We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Life Hacks: Strategies to Suffer Less
Episode Date: February 2, 2023We can do hard things, and yet, sometimes we can try easier. Glennon, Abby, Amanda – and the Pod Squad! — share the strategies they’ve used to suffer less – giving us simple Life Hacks for rel...ationships, home, tech, travel, and saving time. 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 back to We Can Do Hard Things.
Thank you so much for really sticking there with us, with all of these hard things we've
been discussing over the last month.
Today, we are going to talk to you about some life-changing ideas to make
your life easier. This is we can do easy things, life hacks.
Well, on the surface they might feel like hard things.
Oh, no, really.
Yeah, I mean, because these are life hacks, but sometimes some of these hacks I think are
going to be difficult.
Okay. They're hard for me. Well, it's as easy as I get in
since college. Okay. Right. Okay. Oh, I got it. I'm a little late, but I got it. Yeah.
Okay. I was like, you didn't work hard in college. Oh, I get it. Yeah, there you go. You were easy
in college. I mean, I wasn't hard. Can was telling you. Yes. Can we all talk about what a hack is?
Like what, what sister, what's your definition
of a life hack?
I think hacks are things that people have discovered
that simplify or streamline a smaller big part of their life
that if we all added to our portfolio of skills,
we might make some things easier for ourselves.
That was like the most amazing definition
of efficiency.
Do you have it written down?
No, I did not.
Outrageous.
So we have some categories here.
We've got overall life hacks.
We've got some relationship hacks.
We've got some home hacks, tech hacks. Travel relationships home hacks, tech, travel, relationship hacks, travel hacks.
And we have pods, squad hacks.
Pods, squad hacks.
We have written into us or called with voicemails.
We are very grateful.
We are incorporating your hacks.
Yeah.
For me, I feel like life hacks are things also
to help lessen suffering.
Really, all I'm trying to do is suffer less.
OK.
Right. It's the idea is suffer less. Okay.
Right, it's the idea of try easier.
Yes, we could try harder.
And some ways we need to.
But in some ways, we just need to try easier.
That's right, that's right.
And there are tricks that you can use to suffer less.
That is how I feel about life hacks.
So my first overall hack is called Eat the Frog.
Where did that come from?
Well, a lot of people attribute it to Mark Twain.
There was like this quote,
the Mark Twain said that if you eat a live frog first thing
in the morning, then nothing worse than that
will ever happen to you throughout the day.
That's the truth, which is kind of funny
because it's like just do a terrible horrific thing
and then everything's up from there.
Can you give me an example of something
you eat the frog with?
Okay, so the way we explain it to the kids
is worst thing, first thing.
So here's the way I think about it.
We wake up in the morning and we all have that thing
that we know we have to do.
Write that email, make that phone call,
have the conversation. Yeah. Or the project, make that phone call, have the conversation.
Yeah. Or the project at work that you want to do the least is going to require the most of you
that you just are dreading. It's the dread thing. Dread, dread. What we tend to do is put that thing
off and off and off and off because we're dreading it. So if you think about your time as like a
long stretch, okay? You got a stretch of time each day.
What happens when we put off that hard thing
is that we spend all of the time between
when we wake up and that hard thing in dread.
So we kind of have a little pit in our stomach
because we're looking ahead towards this thing
that we are dreading, we're putting it off,
putting it off, putting it off,
which means that most of our time is spent in dread.
But if you wake up in the morning, you do your it off, putting it off, putting it off, which means that most of our time is spent in dread.
But if you wake up in the morning, you do your little things, whatever you have to do.
But then you do the worst thing, first thing.
Causes less suffering only because it shortens the time of dread.
So it's a short amount of time of dread now, and then the thing is done, and then you
have the rest of the day,
you just feel lighter and happier.
Yeah, everything's downhill. This feels like a really good procrastination hack, too.
Yeah, it's just the opposite of procrastination, and it has nothing to do with like, being more productive for me, nothing.
And it just has to do with suffering less and living in that dread space.
And I will say that this is probably the thing
that I've learned the most from you in terms of
how you live your life and that I've put into my daily
regimen because early days when we first got together,
I was the queen of procrastination.
No, you did not want to eat the fight.
You didn't want to look at that.
I was just like, no, that's for tomorrow.
Yeah.
And now I really admire and I have admired you for all of these years because look at that. I was just like, no, that's for tomorrow. Yeah. And now I really admire, and I have admired you
for all of these years, because you do that.
You do the very thing that you least want to do first.
And then I look at you, and I have,
I mean, for the first few years,
I just would have so much envy.
Like, oh, she's done with her thing.
I'm so jealous.
And so then I started to implement it.
Yes, you did.
And I am, I am a it. Yes, you did.
And I am a considerably more happy person after noon.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And the other thing is people like me,
you don't need to eat six frogs.
If it's Tuesday, you do not eat next Wednesday's frog.
Just eat one frog, okay?
You must have time after the frog for enjoyment,
or there's no point in eating the frog.
Because I know you frog eaters will be like,
great, so if I just spend Monday eating 365 frogs
for the whole year, then no, no, no,
there has to be some discipline of rhythm in it
where it's like eat the frog and then enjoy the fruits
of the frog digesting.
Okay, that's a story.
And now jump the shark and now to use
the story.
What's one of your overall hacks?
I have a simple one and then a bigger
one. My simple one is that I just
learned that I've been breathing
wrong for four decades.
Oh, yes.
