We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - No More Grind: How to Finally Rest with Tricia Hersey
Episode Date: October 13, 20221. The Nap Ministry’s Nap Bishop shares small, concrete ways to bring rest into our own lives – especially when rest seems impossible. 2. Why so many of us feel like machines instead of humans �...�� and the power of imagination as a spiritual practice to reconnect with our humanity and divinity. 3. Why grind culture – a collaboration of capitalism and white supremacy – wants to keep us exhausted, and how we can resist a culture of overwhelming busy-ness.  4. Why everything changes when we embrace ease as our birthright. 5. Creative ways to reimagine rest within our hectic daily lives. About Tricia Tricia Hersey is a Chicago native who has called Georgia home for the last 12 years. She has over 20 years of experience as a multidisciplinary artist, writer, theologian and community organizer. She is the founder of The Nap Ministry, an organization that examines rest as a form of resistance and reparations by curating spaces for the community to rest via community rest activations, immersive workshops, performance art installations, and social media. Her research interests include Black liberation theology, womanism, somatics, and cultural trauma. She is the author of the upcoming book Rest is Resistance: A Manifesto which will be published in October 2022. You can learn more about her work and the book at thenapministry.com. TW: @TheNapMinistry IG: @thenapministry 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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Hello everybody, welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. We are here with Trisha Hersey.
Trisha Hersey is a Chicago native who has called Georgia Home for the last 12 years.
She has over 20 years of experience as a multidisciplinary artist, writer,
theologian, and community organizer. She is the founder of the NAT ministry,
an organization that examines rest as a form of resistance
and reparations by curating spaces for the community to rest via community rest activations,
immersive workshops, performance art installations, and social media.
Her research interests include Black Liberation Theology, Womenism, Sematics, and Cultural
Trauma. She is the author of Rest Is Resistance, a manifesto.
You can learn more about Trisha's extremely important and brilliant work.
And her book at thenatministry.com.
Trisha, welcome.
Oh my goodness, thank you.
I love that good bio read.
Oh, thank you.
It's very much.
Thank you. I love that good bio read.
Oh, thank you.
It's very much like black church, you know,
in the black church when they're visiting Reverend Coms
and they sit and they read the his amazing bio or her bio
and the person sits there and they just kind of like
take it in.
Yeah.
I did that.
I did that. Yeah, you did.
Yeah, you did.
Okay, thank you.
That's beautiful.
Thank you.
I'm excited to talk with you guys.
We are too.
I'm going to start by asking a question in a certain way that my sister said yesterday,
please don't ask it this way.
Okay.
Okay.
So I'm going to do it because I just feel it.
So you started the NAP ministry.
Yes.
Trisha, but in diving deeply into your work over the last few weeks, what I said to
Sister Yesterday is I feel like calling Trisha's work that NAP ministry would be like calling
Jesus's work a walking ministry.
Like it's so deep and so important.
So my sister said, just please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing.
Please don't say the thing. Please don't say the thing. Please don't say calling the reproductive justice movement about the right to choose when really it's about
liberation. Your work is not about now about liberation.
You got it. Absolutely. I'm so glad you thank you sister. Yes, thank you because it is
deep work. It is. It is it is also when I think about the work
and me being a performance artist and theater artist,
like I really did play up the idea of a net ministry.
And like it is in a lot of ways, it's ironic.
And I did try to play with the idea of a persona,
like I call myself the net bishop.
So it does have this irreverent playfulness in your face, gorilla
art, performance ritual vibe to it. And so I lead people in to be like, oh, this is about
the nap. This is about naps. Everybody wants to sleep. And this is beautiful, soft nap.
And then they get there. And I'm ranting about white supremacy and capitalism and turn
a burn down both systems. So I'm like, a pillow and then here's your flame throw to like burning systems
down so we can all live and be free. You know, so I love that it is surprising the
mystery of that. That's what makes it really centered in our
art practice. So for our listeners you've said
grind culture is a collaboration between capitalism and white supremacy.
Can you explain that?
Absolutely.
Yeah, I think a lot of this work, all of this work is really from a historical lens.
You know, I was an archivist in seminary.
