like ordinary word. Like
the other day I watched an interview with Kate Lanchett where she talked about
like when she got her Oscar nomination, the news of her Oscar nomination,
they celebrated her with Sheetcake
and how that's a very American thing
and just like the word Sheetcake was so evocative
that I just like had to write it down
because I was just like that such a moving image
that like conjures so many different things
or like the word Winnebago. Oh.
Oh.
Like I think, like a lot of you ask me like what,
like my creative process and as it is, like sometimes I like just hear those two like
extremely ordinary American phrases or words or like proper nouns and I'm just
floored.
I think especially in music you have like such a small word count that a word like
everyone you hear sheet cake and I just
feel like you just see a sheet cake and it conjures like some very specific like childhood,
memory and place and taste and I just feel like that is like part of at least for me and my work
is just like finding those like moments like that where you're like how can I use that to like conjure
a moment for many different people like really quickly and. I think that's a lot of what we do as writers is pull on the strings of that for many different
people.
There are certain things that you just know.
I know this is a very, I have my own personal attachment to this, but I have this intuition
that it's going to touch a lot of different people too.
They could be all these collections of little details.
Everyone has a certain connotation of neighborhood T.J. Max.
For me, T.J. Max was a major place for my, I was like, I'm like a holy ground for my mom.
I think that sort of sensitivity allows me to think like this should belong here.
And later down the line, there will be maybe like a dozen people that are like, yeah, T.J Maxx is like moving in an important place.
Or whatever.
I mean, that's essentially what crying in H-Mart is.
Yes.
I was crying in this grocery store,
and I was like, I bet other people have done this.
And like, I need to share it.
There's like something really funny and really dark
and really emotional and sad and moving about this phrase.
And I think that sort of sensitivity
is sort of what led me down my path.
So I think that's a type of sensitivity.
And then I don't know, I just like my feelings
are just so easily hurt all the time.
Then there's the other part.
But it reminds me of that quote that there's either nothing's a miracle or everything is.
And the sensitivity to be like, we live in a world with sheet cakes and Winnebago is in
2G Max's.
Like, everyone's walking around like it's normal.
It's like a kind of miraculous way of living, you know.
And Winnebago, it like sounds like what it is, like an experience.
I don't know what a Winnebago is, but I know it's like what it is, like an experience.
I don't know what a win a bego is, but I know it's like an on and on a
P.I.S.
Yeah, I feel like I hear that word and I'm like gazing out at the grandcadius.
Yeah, yes, yes, through the window, the bigger, something eating a sheet cake,
like when a bego and sheet cakes are kind of opposites.
Anyway, aren't they? that you did, Max dress. Like when a baby on sheet cakes are kind of opposites.
Anyway.
They are.
Aren't they?
Because sheet cakes is also like very like,
and it's like so cookie cutter.
Like this is what we do.
This is our celebration.
Baptism, sheet cake, promotion, sheet cake.
It brings me right back to like my 10th birthday.
Like, and I see the candles on the cake
and I can taste it.
My aunt Sally made our sheet cake birthday cake.
So it's the only difference in it.
And it's kind of like delicious,
but also disgusting.
It's plastic.
Yeah.
There's like a hint of plastic.
You know exactly what it's gonna taste like every time.
But you want it.
But you want it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Death taxes and and chic.
That's good.
Very predictable.
So speaking of sensitivity, you, one of the things we have in common is that you also
had a full mental breakdown in high school.
I actually ended up in a mental hospital.
I don't know if you actually were sent away.
I wanted to.
I was like, I was like, I need to go. We were about to go at one point
in time, but my parents were afraid. My mom was afraid. Well, my dad probably was afraid
too, that it would show up on like a record or something, and that they were afraid that
it would impact future opportunities. If you looked up like my medical records in
saw, I had been checked in somewhere. But I remember there being a moment where like we're like, she's got to go.
And I wanted to go. I felt like I was going crazy. And that part was really hard for me to write.
And I was worried actually that it didn't really come across like what I and I think a lot of people
probably go through this. But last minute I ended up not going because they were afraid of like the
10 steps ahead when I'm applying.
