We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Letting Go of How It’s “Supposed to Be”
Episode Date: September 29, 20221. The twinge of loneliness that comes with searching for what it *seems* like everyone else has. 2. A Varsity-level question from Christie that challenges everything we said about Help on Tuesday�...�s episode. 3. How to make “your thing” more of an “our thing” in relationships–and how Abby got Glennon into the sports. 4. If there is anything worse than vacationing with your own kids, it’s vacationing with other people’s kids–and the time Glennon staged a sketchy early exit from a group trip. 5. Abby and Glennon’s brilliant compromise boundaries for future extended family gatherings. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. We love your guts. We love you so much that all we've been doing is listening to your amazing voice males and questions.
And today we are hearing from the pod squad.
Are people?
So my favorite days.
Are people still saying woot woot?
No, they're not.
No, they're not.
Someone tell us what the new generation of woot woot is.
I don't know.
It's just you still saying woot woot.
I actually don't know if anyone ever said woot woot.
Okay.
But I do write in a text everyone's well.
Woot. Let's go let's hear from our first pod
squadron Julie hi Glennon Abby sister this is Julie my question is a professional soccer coach in the US and I hate sports
But I love him. I'm trying to figure out how to be supportive and
Engage in the sports or soccer without hating my life
So I just think there's too many sports, too many games, too many
seasons, too many things. It's never stopped and I find myself rejecting, like
even conversations about scoring goals and all those things. Like I'm just like
I don't care how many times the ball went and then that or like who won. I just
genuinely don't.
And so yeah, I guess my question is how do I support and not hate my life?
That's all. Thank you.
This is such a foreign concept to me. I have no idea how to talk to Julie about this
because I've never experienced anything like these feelings. I love Julie's guts.
I love this question. Do you want to take a stab? Yeah.
Related Julie's husband maybe? I mean, listen, Julie, I
appreciate the honesty here. I think one thing that I would ask
in, in response is, do you love your husband and do you love what he does?
Right like
Through his eyes
So for an example, I watch my wife read books
For hours during a day
He does
And reading is not something that it's not like my first instinct. I'm not like,
oh, where's my book? But I do see Glenin reading all the time and she loves reading.
And so I love witnessing her doing something that she loves.
I know, but maybe Julianne or husband or not lesbians.
Okay. So they're not gonna stay in each other being. No, I understand that.
Okay, let's go a different route.
Maybe you can look at his coaching.
He's not just a coach.
He's like a life guide for these people.
I understand that it's weird because there's rules
and this team has to score goals in that net
and this team is trying to go to the other way.
And there's a lot of these complications during sports that can feel confusing and not fun to watch.
But if you could see it as maybe like a TV drama that's unfolding before your eyes,
maybe you could find it more interesting. So when he comes home and he might be talking about the X's and O's in sports,
we call the X's and O's like the tactics of the game.
It's hugs and kisses, right?
Yeah, X's also.
No.
Maybe you could inquire and ask about the people.
Yes.
Oh, agree.
Ask him about the people because Glennon, you've told me when we were watching sports
on the television and you want to maybe die at times.
And then they start talking about this woman's story.
Right, right.
But also you don't, you get annoyed when I ask you, is that person married?
What is that person's mental health?
Where do they live?
Do they have pets?
You don't want to talk about it.
You just want to talk about the net and the ball.
That's not true.
I talk about the people because I am a leader.
I think that you have to get into the hearts and minds
of the people that you're trying to lead,
especially as a coach.
Mm-hmm.
And we all get to like different parts of it.
I just don't know if Julie has found that there is a different part to watching sports or
listening to a coach husband talk about the sports.
She might have to prod with a follow up question of, well, you know, who's struggling the most?
That's interesting.
I'm interesting. I
Desperate I'm desperate to hear what sister thinks
Sister, what are you thinking shocking to everyone? I'm sure
um, I
Just don't understand why we can't each individually do
What each of us individually loves.
And then if we happen to have a struggle in that area, bring it to each other and say, I need
your help in this area. But why can't we reserve our togetherness for the things that we together love?