And that was a surprise to me because
I know how to properly cite a foreign
constitution and a legal brief,
but I didn't know how to breathe. I don't understand how that happens. So this is something I would
like to share with the group. When you breathe, you are supposed to inhale and your stomach goes out.
Okay, your stomach goes out because then you're expanding your diaphragm, you are letting the
air into your lungs. Then when you exhale, your stomach
contracts, comes in. And then you give it a little pinch, that's like expelling the bad stuff in
there. So think of it as that. You're like breathing in the new, it's filling you up.
Then you're letting it all out and you're coming in. I was doing that wrong for 43 years.
Yeah, like you're filling a balloon, I always call it filling a balloon you're coming in. I was doing that wrong for 43 years. Yeah, like you're
filling a balloon, I always. Yeah, it's called yeah, it's called filling a balloon, letting
it out. Okay. It's called diaphragmatic breathing, diaphragmatic breathing. Yes, that's
what it's called. I just did not say that word. Okay. That feels important since breathing
feels essential. Also, I realized something that I think that it's a good life hack to not ask to know
things that you don't want to be responsible for. So for example on Thanksgiving my
amazing sister-in-law was here with us Johnny's sister Kate and she's
wonderful and she curious minds want to know
about who was the person on the episode that wasn't.
Ah, the person that, okay,
the reference, the person that we canceled the interview with
because she was very rude to our producer.
So she said, I need to know who the person was.
And I know Kate very well.
So I said, Kate, do you want that job?
If I were to tell you who that person was,
I would be giving you the job of holding that information
and never telling not one single person who that is. So you would have
the information, but you would have to protect it for the rest of your life. And she said,
oh my god, no, never tell me that I never want. And her like head kind of exploded about it because
she hadn't done that calculus. She had only done plus for me in the column if I know more things, but
not on the other column of, now I have more drops. Yes. And I feel like that relates to so
many things. Anytime someone but dials me, I immediately like scream into it. I can hear you!
Yeah, I'm so scared of something. So scared of you. Exactly. I'm so scared I wouldn't hear anything.
I never want to know anything that someone says about me.
If someone starts telling me a story, oh my gosh,
I heard they were saying I was like, please stop now.
Please, mm-hmm.
Why am I going to accept that burden from you?
I'm just walking around in my life.
I don't want to know things about things
that are none of my business.
Is a job being mad at people as a job?
Yes.
It takes a lot of your energy.
This is tough for me because I like to tell secrets. I know you do. This is revolutionary for
somebody like me. Like, don't tell me nothing. Yes. And also, similarly, don't give people jobs
they're not qualified for. So if you are a person with a secret, a very upsetting way to live is to know their people
in your life who can't keep secrets, then to know as you're telling them that secret,
that they're definitely going to tell it.
And then to harbor the anticipatory anger that will occur when they will tell it and then
to be shocked, which is a bullshit lie because you're never shocked, that they didn't tell it and then to be shocked, which is a bullshit like because you're never shocked.
That they didn't tell it.
Because so also it's the exact same thing as holding a very hot pot being like, I can't
hold this shit.
It's too hot.
It's burning my hands so you hold it, handing it to your friend and then being pissed when
they help give it to somebody else.
You couldn't hold it yourself.
That's right.
It was too hot.
That's good.
So you just don't give people jobs that they're not qualified for and you don't ask for jobs
that you don't want to be responsible for.
That's good.
And I think everyone would just be better.
More information is not better.
Okay.
Babe, what's one of your life hacks?
Okay.
Mine is, in the same vein, a little bit as yours, Glennon, but it's kind of got a different
vibe to it.
Okay. bit as yours, Glennon, but it's kind of got a different vibe to it. So every single one of us knows that there are certain things in our life that when we do
them, we just feel better.
Like for me, I know that I have a few things that I sometimes struggle with whether it's
motivation or just the doing of them that I know every
single time make me feel better. So for example, for me, it's exercise. Even though I was a pro
athlete, like staying fit and healthy was always something that was a big struggle of mine.
So sometimes I would wait to be motivated or I'd wait to see how I felt that morning. And that always ended up giving me an option, like a choice.
Like, oh, I get to choose. So I have in my daily regimen that I do things no matter what,
that I know make me feel better every single day, every single time I do them. Like,
every single time, I'm never like,
oh man, I wish I didn't work out. Yeah, that's how I feel about walking or meditation.
So I put into every single one of my days something like that, whether it's working out or reading
the book or meditating the things that I know that never let me down when it's done, those are
things I do every single day.
So treat the frog treat the frog.
It's kind of like worst thing, first thing, next thing, best thing.
It's like the hard,
itgy thing and then the thing that feels like a treat to you because it doesn't
always have to be working out something that's miserable during it.
Of course.
Like, of course.
So like for me, it's showering.
Oh, I know that sounds ridiculous. But
it's like, I go, whoa, whoa, yeah, to some people, personal hygiene, to some people, treat.
I will go days where I have slept in whatever I sleep in, wake up, go the whole day,
still in those clothes, and go to bed in the same clothes that I slept in the night
before. And it's just because I don't need to leave my house,
I work from home, whatever.
To be clear, you stay, you work from your bed.
So she doesn't need to leave her bed.
I literally don't, that's another story.
It started with my broken toe where they
that I had to work from a bed.
And then I was like, oh my God.
Why haven't I been doing this for my entire life?
Treat the frog.
Treat the frog. Treat the frog.
Treat the frog.