Yes, the 10 steps ahead.
Yes, Senator or something.
Speaking of being sensitive towards, I heard in a podcast, you said,
I'm still afraid of my mental health.
Yeah, and I thought she didn't say, I'm still afraid for my mental health.
She said, I'm still afraid of my mental health, which is exactly
how I feel. So can you tell me what you mean? That time in my life was just so out of my
control. And I think as an adult, I've certainly learned ways to kind of navigate when those
sorts of feelings come on. It still does feel out of my control.
There are sometimes just when there is a deep depression,
I feel coming on.
And I think as a teenager, I was like more prone
to leaning into that.
Like so I'd be like, well, my body doesn't
want to go to sleep right now.
So I just wouldn't sleep.
And I wasn't eating well.
I wasn't taking care of myself. And now when I feel those kinds of like feelings come on, I do go
out of my way to try to incorporate like positive, basic people things, like exercise and
like, sun or whatever. All the stuff that drinking water, like all the dumb things that you
think like are for basic people, but are actually really crucial for every human being
and they are really onto something.
I think I would just kind of like lean into listening
to Elliot Smith and staying up to like eight o'clock
in the morning on those days.
But I know that that is something in me
and it's like something kind of like that is out of control
and I am very afraid of it, you know.
And a big thing is like, I'm very nervous about, I haven't really talked about this,
but I have a real fear of being away from my partner, my husband.
I have a real fear of like being alone for a long period of time because I am just very nervous about where my mental health
will go without someone sort of keeping me in check.
And I don't know how much of it is rooted in that.
And also just this real trauma of losing a loved one
and being so afraid that the one person that sort of keeps me
on the rails won't, something will happen to him. Uh, but yeah, I think it, it comes from that fear. And I've had moments where I've
been alone, uh, for like a week or something, which is totally normal, you know, just to like,
for work or something and felt like, Oh, this is a little scary for, for, but I have a better
way of like handling it than I did when I was, when I was younger. And I think that that
sort of mental breakdown kind of led me to know that I'm capable of those feelings and that's why I'm sort of always afraid.
And when my mom died and it was finally just like, now you have like an extremely real reason to
fall into deep pit of depression and never get out of it, I think that's sort of the reason why I
reacted the way that I did. When she died, I was just like, you have to get busy.
You have to get a job.
You forget like three jobs.
You have to like have projects afterwards
because I knew that if I really let myself lean
into that despair that I just would never crawl out of it again.
I think.
I do know.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah. Whew. Who?
Michelle, you already mentioned that your mom is Korean.
Your father is a white American.
You describe a really complicated relationship with belonging.
When you would go to Korea, they would kind of stare at you and try to figure you out.
And then in America, kids were much less subtle
and would just say, like, what are you?
And so, what does belonging mean to you
and with whom do you feel most belonging?
Artists.
I think that sort of like outsider feeling
is something that a lot of creative people have in common and I think in a way that when you write a book or when you make music
or when you're involved in creating something, you're basically making some kind of like home
for yourself to be understood.
And so over the years, especially the last few years that the book has come out and
the sort of conversation has been a big part of my life.
I've met a lot of other biracial people
who have a very sweet way of saying,
I don't feel like half Korean and half white,
I feel like 100% Korean and 100%.
This other thing, and that is,
I think a really generous and sweet idea but it's not something that sort of
resonates with me at all. I feel very much like I've always had this kind of fragmented identity
and I and I think that my journey has been sort of about being okay with being divided in this way.
I think that is a really big part of of who I am and what I grew up with and I think a big reason why I do what I do is because I feel whole in being
an artist.
I feel whole like when I'm playing on a stage and I've gathered people into my house to
like come watch me do the thing that is so uniquely my own and people have responded to
that.
So I think that that's where I feel the greatest
sense of belonging is in a space that I've created for myself.
I'm going to be a part of the story.
I'm going to be a part of the story.
I'm going to be a part of the story.
I'm going to be a part of the story.