Why does our together time need to be consumed
by our individual idiosyncratic interests?
I don't want to spend my life pretending
to be interested or impressed by shit
that is not interesting or impressive to me.
Yeah.
I did that a lot as a teenager
and I just don't feel like I need to do it anymore.
I'm allergic to placating
and it's not even about having a realistic expectation
of my partner's genuine fascination with my interests.
I don't expect him to do that.
I don't expect him to be genuinely interested
about the things that I find individually fascinating.
But I also
100% I'm not going to fake fascination in his change in general interests.
Why are we faking that? It's silly. There should be enough that we can be like, you have a bucket that you love. I have a bucket that I love. What's in our bucket of things we love together? And perhaps
we could focus on that when we're talking. Like, also, just for context, I just want to
us for to imagine a world. Julie has called in, okay? She's struggling with her lack of genuine
fascination with the sports with which her husband is consumed.
Can we please try to imagine a world for one hot second in which Julie's husband is sitting
around fretting and asking for advice about how he can become more actively and genuinely
engage in Julie's love for gardening.
It has never happened not going to happen ever.
I hear that, but I also think that what people do for their life, like their career, their
life's work, which might be gardening, I'm not taking that away, I do feel like there
has to be a little bit of open-heartedness in what
don't tell sister that there has to be open-heartedness. She will turn this plot around, but they're
spending half of their fucking life doing this thing. Right. I could be totally wrong, but there's
a little flavor in this of I have this one image of myself from my past that as God is my witness, I will never return
to again.
And that is what you're going to say.
It's watching your boyfriend play video games.
Yes.
Okay.
I used to sit my very smart, albeit wasted at the time, ass on a dirty couch. And for hours, I would watch my boyfriend play video games.
Okay?
I don't like video games.
I don't like boyfriends.
For some reason, I felt like what I should do
with my one wild and precious life.
Like it would have been dumbass enough to spend it playing video games.
But now I'm spending it watching someone else play video games.
And all I'm just saying is that I don't know how to say it other than that's a vibe.
I am not returning to.
And it feels like maybe there's a flavor of this as God is my witness.
I will not do that again in Julie, okay?
Because here's what I will tell you.
And I'm not saying this is fair.
I'm not saying this is fair.
I understand it's not fair.
When I was married to a man,
I as God as my witness was not gonna be interested
in his sports.
But when I'm here at Abby, I was like, huh.
All right, I don't know.
There was something about the power dynamic.
She brought more of the sports to me.
It was very clear that it wasn't just about the sports,
it actually wasn't about the net.
It was about the human struggle of learning how to work
together as a team, learning how to experience deep emotions,
like competitiveness and loss and jealousy,
pouring yourself out and losing,
and all the things I actually do care about
in the world, but like it's all playing out
in front of you on a field.
She brought humanity to it to me in such a way
when our daughter wasn't playing sports.
She was like, why?
And I was like, well, she's not that good at them.
And she was like, so, that's not what any of this is about.
And so we put our girl back in sports
and I watched the teamness of it.
I watched her learn how her body was for accomplishing something
and not like appearing a certain way.
I watched her learn how to lose.
This child never knew how to lose without like having a complete
breakdown.
I watched her lose.
I watched her pull herself together. I watched her lose. I watched her pull herself together.
I watched her experience, all of these emotions on the field safely in the container of a game.
Sports became, I can cry now watching this shit, but it was because it was brought to me
in like a human to human way, not the way some people do it.
I'm curious does she respect what he's doing because is what she's seeing
just like a more glorified version of her watching video games.
Video him playing video games.
I think there's two things going on.
I think that Glenin, what you're saying
is what I think I'm trying to say with the third bucket.
You can love your thing over here.
I'm disinterested in.