But I often feel like I don't need to take a shower.
But every time I do it, I'm like, that was a great idea.
Yeah, good for me.
Treat the frog, okay?
Treat the frog.
So good, okay.
I have a couple more.
One, I learned when the kids were little.
I wanted to have like this vibe in my house
that I thought would require me to create the vibe.
So, because we're little, I wanted everything to be like
playful and cozy and fun,
but I was miserable and tired and cranky.
So, I could not be the vibe that I wanted my home to be.
So, be the vibe you want to see in the world.
Yes, I could not be the vibe. I wanted to see. Nor. So, be the vibe you want to see in the world. Yes, I could not be the vibe.
I wanted to see.
Nor can I still be the vibe.
So, what I figured out one day,
I turned on some kids music,
like a kindergarten teacher,
like I used to play in my classroom
or a circle-time music or kids music.
And damned if I was standing there
just totally miserable, you know, third cup of coffee, unshoured, cranky,
turned on that music, my house felt so peaceful, cozy,
viby like preschool teacher ran this house. I looked at the
kids and I was, I had not changed my vibe at all. This is when
I realized, you just have to play the vibe you want to be in
the world. You just have to be the vibe you want to be in the
world. You just have to be it. If you want some peace, turn on some peaceful music. If you
want to remember your freaking college vibe yourself, turn on some Dave Matthews. You don't
have to be a vibe. You just have to play a vibe. And suddenly you want your house to
seem peaceful. How often do I turn on some freaking spa music when I'm cursing and miserable?
And I'm telling you, it works.
I walk into our room and I'm like,
ooh, I feel good.
Yep.
Mm-hmm.
She'll light some incense and I'm like,
ooh.
Yep.
Are we getting a massage?
Like, what's happening?
If you want to know how miserable I am
and how cranky I am and how anxious I am,
you just have to figure out how peaceful the music is on
You're always the equal and opposite of the music. That's good. That's right. It's like joy to the world and it's like
So that's a life hack. You don't have to be it. You just have to play it any other so good for you to I have one
Okay, I just think that one of the best things that I heard long ago was don't make any big decisions
after 9 p.m. Like after 9 p.m.
That's when all the things go silent, you're laying in bed and you start to you're the worry list
and you get up and you make lists and what am I going to do to it? It's like no. Don't make big decisions
after nothing good happens after 9 p.m. 10 p.m. That's right. And that dovetails a lot with that horseshit of never go to bed angry.
You should mostly when you're angry go to bed.
Half the time you wake up and you're like, oh, I wasn't so much angry as I was real tired.
Exactly. And then you wake up and it's done. Yeah. Or you have some perspective on it where you're like, huh.
Yeah, I kind of see another side of it I didn't see before.
Yeah.
When you're angry like nine times out of 10,
just hit the old sacroboromy.
You're tired.
We need to not make any decisions about how much our life sucks at night.
Yeah.
We can only decide in the morning if our life sucks.
Mm-hmm.
Well, which don't worry. It'll probably suck at the moment.
Yeah, of course, it'll be just a day.
Just stay up to suck and suck and suck.
Sleep first.
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. 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.
All right, let's hear from Maggie.
I love this that she sent in about her life hack.
Hi, Glennon, Abby, Amanda.
This is Maggie.
I think one of my favorite life hacks is the 10-second rule.
10 seconds of silence.
When you are asking for something that you want, need, or desire, and deserve. When you explain what it is that
you want, just wait 10 seconds. Wait. Because it's so easy that we start explaining
away the reasons why or undermining our requests to begin with. And so allowing for those 10
seconds to just let your request or your requirement stand on its own. It empowers
it rather than devalued it. I appreciate all of you so much.
Hold. Hold.
Oh my God, it's so good. It's so good. I feel like we need a 10 second silence.
Silence after that, but wisdom. It's so good because think of all we could do it.
No, we were like one think of all the like the context where that applies.
It's even when you're asking for something when you're saying something and there's an awkward silence and you're like,
I cannot tolerate this. I'm just gonna fill it, fill it, fill it, fill it.
And then it doesn't honor the thing that you put out there.
And then you're actually allowing someone to respond to it instead of just being like,
oh, I see, I knew I was wrong.
Never mind.
Take it back.
I think that this is revolutionary because sometimes it's easier to say the thing than to hold the line of the thing because after you say the thing you're dealing with the other person's facial expression you're dealing with what they might say or not you're you're dealing with the discomfort of what you just put into your universe so then I think what happens is that we try to bolster our case. Like we try to bring more evidence to why we deserve to say the thing that we just said, which reminds me, babe, of when we are arguing and you just say that hurt me you can't argue with that. Mm-hmm. You don't make a case of all the reasons,
because then you can attack the reasons,
but just saying what you just said
or what you just did really hurt me and then leaving it,
is very powerful.
It reminds me of getting the courage
to say something that you want or need.
And then the fear of rejection of it
is what makes us wanna add more and add more and not
just wait and hold the space. Yeah. That fear of rejection, I think, that makes it really hard to
actually do this 10 second rule. But I love it Maggie. And standing strong in the disequilibrium that
bringing your need to someone causes because it does cause a disequilibrium because people are not used to hearing,
people say boldly what they need. So there is a disequilibrium that happens and allowing that
awkwardness to be a sign that something new is happening instead of that you need to take back something.
Yeah. I feel like that goes along with the idea of when you're drawing a boundary of somebody
or you're saying no and that person gets really upset.