So when I was in seminary, I was working in archives on campus at Emory University. And so I'm really always been a student of history, a
student of culture and trying to figure out and look at things from the lens
that it should be looked at, which is a lens of pulling back the veils and
moving things back and seeing what's happening. And a lot of people don't know
that capitalism was created on plantations, that it comes right out of
the chattel slave system. And they're like, you say down with capitalism and capitalism is trying
to kill us. And this is this economic system that we're living under that's killing all of us and
the planet itself, also the planet is suffering because of it. They don't trace the roots back to the
history of this idea of looking at a body as a machine, as looking
at a human body as not being divine, as seeing us all as a tool for the production of wealth,
for profit over people.
And so when you bring that back and you start to begin to really study the history of
what happened on plantations, the history of the middle past, this transatlantic slave trade, the way this entire
culture was built on the backs of black and native people.
Then people are like, hmm, OK, that does sound super violent
and super horrible.
But we're all a part of it because we're all living in a
system that moves like that.
And so the system that I look at when I think about
grind culture, I say, it's the same energy, the same
ideology that was on those plantations work all the time,
have four or five jobs, plus a side hustle, have your hobbies
as a way to make money, never rest, never.
It's the same energy that looked at human beings, my ancestors,
as human machines who work 20 hours a day on plantations
who saw this unsustainable pace of machine level production.
It's still happening here in our corporations
and in our world right now.
And then you look at white supremacy,
this ideology, this systematic idea
that of a hierarchy on race.
When you look at white supremacy being so violent
and using bodies for centuries as tools of evil,
like that's all white supremacy is looking at.
It's devaluing our divinity.
It's making everyone look at each other
as not the divine miracles that we are.
It's really caused a true brainwashing
and spiritual deficiency in all of us to be under a system
like white supremacy.
So you blend those things together and you get grind culture, you get this idea of a body
not being able to be owned by ourselves.
Like I say a lot, I don't belong to capitalism.
I don't belong to grind culture.
I don't belong to white supremacy.
You can't have me.
I'm not the one being the one you're going to get. And so because of that, I'm resting. I'm using rest as a vehicle to disrupt it, to disturb that idea, to push back.
And so it really centers itself in history. I speak so much about the historical lens of Harriet Tubman, of the maroons of North America.
My ancestors who were jumping off slave ships and leaving plantations and hiding out in caves.
For 15 years, not fugitives, not runaways,
they never wore part of the system.
They just never weren't.
They were like, the system was happening around it,
but they marooned and said,
I'm not a part of it, to be in a world, but not of it.
You know, and so when I think about that,
those are the deep links between what capitalism was doing.
And when you do more research around slavery,
plantation labor, re-slave narratives,
learn about what was happening,
I mean, it's unimaginable brutality,
it's unimaginable ideas that you would look at a divine body like that.
And so that's where the idea of reclaiming our bodies as our own, reclaiming our
spirits to not be connected to a system that sees us like that. And so
I refuse to donate my body to the system any longer. So I'm resting.
I'm so thankful that you brought up the historic lens and that your book focuses
so much on it. Yes. Because I think most of Americans that are raised and indoctrinated
in this culture like slavery. Oh, bad. Capitalism. Good. But when you think about the reality
that there has only been two average American lifetime
between right now and slavery.
And there is a very, very short line between enslaved women that the day they gave birth
were forced to go out on the fields.
And America being the only wealthy nation
where we don't have parents who pay parental.
Absolutely.
Like, it is a direct lie.
Absolutely.
We just need to make the connections.
And I believe we can't make the connections
for a lot of reasons,
but one of the reasons is that we're exhausted
out of our minds.
And when you're exhausted,
and when you're on the grind,
and when you're trying to keep up
with this unsustainable pace,
there is no time to sit and make connections.
So when I started wrestling, when I first started the organization,
I just started personally experimenting with rest.
Like I would go to school on campus
and I would just sleep on the quad all day.
It became a moment where it was like, let the chips fall where they may.
And I'm just gonna come to school,
get the attendance credit,
but I'm dying from exhaustion right now.
And the more I started to do that,
the more things made sense with my research,
things made sense with my life.
I've started getting better grades.
I can make connections between what I was seeing
and what I was feeling, what I was doing.
Like this disembodied,
disconnection that happens in our bodies.
People think not resting is just, oh, I'll get to it later, but what is really doing to us is
disconnecting us from our bodies. We don't have no connection between what's going on in our bodies
and our hearts and our minds and our spirits. We can't connect with each other or ourselves.
And so when we begin to rest, when we begin to take root and connect with
ourselves and dream and imagine, things begin to make sense. Connections begin to happen. So,
yes, I'm so glad you've raised that about reproductive justice and what's happening.