I can love this thing over here. I'm disinterested in. I can love this thing over here
that you are disinterested in without having my thing feel threatened and without personally feeling
threatened. And then there's a third bucket in the middle that is the thing that we can both
genuinely without pretending be engaged and interested in around. What Abby did is she took some
of her first bucket and
poured it into a third that you could be like, you know what? I am genuinely interested
in that. That is so cool to me. I'm never going to be remembering the stats, but I love
this heart of this thing. And therefore, I can be a really engaged with it. And so I
think that's the job of both parties. You don't have to say,
come over here and entertain my bucket and be in love it. Love it. That's right. It's
like, no, my job is to translate it to you in a way that you will love it. And include
you in it in a way that includes you. Includes you in a way that is generous
because I know my partner and I have this thing I love.
And so I'm gonna figure out
what is the Venn diagram of that.
Yes.
If Abby had come to me and just talked to me
constantly about statistics,
that would not have included me.
I needed her to be like, this is my wife.
I actually, I know her so well,
this is the part of my thing that's gonna light her up
and think that through and include me in it.
But if you don't, it's a repetitive scene
from Fried Green tomatoes, where it's just
the dude coming home and taking his, you know,
TV dinner to the sports and leaving his wife out of it
because there's no generosity,
there's no vendiagramming.
And both parties need to be a part of that vendiagram.
Like Julie's husband has to translate it to her, and she also has to have some openness
and some curiosity with the sports.
I'm also going to take a little gander, which was not included in this question and wonder
if a little bit of
the there's too many seasons it's too much it is quite possible that in some relationships when
somebody's
hobby or work over shadows and dominates the life and the conversations
and the time and eclipses, not cool, the rest of it, that then the expectation that you're going to be giddy in discussing it just breeds resentment.
That's good.
That's right.
So, if you have a husband that plays two rounds of 18-hole golf every Saturday and you're
already bitter as shit because that's your family time and he is not taking care of the
responsibilities.
You're taking care of him Saturday. And then he comes home and wants to talk to you about golf.
You're probably gonna be like,
you suck all the way off.
I hate golf.
That's right.
So and just for the record,
my husband doesn't do this
because I know sometimes I present theoreticals
that are like, are you just trying to couch that?
That is not a thing.
But I think there's a lot of, well, why don't you like golf?
It's so not cool. You don't like golf.
There's a reason she doesn't like golf you guys.
Yeah.
Yeah, because you can send someone's priorities to.
It's like, is sports your life and you're just trying to fit your family into it?
Or is your family your life and you're adding sports to it sometimes?
It's complicated, but I'm with Julie in the fact that the sports presents
itself as in like, it's a season. So that's a lie. It's not a season. It never ends. It's
not, it doesn't end. It like, no season stop. Like fall, winter, spring, summer. That's a season.
Okay, the sports, they just overlap and they keep going. And the second there's a championship championship and then the next day there's a practice, it never ends to big lie. Even when the
game's over, it's not. There's extra time. It's just, I'm with Julie in the fact that the
the farce is over, like there's no end to it and it's just sports till we die. Yes, right. That's
what it is. That's right. Okay. Thank God.
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.
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.
We have an anonymous question.
Oh, let's do it.
I am 46 years old, and I still feel like friends
that are such a struggle for me.
And I'm highly sensitive, I'm a teacher, I'm a mom, and I still am struggling to find
where I sit with friendships.
I have a few really close friendships that do provide me a lot of joy and are very fulfilling, but it's the times where I get these twinges of loneliness
or when I see other females having like,
ladies, nights out or these families that they cater
together and all their families and kids go along.
And then I think, Josh, I'm making something wrong here.
How come I don't have that?
So I guess I'm just wondering at this phase in my life, how to do this
friendship thing. I'm with anonymous. I actually called that question in.
You paid somebody. You are 46. All I can hear in this question is the red flashing words vacation together.
Vacation together.
I'm just because I want to honor this person and this question.
I'm going to tell this story.
And if my friends who it's about or listening, I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry.
But I, here's what happened. So what happened was, I decided that I was going to go from like
zero to 60, right? That I needed to jump into the friendship thing. I was very much like
anonymous. I don't, didn't understand how people were doing this.
My friends, every summer, this group of friends,
who were always like, togetherness was easier for them
than it was for me.
I was kind of in, but not really, all of it.