I used to really think, oh, that's a sign that I've done something wrong.
And that I should backtrack what I just said I needed.
And now I always think of it as a sign that like I should double down that I absolutely
did the right thing.
Like if I say something to someone that's a basic boundary or need,
and then they are angry with that,
that just shows me that was the absolute right move in the first place.
That just because someone gets mad at you because you have said what you need,
does not mean that you've done something wrong.
It probably means that you've done something right because you're establishing a boundary.
It means that they no longer get to override your boundary that was working for them.
I also think it's just a lot of people who are most empathetic and most emotionally intelligent can see 100 sides to the same situation.
So we go through the process when we're figuring out what we need.
We also can understand, okay, this is how that impacts that person and they might feel when
I say this like this.
And so I am prepared with all of that when I go in and state just my need.
And so we, as soon as we state our need, we feel the need to bring up.
And I know that it might be that you feeling this, and I know that in this one instance that
didn't work.
And so you might be thinking that I'm not serious about this.
We like bring it all to the moment.
But I think if we can separate that and say, all of this is true.
And yet we still feel like we need this thing. There will be time to get to the moment. But I think if we can separate that and say, all of this is true. And yet we still
feel like we need this thing. There will be time to get to the rest of it. Just give this one thing
that you have decided you want. The 10 seconds it deserves to stand alone. And there will be time
for the conversations of all those nuances and holding your line and validating the other person.
We just don't need to muddy the one moment
where you need to say the thing you need to say.
It would be a good life hack, I think,
just to incorporate the pause into so many things.
The pause is, you know,
it's the difference between reacting to something
and responding to something which people talk about so much,
but I have found to be unbelievably true that for me,
the difference between war and peace with someone
is usually like 15 seconds,
responding to something right away,
which feels like it's gonna feel good.
Almost always for me creates more pain for both people.
But if I can spend just a long pause metabolizing it a little bit, getting some creativity
in there, some space, some breathing, I can almost always respond in a way that works better
for both of us. And it's not just about being kinder actually, it's about being more efficient, being more generous, being
more able to come out with an outcome that works for both people. Yeah, it's
just it's so awkward. Like I could use a total masterclass in this because I
can't handle awkward silence.
And that's what is probably stopping so many of us from creating this space for even a pause
in conversations. And not for nothing. I don't think that this is where Maggie was going with this
necessarily, but from a negotiation perspective, you're asking for a salary.
If you're asking for more flexible arrangements, if you're saying what you need, in any kind of negotiation.
The one who can handle the silences wins.
Yes.
Because what happens is you say, I need a $10,000 race. And when you fill in that silence
with, and I understand the business has been doing better than I understand better than I, and like,
you've been so good to me and you let me stay home with my kid for that week, you was sick.
What you're doing is handing the other person what they say back to you. Yes.
Whereas if you say what you need, I need the $10,000 raise.
You are not showing them the keys to the kingdom.
You are not showing them your vulnerable pieces that they know now to use against you.
Exactly.
They have to fill that silence.
And then you get to react to what they say instead of reacting to what is your biggest vulnerability, which is what you're gonna fill the silence with to begin with.
So then.
So I have even arguing with me all these years.
That's really smart.
Yeah, I mean, I do think like...
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's correct.
Okay, here are some tech hacks. I have three.
My first one is turning your phone to grayscale.
I'm not even going to begin to try to tell you how to do that.
Just Google it.
Here's the reason.
My phone is on grayscale.
It's so boring.
Your eye does not go to it.
It's not as pleasing.
It's not as like,
moth to a flamey anymore. It's like, the world is suddenly brighter than your phone,
which makes you look at your phone so much less. Yeah. Okay, it really works for me. Grace, scale your phone. Number two. I did it for one day and I had to switch back.
That is true. Number two, if you don't want to constantly be held hostage to your phone, if you don't
want to live a life of reactivity by constantly having to text people back, tell people in
your life that you're not a texture.
Tell them that's not how you communicate that you don't use your phone for that.
That's what I always say. Oh, I don't use my phone for that. That's what I always say. Oh, I don't use
my phone for that. Just tell them. And it suddenly you put down 479 jobs. Okay. You can then decide
with people how you prefer to communicate. That's different for everyone. Number three, my third one.
Unfollow people who make you feel bad.
I know this seems simple,
but I do it every few months.
It is unbelievable to me how I will sit there
and scroll through things that make me feel like crap
for a very long time until I remember,
I don't have to do this.
Mm-hmm.
And what makes me feel bad
or doesn't make me feel good is different all the time.
So it does require a repeated curation. For me right now, I am allergic to anything that
even has hints of diet culture. I'm learning about all of that. I don't like make myself
prove why I deserve to unfollow this person. It doesn't mean they're bad people. It doesn't
mean I'm even making a judgment about them.
It means it's not good for me.
And also, if you don't wanna hurt people's feelings,
then you can mute people.
I'm not gonna go through that, just Google it,
but there's ways you can unfollow or not see things
where that other person won't know
that you have unfollowed them.
It's good.
Sissy, what are your tech hacks?
Well, I am the last person in America to know this,
but if you happen to be the other person, this is for you.
You know how on text, you can send an audio file.
Like if you press the little thing,
you can say something the other person receives it
as an audio file.
There is another way to text that is, you say it with your voice,
but it goes into typed out words.
So, okay.
So close.
So close.
You go to your text,
you click on the place where it says message
where you would normally type.
Then there's a little microphone at the bottom of your phone.