We have a conversation ongoing conversation on this podcast where we are trying to figure
out how do we know whether our personality is authentically us or whether our personality
is just this manifestation of our accumulated coping mechanisms and traumas. And I heard you say that much of your personality
was developed in opposition to these stereotypes
that were projected on you as an Asian American woman.
So you never wanted to be seen as docile or agreeable
or hyper feminine.
And so you kind of over indexed on the masculine, raucous kind of side. And you are not even sure whether that is your genuine
personality. And it makes me wonder how can we figure out who we really are when
so much of what we become is based on societal expectations that we actually
have to reject.
And so practically speaking,
have you been able to determine what is authentically you,
if so how?
And also, do you know who we are, Michelle?
You've been talking for just a few minutes.
Send me an email, that would be great, I'd love to know.
Okay.
Yeah, I don't know if that exists or like what that would look like if we weren't, I mean,
that's what being human being is is being conditioned by things that happen to you.
So I don't even know what, what like pure root of that we would be after because if we
weren't conditioned by things, we wouldn't speak any language.
We would just be primal beings, I guess.
But I don't know.
There's never been a world where that kind of like pure self exists.
So I just, I don't really know.
Men are also conditioned to be a certain way and why people are conditioned to be certain
way.
So to be fair, like, I, there's a part of me that wonders if I wasn't doing certain things in opposition
to my expectations, like what I would be like.
But then I also know both of my parents are really loud on apologetic, not docile people
either.
I think that when I hit my 30s, everything feels like my parents problem.
I feel like I think everything that somehow,
like when I hit my 30s, I became obsessed with thinking
like every single part of my personality,
bad or good, it could be attributed to my parents.
Oh my God.
And we did it 10 years earlier than I did.
I might, they're not.
Michelle, I've said this 10 times in the podcast,
but there's this New Yorker cartoon
that came out recently and there's this dude laying
on the couch in his therapist's office and he he says I had a complicated childhood, especially lately.
He's like 55.
Yeah, yeah, for better words, I feel like I can source everything from, you know, either from my jeans or the way that I was raised. I feel like it's all their problem. But yeah, I don't know. I guess I'll never know. But I do
think I didn't feel comfortable doing certain things that now that I'm older, I can recognize why.
I mean, there's a lot of undoing that we have to do in our lives. And I think that it's really wonderful, like, you know, as exhausting as like contemporary discourse
can be, it really can be eye-opening.
I remember being in my teenage years
and starting, there is starting to be a dialogue
about how women compete with one another
and can be cruel to one another.
And I remember like being very impacted
and aware of my own internalized misogyny
and how to, you know, how that exists
in everybody and how to work on undoing that. And I still think that it's something that I have to
work on all the time. I think it's something that everyone has to work on. For me, in a creative
field that can feel like there's not much space for all of us. It's hard to not be envious or jealous of other people in your position and have the
sort of scarcity mentality.
And so I think that sometimes like, there's a really positive undoing of that.
But when I was younger, like, I think especially because I was really drawn to sort of male
dominated fields, it felt like in order to be taken seriously, you had to present in a certain sort of way.
Mostly just to not invite like a certain kind of question. When I was younger, I wore a lot of like muscle teeth.
And I had like a very short haircut and I liked myself in that way and I also like myself in this way.
But yeah, now I feel like I'm sort of in a place in my life where I have the option to appear a certain way and not feel threatened by that.
That makes sense. Yeah, it does. So if you're talking a little bit about the masculine and
I was very grateful for how honest you are about your dad in the book. You talk about
how you hadn't planned for your mom to be the one to die first. There was a feeling of
like we're not going to be an
us anymore without her. She was the one that was the glue. There's this one line that you had about
your dad, which made Red Out Loud, but you said talking to him was like explaining a movie to someone
who was walked in on the last 30 minutes. Yeah. Talk to us about your dad. What did you mean by that line?
And also just having listened to your lyrics
for a long time, how do you feel about men in general?
I have some feelings.
I have some feelings and thoughts,
but I just,
she says about your sidebar.
Yeah.
Extra one.
First question is, what did I mean by that line?