They would go for a vacation together
in a big beach house, every single summer,
all of their children, and then like six fricking families
with their children, okay?
And so I was like, you know what?
I'm gonna do this.
I'm gonna do it.
I am a person who goes on beach family vacations.
That's the kind of person I am now.
I saw the pictures, it looks delightful.
I am gonna do it.
Oh my God.
Day-tier, my lady.
Day-tier, I love these people.
Oh, they're the best.
I love these people.
Like, as far as people on the planet go,
they're my favorite people, okay?
It was a slice of hell on earth.
All of these freaking children, so many children. So many different parenting
strategies. So many different approaches. Some people getting up in the
morning. Some people, my kids were little, I lived for seven PM because I was
like, they're out. Kids are done. We're done. Some people's kids stayed up till
midnight. So it didn't matter. There were still children everywhere.
It was so many, so much.
So here's what happened.
Craig and I would got in bed both nights
and we just couldn't even talk.
We were just like in the fetal position,
we don't what we're gonna do.
The next seven days spread out in front of us
like a fiery hell and
Tish woke up one morning and said,
my tummy hurts.
And you're like, yes, it does.
I looked at Craig like, oh, we have been given a gift.
I proceeded to make Tish appear so sick.
I behaved concerned. I laid her on the couch in front of everyone, took fake temperatures.
We prepared this dramatic exit. I took her to the emergency room to make my story complete.
Okay. We were like leaving the house. for us. Yes, yes.
Greg was in on it with me.
He will call in and verify this whole story.
We took her to the emergency room.
She was like, what the fuck?
I feel like that might have been a bridge too far.
Couldn't you just say you say you went to the emergency room?
Oh, no, because that would have been a lie.
This was more of a performance with a truth at the end.
Okay.
I got it.
So you were just like, everything was reasonable as long as we keep it within the
of factors.
It could be.
It could be.
It's true.
It's true.
Right?
So we took her to the emergency room.
Low and behold, they couldn't find anything wrong with her.
But just to be safe, just to be safe, we packed up, drove home, best trip home of my entire
life.
The point being, don't try that, anonymous.
Don't jump into family vacations.
I think it was sister who said if there's anything worse than being with my kids on vacation,
it's being with my kids and so when else is kids?
Advocation.
Yeah, that's right.
That is what I said.
And that is true.
What do you think about this love bug and her wishes, her desire to have this group of
friends?
Well, I would just ask, like, clearly she might not be the kind of person, maybe a little bit like you,
Glennon, that would do well, that would thrive in these, but she wants to be the kind of person,
in some ways, because there's something about what she's seeing or hearing or looking at on the
fucking Instagram. God help us with everybody. Frolicking women to favorite around the best photos. It's just not ever totally like that.
So I don't know.
I would ask, what is she seeing that other families
are getting from these family vacations?
Because there's a difference between a vacation and a trip.
Like a vacation is what you take without any children. And a trip includes
children. It is not vacation. It is, it is a trip. There's probably some like tree climbing
in our family. Rapids. I totally agree with you Abby. I think there's two things happening
here. I think the main thing is when we see ladies and nights out or these people are in this book club together,
these people do this and and the family vacations together that we feel like there's this wide swath
of something that we're missing. And I get that too. Definitely. I see things and I'm like,
out. Do you know when you get that little like 20, she said, what did she say? She said, twinges of loneliness.
Twinges of loneliness.
I love that because mine always just feels like
like a little baby boa around my heart.
Like, contract, contract, and it just makes you feel sad,
especially if it's people who used to be friends with
and you see it.
And I think that's totally natural.
And that is valid.
And also has nothing to do at all with whether you should be someone who's going
to ladies' nights out or going on group family vacations.
That's right.
The fact that you have that twinge means, oh, that looks awesome.
And oh, I wish I had something that feels like that looks like that feels.
Yes, exactly. That feels like that looks like that feels because I always
think every time there's a picture like that, I'm like, okay, but somebody had
to arrange
and take that picture, which means it's staged a bit.
And for every group of people that are together,
she's like, how do their families get along
and their partners get along and their kids get along?