You hit that and you say,
hey, I'll see you at five o'clock.
Do you need anything from the grocery store?
Question mark?
You actually say question mark.
And then you press it and it goes to them as writing.
And I am the person who has written paragraphs
and paragraphs of things.
Thumbs on the text.
This has changed my life.
Okay, number two, when you're writing an email,
I'm always afraid that the
email is going to go to the wrong person, that it's going to go prematurely. Write your
email and then put the recipient in the email last. Then you don't have to worry about it
going prematurely or accidentally sending it to the wrong person. That's good. Third thing,
this is one for me because I wish people would do it for me and I wish to do it for other people.
Venmo requests.
So I live in fear that I owe people money.
So it is kind to send a memo request that people know you owe me 30 bucks and then you
can just press it.
Also it helps you not to harbor secret resentments.
If instead of saying, oh, we're going to split this dinner, you'll just give me 30 bucks
later.
You can do it in that moment.
Yes.
Send a memo request.
Then you don't have to worry about whether that person is doing it intentionally.
Good job. I like that.
I love that so much.
All right, babe. What are yours?
Well, having been a professional athlete for so many years,
I was never very good at staying on task.
Like, basically, I just followed the herd everywhere it went.
You know, and so now, in my post-career,
I early days, I would forget to show up or to write things down in a calendar. So what I do
is actually I set 10 alarms in a day. Because when the calendar notification comes up on my phone,
I ignore it every single time. I don't know what's happening.
Me too, I don't know.
I'm like, why are you bothering me again?
I know.
I just, I flick it.
I like clear it.
So that's one.
Another one is to take selfies in the iPhone app in the photos section, you just press
the volume up button. So people are always amazed when anybody has
ever asked me for a photo. Oh my god, I just did it while you were talking. I cannot believe
that works. Yeah, I struggle to hit the dot in the middle every time. And then you have to hold
it in a funky way. Oh my god. On the the middle, wait till you just hold it up like this
and press that up for you.
Yep.
Oh my God.
I just saw that changes everything.
It's a game changer for family photos.
And you always take the selfies
when we're out and someone asks for it.
I hand it to you because you do it so easily.
And that is why.
Yes.
Yes, that is why.
Great. Friendship hacks, I've got a few.
Okay?
Number one, when someone comes to your house, you can tell them what time you want them
to leave.
We always have start times for everything. And then there's no.
The ending time is just this ghost.
And you just have to like figure out
when people want to leave and read the energy.
And you feel like they might never leave.
No, I always say to people,
well, to person, to Alex.
So one person who comes over, I say to person,
would you like to come over from six to eight?
What's wrong with that? Then the person comes, I say to person, would you like to come over from six to eight?
What's wrong with that? Then the person comes, then you're not wondering
the whole time you know when your stuff is have an ending time.
Hack within a hack, have the ending time a half an hour earlier
than the time that you really must be done.
Oh, because then you can seem super gracious
when it goes to late 30.
Yes, yes, yes.
Okay. The five minute check-in. This has been very, very important to me. I don't like to call
people for a few reasons, but one because I don't want to talk for an hour. I just don't want to
do the whole thing where you're just trying to figure out what to say and how are you and how's
everything? Five minute check-in. Do you have five minutes to just check-in and see how things
are going? Ten minutes, whatever it is. Every conversation doesn five minutes to just check in and see how things are going?
10 minutes, whatever it is. Every conversation doesn't have to be an hour long.
That's a preemptive text. So, hey, do you have five minutes check-in?
Yeah. And so everybody knows. This is a five minute call. It's good.
Yeah. And then, of course, we've talked about this one before, but I really like the post-mortem,
where you like are with someone and then you at the end of the getting together, you talk about
all the things that you wish you didn't say
or that you already feel awkward that you said,
at the end of it so you can get that out of the way
so you don't have to do it on your way home
and then for the rest of your life.
That's so sweet.
I never, ever worry about that.
I just wanna be you in another life.
I know.
What about you, Sissy?
One is the friend caucus during
difficult times when something happens in like if there's a
separation or divorce within your friend group. I think it is a
really, really good idea to bring all the friends together for
a meeting. So recently when this happened in my friend group, I
called a lunch meeting at my house
where we just had lunch and it was with the express intention
that the friend in our group who was going through
a separation and eventual divorce
could sit down and tell us what she wished to share
about the situation to all of us together once.
So we're not doing this like phone tag game.
So smart.
And even more importantly, hearing from her
about what she wanted from us.
So everyone is different when this happens.
And I did this because I wish that I would have done it
for myself when I went through my divorce.
But there's so many things that come up in that situation that are not intuitive, that people who want to be a good friend
don't know how to handle and also don't know how the person wants to handle. So we talked about very specific things.
Like, are you okay with us speaking individually about our concerns
and worries about this, or do you want us not to? Because then everyone could hear together.
So if she said no, then you in this group, if you come and talk to me about it, you know
it's not, it's not what she wants. And we have to pretend that we're talking in a concerned way if she said she doesn't want us to do that.
Also, the intention of how she could feel supported in our interactions with her ex, do you
want us to be gracious?
Do you want us not to?