I see it all the time when I think about all the labor unions right now that are protesting.
I am so excited about it.
My father was a union organizer growing up.
And so I grew up under that idea of power to the people,
power to the workers.
And I'm glad that people are now coming up out of the veil
and like you can be in like the great resignation
and seeing connections between, oh my goodness,
like I'm working five jobs and I still can't afford rent.
Why is that?
You know, like, why is that?
And so, yeah, the capitalism and why is the president?
It's because 1% of Americans own 40% of the wealth,
just like implantation times.
Yes, exactly.
The connections are rich.
And so, I talk about that in the book,
and I encourage people to take a slow deprogramming.
It's no rush to this. Like be grateful for the time that we have to begin to gain ourselves back,
to begin to step into the miracle of our bodies to slow down. There are no quick tips. There are no
quick answers. There are no, what do I do the rest? Man, We got to come together and see this as a full on decolonizing movement, a movement
of reclaiming ourselves in each other because the systems won us all dead in many different
ways.
The systems won us all working 24 hours a day in different ways.
So this part comes from a black liberation lens.
I'm a black woman.
I am a womanist. I'm a womanist,
I am a person who understands that no one is free until we're all free and I see the interconnectedness.
But this work sits rooted in a human rights global ideal. Everyone is suffering, including the planet.
The planet itself is suffering from the way that we are working it and not taking care of it.
Climate change is so real.
The planet is tire.
It's exhausted.
It's abuse.
We won't stop.
And so there needs to be a pause.
There needs to be a pause and we're going to have to take it.
No one's going to give it to us though.
And Trisha, you focus so much on explaining to us in the book that the exhaustion and the inability to imagine is purposeful.
Absolutely.
Right.
Any stopping and thinking and asking questions and allowing your imagination is dangerous.
It's very dangerous.
Tell us more about that.
It is purposeful that we are so exhausted and don't get carried to dangerous.
We're easier to manipulate when you're like exhausted. And we're going to be very dangerous.
We're easier to manipulate when you're exhausted.
Don't have time to think.
When if we rest it, I think the systems know
that it will be over for them.
So many people will wake up and be like, wait a minute.
So to me, this work is really about awareness
and pulling back bells.
I see prayer to be a veilbuster.
Just saying where I see rest to be a veilbuster.
It busts up a veil, it pulls back one from that eye
and maybe you can see a little
and if you can see a little and understand who you are
and who you are and what your right is
as a human being, none of this terror of capitalism,
white supremacy of racism, ableism, transphobia, all the things that are like ripping
into great and our divinity would not take place.
And so, Bell Hooks was one of my favorites, speaks about imagination being the greatest
tool for oppressed people.
It is one of the greatest tools for oppressed people, for marginalized people is imagination.
And so when I think about a manifesto,
that's why I wrote this to be a manifesto,
the history of a manifesto, they're
written from the point of view of being disillusioned
but bringing us back to hope.
They're written to be almost like to challenge and provoke
us, to say to us, there's a new way.
And these are what I'm saying, the new way,
this is what I believe, and it's not that. And so that's really the history and these are what I'm saying the new way. This is what I believe and it's not that.
And so that's really the history and beauty of a manifesto.
Is it asked the question, what do you believe?
What do you feel?
What can be real?
What can we imagine?
And I believe we can freedom dream.
We can imagine ourselves free.
Imagination is our greatest tool because the world that we live in now
was imagined and thought up by people.
Some folks sat down mostly white men, sat down,
and was like, what we gonna do, what we gonna make,
how we gonna create, and what could it look like,
what they set down and invented and created this.
And so we can imagine a new way,
we can imagine a way, a new world,
and a new opportunity for us to be rooted in that
liberation. It is a political tool. It is a social justice tool. People think
imagination is just frivolous. That's a thing of children and your day dream and
your wasting time. They want us to always be locked up and focused on work,
focused on production, focused on labor, but to be able to imagine and
wander, that's
where the ideas for liberation come.
And I keep telling people that we'll never be able to get to this world that we all want
to see.
A lot of people are now wanting to see a world filled with justice, wanting to see a world
that's liberating.
How do we get there from an exhaust to state?
How do we get there from our minds being exhausted
because the neurology and the biology of that
tells me our brains aren't even thinking in full capacity.
Our brains aren't able to download
no information and what happens when we are exhausted.
Sleep deprivation is a public health issue.