For sure they don't.
For sure that's a picture.
And then their kids are like, I hate her
and I hate when you bring me here.
And like, you know, and the partners like, how much longer we have bring me here. And like, you know, and the
partners like how much longer we have to stay here. And like for sure, they don't all
get along or I have never been a part of that where everyone's just magically melding together.
And if they are, if you have that good on you, that is so great. I love that for people. And I
believe that there are whole groups of people that go and it's the time of their life and that is beautiful. And I wish I were a person who would do that.
And also it's like a personality test. I am never ever ever going to be a person who
does that. So I think there's that whole bucket. And then there's this like, am I missing
something? Do I have my friendships right? And she said that she has a few really close friendships that provide me with a lot of joy and
a very fulfilling.
And to that I say, me too anonymous.
Yes.
That is what I have and I don't particularly think I'm doing it wrong.
Yes.
Is there a third way here?
Because, you know, Glennon, we have I my birth family has a place that we
sometimes go to in the summer for a few days and we go because we know you know
it's my favorite place in the world and it's our kids one of their favorite
places to go to but it's a literal island with my whole family. And-
But tell them it's like 40 people.
It's, it is entirely-
40 people.
Too much for you.
And I need you to explain to them what an island means.
They're a picture and tropical.
Look at it.
The island is like the size of a bed.
It's a quarter acre.
It's very tiny.
It's very tiny.
It's very tiny.
Okay.
And there's a lot of people and a lot of goings on all the time.
Isn't there a bathroom outside? There's an outhouse. Yeah. There's an a lot of people and a lot of goings-on all the time. Isn't there a bathroom
outside? There's an outhouse. Yeah. There's an outhouse. There's a bathroom. And it's the best.
And for you. And also the worst. There's 40 people. And there's two bedrooms. So, but the bedrooms
don't have walls. So walls are half, half walls. So this is an 18 late 1800s build. The walls don't call the
way up to the ceiling. The point of my story is outside and there's spiders in it. We have
gone a couple of times. 25 children. And you were more inclined to go early on because you didn't know
what it was like. Because you were still chemically dependent on Abby. I was still hiding my personality. So as yeah, and so now I know to get you under contract.
Kind of what and I believe that if we were to ever go back to this area that we would
have to actually stay somewhere else.
We would have to have a place of our own.
Okay.
Third way.
Third way.
And then opt in to said family vacation,
maybe the kids stay there.
I feel so cozy about this.
You know, maybe the kids stay there.
And we're just over here doing our thing
or maybe we opt in on dinner
or we're only there for a few hours a day
that allows you and your kids
to have this kind of familial friends experience.
But also boundaries.
But also a safe place to return to
with bathrooms on the inside.
Yes.
Yes.
No, but we're laughing, but I think that's brilliant.
It's like, it doesn't have to be all this way or all or nothing.
Yeah. That there can be,
I mean, we've learned this with our families. We can still go but like stay in different houses
and then opt in and then opt out. And that that's, I think there's also something that anonymous
mentioned in the beginning that she started with. And she said, I'm highly sensitive.
and she said, I'm highly sensitive. That's the first thing she said.
What I want to say about that is,
if you had supersonic hearing,
you might be more uncomfortable at a loud dinner party
than someone else.
You would hear things that other,
that person didn't hear,
so it didn't upset that person.
It's not because there's anything wrong with you
that you're upset or emotionally, you know, didn't hear, so it didn't upset that person. It's not because there's anything wrong with you
that you're upset or emotionally, you know, dysregulated, dysregulated in large social settings.
It's because you have supersonic hearing.
It's because you are affected by more things
that so that I have a, I have, I'm 46
and I'm not gonna change that about myself. So what I know is that have, I'm 46 and I'm not going to change that about myself.
So what I know is that that picture of the way things are supposed to be, that thing we say over and over again on the pod, that the thing that screws us up most is the picture in our head we have
of how things are supposed to be. So just because Instagram presents women and friendships
as this ever never ending get together in someone's living room around the beach.
That has never worked for me.