Are you going to feel like we're disloyal if we say hello and we meet him. How do you want to
interact with your kids with respect to this? What do they know? Do you want us to
keep inviting him to the family barbecues? Do you want us not to? All of those
kinds of things. And then we don't have to guess also how do you handle the
inevitable community members who during school pick-up will say things like
what happened there? Because people are not
equipped. We've, you don't think of it, you get caught off guard, you eventually say something
that you end up feeling disloyal about. It's terrible. And so we actually practice. Like, what I'm
going to say is it's a really hard thing and I'm not discussing that. Or it's very complicated,
you know how these things are. Or whatever it is that you don't walk away thinking, oh shit, I just shared my friends
confidence and I didn't even mean to and now I feel terrible.
And also do you want us to report back things you see?
Like, Z-back to the first thing about jobs you don't want.
I didn't want to hear anything that people knew about my ex.
I didn't want to hear they'd talk to him.
I didn't want to hear they'd talk to him. I didn't want to hear anything.
So I just feel like it's a really helpful thing to do
because that is way too complicated of a system
for everyone to be navigating independently
without hearing directly from the person.
Really good.
There's only problem I have with this
is that I don't have more than one friend.
So you just need to caucus.
I was just thinking that I was like,
who would I, who would be my caucus?
Who would come to the caucus?
Like, that's a good, I don't know,
I think that's good for us to sit with.
We need to find our friends.
But it's different.
This is the group that all of our kids
went to preschool together.
All our kids are in elementary school together.
It's a different phase of life
where we are in this community at all the same places. And so that makes it even more important that we are representing
her the way she wants to be represented. God, sister, that is so beautiful. I don't know.
I just love that so much. It just shows so much about you too as like a protector of people.
It has so much integrity. Yeah. Like everybody wants everybody wants to feel held by a group like that.
Talk about having gone through a divorce
and needing a little bit of a playbook, right?
Yes, there's no playbook.
That's exactly right.
And then we're like, well, I hope all of these six people
that are in this friend group
that are all raised in a very different way
that all have different life experiences will do what I wish they would do even though
we never talked about it.
Yes.
It doesn't make sense.
And then some people feel like they need to be mean to the dude because that's the most
loyal thing, but that might not be what she wants.
Right.
And families don't even do that.
Like, you're going to divorce with the siblings and whatever.
They don't know what to do. They don't know if they're supposed to be talking to that. This is're going to divorce with the siblings and whatever. They don't know what to do.
They don't know if they're supposed to be talking to that. This is good for families. The caucus.
caucus sister, very good life hack. Okay, super quick ones. Parenting. Number one,
our biggest parenting hack and also Abby's biggest relationship hack with me is every time your
kid comes to you with the drama and the trauma of little beingness
or teenageness or whatever, not fixing the problem.
The way we changed our relationship
with one of our children is to every time they came to us
to say in one way or another,
are you wanting a solution right now or no?
That changed everything because this kid needed a place to just be
and have all of their feelings and have that space.
And every time we jumped into solution mode,
it would steal away her whole transformation.
We talked in the Sarah Borrelis episode about some people just need that cocoon time and
don't want to be forced into being a butterfly because they know how to get to the butterfly
place.
And it's to stay in the cocoon place for a while.
It's not to be shoved because rushing the transformation doesn't work.
And now what she does is she just comes into the room and it's like, I need to vent.
Yeah, really.
She does it.
She knows.
Okay.
Number two, and this comes from my teaching years.
Little children are so annoying.
Okay.
My fact.
Children are so annoying.
And one of the reasons that they're so annoying, and by the way, I love them more than
adults, so let's just say, like I'm obsessed with children, I would spend all day with them
if I could, but the reason they're Hawaii is because they have no power and control. So they nag this shit out of you
all day. When I have little kids, tell them what's going to happen that day.
Put a piece of paper up, put it something, have a schedule. This 9 to 10,
tell them what's going to happen. And then 70% of their questions will be gone from you all day.
Because you can just point back to the schedule. They just, what are we doing? What are we doing?
What are we doing? What are we doing? What are we doing? Point back to the schedule. I used to do it
when they couldn't read. I didn't even know what I was pointing to. It's just like something is there.
Structure liberates everyone. Right. Number three, last one. When I was teaching preschool,
Right. Number three, last one. When I was teaching preschool, I would prepare for hours and hours and hours, all their activities all day. And then I would hear back from their parents that they didn't remember shit. They didn't know what we did. They know what we did all day. I might as well just stood there and handed them iPads. So here's what I figured out.
In preschool and with children, you start strong and you finish strong. That's all they remember.
All right. They remember the thing that they did the second they get to you.
And they remember the thing that they did right before they get in the car with their parents.
Rest of the day, a bus of nothingness. So apply this to your life in any way with children.
Start strong, finish strong, all the middle,
screen time. That's so good.
Heavy, what are your favorite big things? I think one of the things that I like to believe that I brought to the family is when the kid asks a question, I just respond with, well, what do you
think? So good. Like before I go into my diet tribe of,
I know how to answer it,
but I want to like call on them
to start developing their own thoughts, agency.
I mean, even something as simple as like,
what do I get at a restaurant?
Or what do you think I should get?
And what should I do with this friend?
I'm like, well, what do you think?
It works.
Yeah, it's good.
It works with things like God too. Wow'm like, what do you think? It works. That's good. It works.
It works with things like God too.
Why?
What do you think?
And they also have the way cooler answers
than I would come up with.
Yes.
So it's fascinating.
And they almost always have something.
And it's like, oh, they just needed a sounding board.
Yep.
My only parenting thing is to get a dog.
Ooh, that's good.
Because it's just, it just takes the edge off the whole family.