We are not working in a way that our bodies could work.
And so to be exhausted is not going to be generative.
It's not going to allow us to get to these imaginative, inventive, subversive, true things
that we will need to move this culture towards.
One of our freedom for all people.
We just can't get there.
You're not going to get there from being exhausted.
So to continue to be on the grind and to be working yourself like this and not giving
space to rest will get us just more of the same.
Yeah, when you think about just the idea of get back to work, what that is is that still
building somebody else's imagination about the world should be as opposed to stopping
and imagining for ourselves.
Yes. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm Jonathan M. N. 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.
sounds great, but I just can't even imagine a world in which I can take a noun. I can't imagine a world in which I can put it down. What Trisha is saying
is that the greatest oppression is when you cannot imagine a way, like you cannot
imagine a way out of your thing. So you draw so much inspiration from the freedom
makers of your past, your ancestors who there was no way. And they made a
mess out of it. It's not like people did things always because there was a way
to do it. Exactly. I love her. I love her. You get it. Like, think, yes, people
keep saying that to me. And I really have so much empathy and compassion for them because I understand
That the systems have socialized a sense birth
Even sometimes before birth when I talk about my son in the book about my birth story with him like the systems
Socialized and brainwashed us from birth
Everything's in collaboration teaching us these things and so when I see people who like they're desperate,
like that sound good, but I can't do it.
And then I think about the people who are like typing me
long, for paid paragraph emails,
telling me why they can't rest.
And I'm like, wow, that was five minutes of daydreaming
right there.
You're gonna have to make choices.
You're gonna have to see your way out and have perspective around it. It's always time to rest. And I believe
that the true resistance part of rest is resistance is what we really got to start to uncover
a little more. This is not going to be easy work. We are trying to disrupt and push back
against very violent systems, grind culture's violence. Why supremacy is violent? All these
things are violent systems that are raging on us. Why supremacy is violent? All these things are violent systems
that are raging on us.
And so to think that it is gonna be hard easy,
to think that there isn't gonna have to be
some type of subversion, some type of inventive, imaginative.
I think about my ancestors, I call it the trickster energy,
that being able to exist in two different worlds,
being able to build community within a culture that was so toxic and violent. My grandmother
working two jobs, raising eight children, healing from post traumatic stress
because she left Mississippi after seeing a lynching during Jim Crow
terrorism. She came to Chicago. I say my ancestors floated on a spaceship that they built out of
uncertainty and hope. They floated up north away from the South hoping for a new world and they built
new worlds within a world that didn't want them free, that didn't see them as human beings. And so
that's the resistance I pulled to and no one can tell me that something is impossible. Like I don't
believe it. I don't know a lot of people are in a place of feeling like there is impossibility,
but manifestos in this work provoke impossibility.
That's the whole purpose of them is for us to imagine it, something that's impossible.
So I think about my grandmother,
or who's taking a nap,
who's resting her eyes,
30 minutes to an hour every single day in between going to her two jobs.
She having her uniform from working at the home hospital as a nursing assistant.
Still got her whites on.
She'd be sitting on the couch with her eyes closed.
Eight children's dozens of grandchildren.
I'm one of her wild grandchildren running in and out of her house screaming, jumping on.
She didn't move.
That woman sat on that couch,
it held court for her own healing.
And we began to watch that,
and we began to respect that.
Grandma's resting, she's sleeping.
We be like, Grandma's sleeping, I'll chill out.
Be quiet.
She say, I'm not sleeping.
I'm resting my eyes.
Every shut-eye ain't sleep, I'm listening.
She was saying, I'm listening to God. I'm listening to the universe. I'm resting my eyes, you know, every shut-eye ain't sleep. I'm listening. She was saying, I'm listening to God.
I'm listening to the universe.
I'm simply listening.
And I wonder, what was that listening giving her, you know,
to be a black woman in Chicago, you know,
poverty all around her, raising all these children,
trying to like have a way and have a new life
outside of the South in the tear of that.
What was she listening to?
What was she hearing?
What was the silence?
What was that evoking for her?
What was this resting moment giving her?
And so she becomes the muse because I watched her rest.
I watched her make space for her own rest every single day.
I watched her slow down.
I watched her uplift leisure.
And so we're going to have to reimagine rest.