It won't, but what I am creating now is a few deep friendships.
A couple people at a time, I'm getting that connection.
It sounds to me like she's getting the connection she needs from friendships.
And it's just this idea out there of here, of how it's supposed to be.
That's causing the twinge of loneliness.
We're with the anonymous.
Okay, let's hear from Christy.
This is a question that's based on our help conversation.
Hi, I'm Christy.
I'm 45 and I'm married mom of two teenagers.
I have a full-time corporate job.
And I have a question.
So all the time when we hear advice about self-care,
we're told, don't be afraid to ask for help, don't forget to ask for help, be sure to ask
for help when you need it. And often it's implied that someone else is going to like pick
up your kids or make you a meal or provide three day care for you, where you have a date
night or a spa day, what's the actual hell?
Every time I hear it, it makes me grit my teeth,
like literally my jaw clenches
and I'm totally not a glass of the jaw clencher.
My immediate reaction to that every time is,
don't ask me for help.
I mean, I'm buried in work and my own family application
and behind every single aspect of my life
is barely keeping my head above water myself. And then I guess someone might say, well then you should ask for help. But
who do I ask? I mean most of my friends are in the same situation. I am, you know,
I don't even have any family near me or at least not family who's like willing or available
to help. My boss is very kind and flexible, but he just wants me to get my work done.
My boss is very kind and flexible, but he just wants me to get my work done. I do buy some help.
Like I have someone clean my house and do mother-help whole tasks.
I get take out all the time, my paper child care when I eat it, things like that.
And I do often get asked for advice or connections or referrals.
And I'm very happy to provide that kind of help when I'm asked.
I do offer to help in some situations when I see that I can do something easily that
would help someone else.
But the idea that I would like make a meal for another family because somebody recently
has surgery or somebody has a new baby, it's like completely invisible to me.
I can barely get it together enough to feed my own family.
And so I feel guilty for gritting my teeth
about the meal train request.
I go trapped because I don't have anyone
to ask for help myself.
So am I alone in this?
Why are we telling everyone to ask for help?
Where are they asking?
I just, I don't understand.
Thank you for everything you're doing.
I really appreciate you.
Oh, Christie.
Christie. She just summed it all up right there.
What? Bring in the varsity level questions. So, Christie, if everyone didn't listen to
the last podcast that we did, it was all about help. Like, why it's so hard to ask for help,
why some people are help. Fobick, and why you should ask for help and Christie is doing what they say
calling us out on who the hell should you be asking and sure shit don't ask me. Yeah, I love her. It's so true.
It's so true. Why are we telling everyone to ask for help? Who are they asking?
Why are we telling everyone to ask for help? Who are they asking?
Does anyone, wife, sister, have a freaking answer for Christy?
I have one thing that I think.
First of all, good on you, Christy.
Yeah, it's bullshit.
There is nobody like, I double dare you to send me a meal train.
You know what I'm gonna do?
I'm gonna send out a meal train for my regular ass family every day.
train. You know what I'm gonna do? I'm gonna send out a meal train for my regular ass family every day.
When I think and we alluded to this a little bit in Tuesday's episode, this very thing before I even knew about this question of there is this understanding that everyone around you is drowning
and so you putting your hand up and saying I need help is in some ways not cool because you're like, who am I to say
that I'm struggling more than everybody else that I live around and is struggling too?
There's like a, I don't know like a self-importance about that that I'm not comfortable doing.
So maybe it isn't even starting with the asking for help if you're in Christie's position. Maybe it's even just
like a getting together with the other friends that are in the same situation as you and all admitting
that it sucks and that you're struggling and that you all need help. You know, it's like the first step, right?
Yes.
Christie's life has become unmanageable.
Yes.
And can we just allow for life to be unmanageable for women without an added crisis?
What I hear her saying also is you have to have a death in the family or have surgery.
It's like my friends who voluntarily stay in the hospital for days after they have a baby
because they're like
This is my best life. This is my vacation. It's the only time people will bring me food. It's all over after this
I just think that with the demands of life right now
every day is
help worthy
So I just think she's the exact person to lead
that this is bullshit revolution amongst her people
because she's so honest about it.