I was really privileged in the way. I mean, I grew up with a, as an only child with a mother who
was a homemaker. I spent so much time with my mom. She was kind of like my primary parent and
my father never had a father. He was the youngest son of a single working mom.
And he had a tough life. He was an abused child and a covered
drug addict. And I think when he turned his life around and became like a successful working
adults, he really felt like he'd served his role. And I think that I am very lucky to
even have that in my life. But I don't think that he took,
he just didn't take as much of an interest in me
and as my mother did.
I remember my dad actually telling me,
I don't love you as much as your mom.
And that being just like insane,
like why do you need to tell me that?
Wait, he didn't love you as much as he loved your mom
or he didn't love you as much as your mom loved you. He didn't love me as much as he loved my mom. Oh, yeah.
That goes in the category of just, just like, just like, just out to yourself.
Like, my dad is just like such an open book. And maybe I get a lot of that from him that to go back to like,
blaming everything on your parents. But, um, we're better for worse.
He's the opposite of my mom. There's like no withholding nature to him.
And so I think that sometimes that's like a very American concept that you should always be yourself and always tell the truth.
And you should always add everything.
And I think as I get older, I realize like that can actually be really harmful.
And it can sometimes be like the sort of easy way out, the sort of unburdening of the truth all the time.
Because there were a lot of things that I sort of wish that I didn't know about him as his daughter. So yeah, that was just how I felt about him. What do I
think about men? I mean, that's such a broad question. I think I've simultaneously been,
I don't know, I have a great reverence for some men and a great disappointment and many,
many others, you know.
But I feel that way about women too.
Yeah.
What do I mean?
What do I mean?
I don't know.
What are you getting at, Glenn?
What?
Good question.
I think all the time about this part in Isabelle work Wilkerson's cast where she talks about
how experts and cast can identify what cast a person's from by just the way they walk into a room
regardless of what they're wearing, what they're whatever. It's just a way that people carry themselves.
And in terms of being as sensitive human being, I tend to
either shrink or like react too strongly to the way that people who have been conditioned
as men carry themselves in a room, just the lack of yield, the lack of give.
Here I am instead of there, you are type thing.
So I think about that a lot in terms of also being a white woman and how I do that in
other ways. But it's something that I struggle with, that men, not men, but the male act is just
hard for me.
I think it's something I both admire and I'm repulsed by.
Yeah.
I always think about this time, my old band used to have a rehearsal space in this warehouse
and there was like a freight elevator that we would bring gear up and down for shows and stuff. And one time it broke and we were like
stuck in this freight elevator. And I was just like, oh my god, what do we do? And I watched my
male guitar player try to figure out how to operate and fix a freight elevator.
And I was just like, what is it like to be conditioned
with like that kind of confidence?
That's like incredible.
And it simultaneously so dumb and terrifying
that you have the confidence to like do something
that could maybe kill us all.
But you also like have the strength and courage to try.
And I also really envy that and want to find
that balance in my life.
I will also say I've been repulsed by,
I mean, I just think that ideally,
you find a balance of these things
that the sexes can be conditioned by society.
That I also watched that kind of masculine trait like totally fail because my father was
not conditioned to learn how to take care of people.
And so when my mom got really sick and was bedridden, I remember like we got this mouthwash
because she had like all of these sores
like that were a response to the medication.
When I would take care of her,
it'd be like, okay, here's the mouthwash.
And if you need the mouthwash,
you're gonna need a cup to spit it out in.
You're gonna want a tissue to wipe your mouth
and like you're gonna want like lip balm,
like afterwards, maybe water to rinse.
My dad would just be like, here, mouthwash.
And then peace out. There wasn't like this list of
like things like that he would kind of follow up as a caretaker. And I thought, you know, I wasn't
repulsed by him. I was so sad that he didn't get to learn that no one taught him how to do that.
Or to think about those sort of things. And I think that, yeah, I wish as someone who is conditioned
with, as a woman, I had some of the courage to take on things
that felt kind of barred from me, you know, even just like,
a lot of young boys are like given a toolbox as a kid.
I never, you know, like had that.
So of course, I'm not going to feel savvy around that kind
of stuff because you don't get that.