Oh, no one feels like talking to each other. No one knows what to say to each other. Everyone's
talking to the dogs. Yes, everyone's talking as if they were the dog. Yes. Everyone's imputing
some kind of conversation to the dog's mouth. Yes. It's so much more fun than it used to be.
It's like, it's like the bridge of all things awkward, silence, love,
the ability, the amount of love that our children that are
known the teenage years, that they're expressing themselves
with this arch our dog.
I'm like, wow, that's so beautiful.
We don't even look at each other.
All we do is sit around and start together at the dog.
I don't even remember what it's like.
It looks like it might have models, the kind of thing,
like I look at my reaction when my husband comes through the door
versus my dogs and I'm like, take a lesson, Doyle.
Yes.
That is a lot of love.
Someone comes to the door and that probably feels real good.
Yes.
And then you personify the dog and work at all your own shit.
I'll be like, yes.
Look at Heidi on the couch.
She's thinking, why the hell doesn't anyone pick up the shit?
Yes.
Exactly.
Yeah.
OK, let's do travel.
Yeah.
Travel hack.
Someone wrote this in.
Take a photo of your hotel room number
so you don't forget it.
So smart.
Yes.
Also, please take a photo of the nearest
pole to the place you park in the parking garage. Yes. Because you need that too. Yes. Okay. Very good.
Babe. Okay, so I travel and I have traveled my whole life. And what I have found is if you find
yourself traveling more than a couple times a month, even if you
just don't, I have a bag that is my travel bag.
And I know that might sound obvious, but every pocket in my travel bag has a specific reason
for being there.
My pens are in the same spot, my chargers are in the same spot
where I put my wallet is in the same spot, my toilet tree kit, I just bought double of
everything. And so it just lives in my travel bag. So whenever I go to travel, it's all
done and dusted, like I like to say. You do like to say that. And so when I travel with
my family, they don't also understand this life travel hack that I have.
And so it's like, I don't have a pen. I'm like, bam. Yeah, she's got to have to somebody have a charger.
Bam. Bam. Bam. And just a bam and everybody on the freaking plane. That's true.
Can you talk me some cool things about driving? Do you remember when you taught me about the arrow?
This is going to blow the pod squad's mind unless it's something basic that everyone knows.
I think a lot of people know this, but maybe if you don't, it might blow your mind.
Nobody ever remembers the side of the car the gas tank is on when you're going to get
gas.
And there's a little tail tail sign on your gas gauge where there's a little gas pump
next to your gas gauge where there's a little gas pump next to your gas gauge.
There's a little arrow and the arrow is pointing to the side that your gas tank is on.
This has changed my life.
The amount of times I pull up gas, hope, pray, open my door, dammit, pull back around.
There's a freaking arrow that points to the side.
But I remember when you realized that on every elevator, there is a star next to one of
the numbers and that star indicated for you where the lobby was.
That was after eight years of travel.
Oh, my dear God.
Like every month and week.
What a sweet thing to do.
What a sweet thing to do to put that star on there. I have one.
When you're traveling, if you happen to be a family of four, two adults, like our family is,
when you're traveling somewhere, you should book two of the three person rows and just book an
aisle and a window in both sets of seats. And you book those seats because few
people prefer a center seat. So they won't purchase that ticket in between. And then you
will have the whole seat to yourself, which is lovely. Now, if by chance they do purchase
the center seat and you get to your seats, you get to be a joy
giver because you get to say, would you prefer to have the windows seat? And then they say,
yeah, and then you're hero. And you didn't end up any worse than you would have. Love it.
We have a call in hack for travel from Kim. Hi, Glennon, Abby and sister.
My name is Kim.
My life pack is that if I go away, I tell everyone I'm coming back a day later than I actually do. That way no one is looking for me and I have a whole day
for reentry back into the world. But what you guys do, take you on all of my walk,
even when it's raining. Really, really smart. That's awesome. Good idea. Okay, we have got home
good idea. Okay, we have got home hacks. I saw this home hack on the interwebs. I don't know if it works, but I saw that if you don't want your pot of water to boil
over, you can put a wooden spoon across the pot and it will stop the bubbles from boiling
over. Do you even know what that means? What does what mean? How does that even work?
The wooden spoon stops the bubbles.
I know, do you put the wooden spoon just on the outside,
under the lid, on top of the lid?
So on the picture, Abigail, on the interwebs,
the wooden spoon was sprayed across the pot.
No top, just boiling water, lay it across the top of the boiling water.
It doesn't overflow. It works.
It's so good.
Also fitted sheets.
You know how annoying that is to find the way the fitted sheets fit to put a
fitted sheet on the bed.
The tag should be in the bottom left or the upper right corner.
That's how you put it on correctly the first time.
Oh my God. That's life changing. I get so mad every single time. Every time. Every time. Okay, we have a couple of Collins from Haley and Leanne on Home Hacks. Great.
Hello, it's Haley. I am calling with a life hack. Okay, so it's actually really funny.
It's not mine.
It's my sister's.
So I just got off the space time with her.
I was on a space time with her.
And she puts me down.
She could prop me up on her counter and she says,
Haley, look what I did.
She opens her stove and proceeds to pull out all her dirty dishes
from the night before
because she had people coming over.
Yes, she did.
So she literally put her dirty pots and pans and give them in the stove because she had
people coming over.
And he's a mom of two young kids and I just thought it was the funniest thing.
I'm like, that is the best life hack ever.
If people come over just hide your dirty dishes.