It's like almost crazy making what I'm hearing
in her voice.
It's like, this is like all a game here.
And I think what you're saying is true.
Like what she needs is for a group of women
to be like,
everything is bad.
Everything is bad. And I don't need you to fix it because I know it's equally as bad for you,
but I just need to tell you what my kind of bad is.
And it's like this little place where you can be honest with each other
before you even get to the help part before we're making food.
It's just the acknowledgement,
I'm exhausted and sometimes when you share that with each other,
it makes it a little bit easier burden to carry.
And also what's annoying is like,
we're always talking about the women, the women, the women,
the women, and then when the meal train goes out,
I actually don't know, is the meal train like sign up for Josie?
Yeah, I mean, she, this person's in chemo and we need to deliver lunches every Thursday
for the rest of the year.
Right, but typically in our culture, it's always the women that are also doing the helping.
So what Christy's saying is, I can't like help this other woman because I'm drowning.
So and then we're like, we'll get all the women together and then help each other.
Yeah.
But it's like most of these women are in straight marriages.
So where the hell are the guys?
Maybe the guys need to get a support group together.
Because every time there's a problem in a classroom,
the email goes to the woman.
You know, somebody says to a dad is your kid free for the birthday party.
And the dad's like, oh, you can send the email to my wife.
Like, right, where's all the helping that goes on the dots?
Girl, don't get me.
Trying to keep my blood pressure low for this one.
First of all, Kristi, you're going to sit your husband down
and have him listen to two podcasts.
It is the overwhelm episode.
Yeah.
And then the acts of service one.
And then we're gonna get together with our friends and talk about how awful it is.
Because honestly, Kristi clearly is managing it all and she's the one that is suffering from it.
It does not appear to Kristi's people one that is suffering from it. It does not appear to Christie's people
that she is struggling.
And so I think sometimes if you say it out loud,
it's just an opening.
I have a group of friends where we all admit
how much it sucks all the time.
And so therefore it's like an open invitation
for any help that you can give. Mm, that's nice.
There's structural ways, like it makes me,
it makes me absolutely crazy
that we are all with our opportunity cost hourly rate of life,
doing all the same shit.
Yes, why don't we have divisions individually?
Yes, divisions of labor.
Divisions of labor, it's insane.
So this year I went through the whole school calendar.
I wrote down every single day, picture day, field day,
alternate field day.
This is the day they get off early.
I made an entire document with the three pages of every day
we needed and I sent it around to every single person I know.
Because I was like, to hell with us all reinventing
every wheel and doing it every time.
That's so good.
Put these in your calendar.
And by doing stuff like that, you know what?
The next time my friends are always like,
Doyle, you won't know this,
but tomorrow's tie-dye day at school.
And I'm like, thank you, because of course I didn't know that.
That's not dramatic help, but if you open yourself up to be like,
I'm willing to receive all intake that is provided.
Yeah, life is more likely to come to you.
Yeah, and like treating life is a communal experience.
Let's recreate the village somehow.
Yeah, that's really cool.
And also when you said people probably don't know that Christy's struggling,
I feel bad for people who have the reputation or of being very sufficient,
like, of being very steady.
I think it's wonderful for me that my people are a little bit worried about my mental health.
Yeah. Highaluc, I like that. Right. Yeah.
They tread carefully. Right. That's good. And that's good. We should all tread a little bit
carefully with each other because we are all just teetering on that cliff. It's just
that some of us, our faces are like, and some of our faces are like, I'm fine, I've got this.
But everybody's teetering.
Yep.
Truth.
Teeter central over here.
Teeter central, Kristi, we love you.
We agree with you, there's no one to ask for help
and don't ask us for help.
Yeah. Let us please hear from our pod squadder of the week, Cynthia.
My name is Cynthia.
I call you to thank you for inspiring me with courage that I needed.
I'm a recovering Ivy League perfectionist and people pleaser who often prioritized regard
of strangers.
To the point that, if a salesperson spent long enough with me,
I would either put the item on hold or buy and return it.