You get these tools of care
taking, you get the dolls that you look after and dress and know how to, you know, maintain.
So yeah, I'm interested in like there being a balance of those qualities and the way that people
are raised in general. It's so interesting in terms of that we can do hard things of it. It's like
this has been a theme on the pod women have come on and talked about the men in their lives or
like what is it that makes you think yes, I can fix an afraid elevator.
But no, I can't sit with this person in the hard, like walking people home type of it,
you know?
A word that she said that just totally struck me was envy and how much I related to that. When I feel most frustrated by like a white male privilege, like walking loudly into a room,
I think, oh, I wish I had that.
I wish I had that.
Yeah.
That's really, really, really, really something.
But it's connection to love is fascinating too because that part of the book with the mouthwash.
I remember your mom saying to you, when you were giving it to her, he doesn't know how to do it. He's my husband. How come he can't do this for me?
Yeah.
And it feels like full circle to the car, which is like, I've never met someone like you.
How can you not see me? How can you not understand me? the car, which is like, I've never met someone like you.
How can you not see me?
How can you not understand me?
Here are these two people who do life together for so long.
He can look at her, but he can't see what she needs, whereas you can look at her and see
what she needs.
And that was a love impasse for them.
She didn't feel in that moment like he could love her the way she wanted her husband to love her.
By helping her with the mouthwash and it's just like you say,
the ability to condition to see those things.
Yeah. I mean, but in the same breath, I couldn't see her or help her with certain things because of our cultural divide in our background.
And that was also what it was so heartbreaking. And a lot of what the book is about too is like because even being, you know, half Korean and growing up with a certain type of
food, I never ate like Korean old person sick person food. You know what? We ate like barbecue
meats and spicy stews and like when you're going through chemo like that is like not. That's what
my I watched my mom growing up eating those things. I didn't
ever see her or have to like make these more muted Korean versions of like what, you know, would be like chicken noodle soup or whatever. Like there are Korean versions of that that I never
really, I never made and some things I didn't even know about. So in a way, there was this
inability for me to see her too because I just didn't have that upbringing. And it wasn't until her friend Kay came to live with us that I realized like,
oh, I'm really failing in this other way of caretaking and way of seeing my mom, because we have
very different upbringings and experiences. Or are none of us failing? And it just takes a bunch
of people. Yeah, like it's healing and caretaking is just a community and we all bring something.
So, Michelle, your mom used to say, over and over again, some version of, no one will ever love you as much as
your mom does. And so subtle again. And my question to you is, and clearly your dad agreed with that.
So dad concurred. Yes.
So dad concurred. Yes.
So did that turn out to be true?
Yeah.
Yeah.
In wet ways.
I just like know it.
It's interesting.
I just, I don't know.
Your mom is just like, my mom was just like obsessed with me.
So like, I don't know. So much of my like young adult life and childhood life was just like, my mom was just like obsessed with me. Yeah, so like, I don't know.
And so much of my like young adult life and childhood life
was just like her just like endlessly listening to what I have.
Just endlessly listening to like the, you know,
but now like parts of your life like with more interest
than any other human being will ever give you.
Because like, I wonder how much of it is just like,
that's mine.
What I didn't think that you say is like, is like you know that's that's from me.
And yeah I just feel I just feel it. I just don't think anyone has ever been
for better or for worse. No one will ever be as honest with me as hard
and no one will like ever have like my true. She just didn't want anything
back beyond like me living well. I know one, I feel
one will ever, I know, no one will ever give that to me again. I feel very loved by a lot
of people and especially my husband, but I do know that I don't, I don't think anyone
will love me as much as my mother. It's like unconditional love. Like a parent I feel
like does have unconditional love.
More than you can have with a partner.
Yeah, if you're lucky, yeah.
Yeah, whether we want to.
I feel lucky.
Yeah.
I wonder if when you said before Michelle about,
you felt like the response to that question of,
do you need to be understood to be loved?
You're like, absolutely.
And yet, I have this with my mom. And so I'm wondering
is a mother child or father child in applicable situations, the only relationship where
there can be utter love without understanding. Like, I don't need to understand you to know that I love you. Like, you are just this marveling creature that I'm obsessed with.