It's freaking brilliant.
The oven.
Hey it's Leigh Ann and I'm calling about life hack.
Mine is claiming a corner of the couch as my own for television viewing.
It is of course the most comfortable part of the couch.
The part that comes out long that you can lay out in.
And I claim it by leaving a blanket there and as these my shoes. So if anyone comes up, they think I've just left and I'm coming back and they won't sit there.
Although they're probably on to this now, but no one's putting nearly on so much.
Be working.
Our kids wouldn't care.
I feel like we need some kind of, we can do easy things
a word that we give out to people like Haley and Leanne, who
just win at life.
So love that couch.
But Leanne, part of the couch is brilliant.
I mean, Leanne, you paid for it.
Exactly.
I never get the good part on the couch ever.
No, I'm always sitting at, kids are always like laid out legs long.
And I'm just sitting with like I'm trying to put my legs on the coffee table.
And that's not comfortable.
Coffee table's hard.
I want to bought the couch.
Why don't they differential to what we want?
I know.
All right, let's hear from Laura.
Or just differential at all.
Okay.
Uh, Laura and Catherine.
Hi, Glenn and Abby and sister.
I am Laura and I am calling with one of my life hacks,
which is a mom life hack.
If you have small kids and they bring home
roughly 1.7 million pieces of artwork or paper
and they're all special but you just can't imagine where in the world you're gonna keep it all. I would invest in black trash bags.
That way when you throw it away they don't see it through the white trash bag.
It's completely blocked from their view. You just step it down there.
They'll have no idea when they inevitably forget.
And then let me ask you where it is.
Just, you know, complete the fifth.
But it's worked well for me.
So hopefully the mom's can use that.
Hi everyone, this is Katherine.
So my life hack is doing a load of towel.
I have three little kids.
I have like endless, endless amounts of laundry.
And when I get super sick of folding little shirts and pairing little socks and all of that,
I throw in a load of towels.
And the size of the mound of laundry that I have to do decreases by, oh, I don't know, 50 to 60%.
And so, like, it feels like I have less to do them.
And then also towels are super easy to fold.
So, I feel like I, like, win at life when I do a load of towels.
Or when it occurs to me to do that.
You know, you just gotta grab the low-hanging fruit where you can.
All right, love
you guys. Bye. I feel so strongly about the towel load of laundry. Yeah. And when the
towels are in the load of laundry, just pulling the towels out first because then the whole
thing is reduced. It looks like such a huge pile, but really if you pull the towels out,
it's not so big. Yeah, I feel like there's a life metaphor somewhere.
There is.
I'm too tired to squeeze.
A lot of towels in my life.
Yeah.
I'm out to the side.
Eat the towel.
Eat the towel.
And then also for you, super moms who feel bad
about throwing away the art, you can take pictures of the art.
OK, you take a picture of the art on your phone,
you make a little file.
And then if you're really an overachiever,
you can throw it all to one of those companies
that make it into a book at the end of the year.
So you've got all your kids art,
but that fits in a very small spot.
That's good.
And if you're not super, please know
that none of the three people of this podcast
have ever done that.
Of course not.
Of course not.
Of course we've never taken pictures of pictures. Of course we have
no books. All right, I saw it somewhere. My laundry hacks are just everyone in my family knows
if you have a piece of clothing that can't be washed and dried, that piece of clothing will be ruined.
You have to know thyself. I have never once not one time hand washed something, not one time iron
something. If you are going to wear something that needs ironing,
you are gonna look like crap.
I also have a little bit of a hack
because Glenin is the one that does
our laundry and our family.
Not well.
But one thing that I do as,
and I don't know if you know this,
but I turn all of my clothes right side out.
I do appreciate that.
And I take my socks off from the toe
so that the socks don't need to be folded right side out.
So that is a gift that you can give the person who is doing laundry.
You're giving them time back because they're not having to spend that extra time turning the shit right side out.
Yeah, I appreciate that actually.
The other thing is everyone in our family just has to be fine with all of their white clothes being gray or brown.
I don't separate laundry. I will never separate laundry. It's not ever going to happen.
And what about the socks, honey? We saw that tweet. Oh, yeah. So we saw this brilliant sock
life hack from at WT Flankstake, which said to declare sock bankruptcy. And Abby and I laughed
so hard because if you knew Pods was the amount of time that I spend trying to put socks back together.
I mean, we have entire bags full of single socks.
Where do they go?
Singles, mingle, they stick together.
Every couple of weeks I lay them all out.
I asked Craig to bring over his socks.
We have a speed data.
It's the eternal battle of reuniting socks.
And so I just felt so much freedom
seeing that tweet of declaring sock bankruptcy.
It's also now kind of cool for like a teenage kid
to wear different socks.
And I see kids wearing different socks.
And I'm like, I know those parents, those parents are us.
Yeah.
We just can't find the other sock.
Where the fuck do they go?
I don't know.
Like where the fuck are socks? I don't know. Like where the fuck are socks?
I don't know. You guys, this is fine. Do you feel hacked? Yeah, I feel hacked. I feel hacked. I feel
hacked. I feel like all of these little things that can make life easier. I'm actually very grateful
for. And if the pod squad wants to keep them come in, I'm open. I'm all about suffering less. If there's anything you do during the days that helps you suffer less, let us know.
We will keep reporting back because we live to make hard things easier.
We can do our things, but we're going to try easier.
Yes, that's right.
We love you, Pads Quad, and we will catch you back here next time.
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