I still not just appoint them with an unpurchased.
Anyway, today I did a hard thing and resigned
to some of professional job after less than a month,
because it wasn't the right place for me.
And I told myself over and over on the way,
I will disappoint them before disappointing myself. I really appreciate it. Leaving was the right place for me. And I told myself over and over on the way, I will disappoint them before disappointing myself.
I really appreciate it.
Leaving was the right kind of quitting
as it was honoring myself.
It's on the greener pastures for me.
Anyway, I appreciate you, ladies, so much.
And you're inspiring words and vulnerability every week.
It really matters.
Thank you.
Oh, oh my God, Cynthia.
She is an Ivy League perfectionist and people pleaser.
Who formally, if she was talking to a salesperson
for too long, would just go ahead and buy the shit
she didn't want, so I'm not to disappoint them.
I get it.
Do you know that made me think of when I used to
check out at the grocery store?
And then there would be people behind me.
And inevitably, the lady would ask me,
are those organic apples,
or regular conventional apples?
And for sure, they were conventional apples.
But I would be so scared
that the lady was gonna think I was lying,
that I would just say they were organic.
Because you'd pay more.
Because I'd rather just lie instead of her thinking,
I was lying.
So I would lie to the lady to pay more,
so that she didn't secretly think,
suspect that I was lying.
That's amazing.
You would lie in order to preserve your integrity
as it should so.
Yes, I would lie to preserve my integrity.
That's exactly right.
I mean, checking out, like shopping, forget it.
It's a death trap of stress when you check out
at those places and then
Besides the all the questions about is that organic and then you have
You have the moment where you put your
Frickin credit card in and then you have to concentrate so much because it's like
Do not remove do not remove card do not remove card and then there's like the split second where it goes from do not remove card to remove card remove card remove card
Let's second where it goes from do not remove cards to remove card remove card remove card.
It's like, pay such close attention and it always beeps in the shameful way like that's
like you don't have any money.
What are you doing trying to buy those organic apples?
And then I always think it's not sufficient funds and I look at it and I'm like, and then
it's just like remove card.
And I'm like, why is that?
It's such a jud judge ominous beep?
It's like my nervous system is too nervous for this system.
Is this why your wallet is always out of source?
Yes, because also, yes, because then if you don't pay
with a card and you try to pay a cash to avoid,
remove card, remove card, remove card,
that doesn't work because then they hand you change.
They hand you change,
but all the people are in line behind you.
So then you have to figure out what to do with the change.
Get out, it's like too long,
and then you have to take out your wallet and put it in.
So I just feel like throwing the change and running.
You can have it.
It's keeping it too much stress.
I can't handle change.
I can't handle change both literally and figuratively.
But Cynthia, let us focus on this because you went from that level
to a professional job one month in, so connected to your knowing,
knowing that quitting was honoring yourself.
And this needs to be our next right thing with good luck. Knowing that quitting was honoring yourself, yes.
And this, this needs to be our next right thing with God, blessed India.
She said, over and over, I told myself on the way, I will disappoint them before disappointing
myself.
Amen, Cynthia.
That's it.
Let's disappoint somebody this week, y'all.
Don't disappoint me, honey.
Okay. Let's disappoint some. You. Y'all don't disappoint me honey. Okay. Let's
disappoint them before you disappoint yourself. Right? Who do you want to energy? Who do you
need to disappoint pod squad? Yeah. Let's get to it. We love you. Bye. Bye.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle. I walked through a fire I came out the other side.
I chased as I er, I made sure I got once my name
And I continue to believe
That I'm the one for me
And because I'm mine
I want the line
Cuz we're adventurous and hard
A final destination
They stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache.
I hit rock bottom, it felt like a brand new star.
a brand new star I'm not the problem sometimes things fall apart
and I continue to believe
the best people are free
And it took some time
But I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak
So man, a final destination with that
They stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find a way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah We might get lost but we're only in that
Stopped asking directions
Some places may have never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
Through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things. Yeah, we can do hard things.
We can do hard things.
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