I virtue of you being mine.
Well, I think that like, understanding is probably a spectrum.
There's no like you either understand someone or you don't.
You understand different parts of someone, you know, like I think about like my,
my two best friends who
I've known since I was in middle school, so I'm 20 years now, and I don't understand
that. They don't understand me anymore. They're like my siblings, we've grown in such different
directions and we're very different people, but I we have such a deep love for each other
in this way that you can only develop in a way of like,
in longevity, you know?
So I think that both things are kind of spectrums, right?
Like I think that like there is just no like love
or no love, there's just no understanding
and no understanding, they're both like on this slider
of like I understand a deep part of you,
but I also, I don't know, love, love you on, on a slider as well.
And it's tied to like, though, you said you tried to make your dad's idea of, of brutal truth and knowing everything and being transparent and whatever,
maybe like love as, understanding each other is sort of like a Western idea too.
Because I mean, even in your, your mom used to say to you, always save 10%.
Oh, right.
Right?
I mean, that was of yourself.
Of yourself.
Always save 10% of yourself.
She said, even with your father,
I saved 10% of myself.
It didn't sound like for her, love was equivalent to,
I show you 100%.
You show me 100%.
Love was a different thing.
What do you think about that 10%,
saving 10% of your self-advice, even in love?
And do you follow it?
Yeah, I mean, I think it could also be interpreted
in this way of just like,
you're never gonna know anyone 100%.
Like we said, I don't even think I understand myself 100%.
You know, like so, I think that there's always something
that's missing in translation. And I think in in a way like it almost feels like your partner, your romantic partner in life.
At least in my situation, I feel like I have the most understanding from my husband because that's the person I've like picked and incompatible with and we understand each other like very deeply.
and I've picked and incompatible with, and we understand each other very deeply.
But I also, I know my, there was a lack of understanding
between my parents and I, but they also love me tremendously.
My mom in particular just didn't trust anyone,
and it was a really good advice to go through life
of just be careful.
Don't people are not to be trusted,
and everyone is self-serving, and you have to guard yourself
against that.
And for better or for worse, that has protected me
from a lot of stuff.
And I think it's given me a really great compass
to lead my life.
But the older I get, I kind of see it
from another perspective where I think that it can also
apply to being withholding to protect people. I think that it can also apply to being withholding to protect people.
I think that sometimes that Western concept of always tell the truth and be so unapologetically
yourself.
Sometimes I think it's an unburdening for you to have to tell the truth.
And sometimes it's better for people to not know certain things. Like one thing I thought was interesting was an example of this is like,
when my mom was sick, she found out that her old friends would kind of like
disappeared. Her like childhood friend who's disappeared daughter had cancer.
And that wrecked her. She was just a mess because she was just so pained
by the idea that a young child was going through
what she was going through.
And I think my aunt saw that.
And when her dad actually died two or three weeks
before my mom, they decided not to tell her that it was better
not to tell her. My dad and maybe me would be like, mom, you sorry to tell you this, but like this
happened. And I think that like that can also be a type of 10% of just like, what does that do
right now, you know, for this person? And to really think about this, this truth,
like just like every piece of information I own
need to be put onto this person,
is it a good thing for them to know
or is it better to keep to myself?
That's like a really hard lesson I've been thinking about
a lot lately.
If someone says something to you,
that's cruel about a friend.
Like, do you need to tell them?
You know?
Like, I mean, no, you do not.
And I think that when I, even like a couple of years ago, I probably would have, if someone
like, someone says something like me and about your friend are like, oh, like, that might
make them self-conscious.
Like, maybe it's best to not tell them.
Not because like, you, you want to expose the other person,
but because like you don't want that to weigh on their psyche.
And I think it's actually more loving to withhold that kind of stuff
than to just tell someone everything.
Yeah, it's like wise love.
Michelle's honor.
Thank you.
Pod Squad, we can do hard things.
Wise love this week. See you next time. [♪ Music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music to do each or all of these three things. First, can you please follow or subscribe
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