The reimagination, you're going to have to look at rest as not just being
what you think it is. A full nap away from the kids with the pillow
up, close eyes, eye man, more, closed door. Nobody. That's beautiful
like give me more of that. But in this culture, that's not going
to be possible for all people. It's going to have to be
reimagine ways of my grandmother resting on a couch with her eyes closed for 30 minutes, centering her own body and her own self.
While all of the world was still happening around her. She didn't care. She was going to sit on that
couch and and do that. And so I love that about her. I love about my dad waking up early before his
job to sit and pray and read the paper. And I was like, why do you get up so early? He's like, because I want to have a moment
where I can be human and not be on someone's clock
and I can just be.
So this idea of just being.
And so I want people to take a deep breath,
take a little breather, slow down and understand
that this rest work and this rest idea
is a meticulous love practice that will happen
to us for the rest of our day.
There is no rush to get it right right now.
There's praise, there's mercy, there's imagination, there's taking a walk, there's having a cup
of tea in the morning, there's taking a longer shower.
All of these things are rest.
All of these things are opportunities for us to connect with our body and mind.
And so people get really desperate and really panic
about this idea because it's a paradigm shift.
It's a mind shift.
It's a full on shifting of your mind
to understand that your rest is not a luxury.
It is not something that you will add on
once you're burnt out.
It really is the center of your life.
It has to be the north star.
In a culture like this without a pause button,
if you aren't centering rest and snatching rest
and getting rest,
anyway, you can and making space for others to rest.
And looking at the ways in which you participate
in growing culture,
that you participate in white supremacy that you
Participate in all these things like this is a full on looking at yourself in a mirror and a full on healing modality
It's not just take a nap and get up and keep being racist, you know
Napsticks gonna save you
That internal work, you know to really go back to sleep
I've been done that in turn of work, you know, to really go back to sleep.
You're not ready yet.
That's not gonna save you.
If you're looking at them as just that,
you're not looking at this as a full-on political,
social justice, deprogramming.
What I hear you in your work in your book,
it's not just change what rest is,
but change why rest is.
Because we are just taught, just rest. Here's your I'm
asked that $30 and here's your candle. And it's also part of grind culture is
buying this shit and then so that you can rest so that you can come back and
be more productive and grind more. So you can help us build better. Yeah. So you
can help us build stronger white supremacy. That's it.
That's it. And Trisha is saying, no, no, that is not why we are resting.
No, we can come back and build their shit better. No, resting so we can imagine what
we want to build instead. So we can resist so we can give a push back on this
option to take a nap into resist and to say say no, I'm not going to be on the
clock right now to intentionally rest even for 10 minutes a day. That is a disruption tool, this
beast of a machine. I know people don't see themselves as being there, one person being part of
something that can change, but it is like you doing that. My grandmother doing that was a disruption.
That system went in her on the clock. 24 hours a day, running
from Jim Crow, running from the Clue Clux clan and down in Mississippi, getting away during
a great migration and then she's centering her rest. That is a disruption. So I want people
to, like you said, get deeper into the idea that this idea of productivity, forget about
it. The idea of productivity has been taught to you by a capitalist system.
We don't want that curriculum.
We need new curriculum.
All of that that you learned that's done.
I know you might have got an A in that class,
but the curriculum is not that long for it.
The cor- what we are learning and trying to take on is the idea that productivity
is not what you think it is.
That resting is a generative state.
You generate ideas.
You are connecting with your body.
You are participating in the spiritual practice.
Resting is a spiritual practice.
It connects you.
I believe dreams and napping is,
allows you to have a portal.
There's a portal that opens
that when you go into a rested state that allows you to have a portal. There's a portal that opens that, when you go into a rest estate that allows you
to see things different,
that allows you to have a moment outside of grind culture
that allows you to connect with something deeper
outside of yourself, connect with your ancestors,
connect with what you want to be,
connect with the dreams.
And so this dream skate, this portal idea
is really centered
in an Afro-futurism and my idea of understanding
that we can dream ourselves free,
that I watch people dream themselves free.
I watch my family dream themselves free
and pray themselves free and leap to freedom in ways
that still to this day surprised me.
And so to tap into that,
I believe so much in human beings.
I have so much hope.
I believe in the deepest parts of ourselves
that we are all divine,
that are a miracle that we're here on Earth.
It is a miracle to be born.
And so if that's the starting point,
anything that's trying to degrade that
and still there from us, I'm not with.
Capitalism, exhaustion,
white supremacy, work culture, racism, ableism, homophil, anything that's degrading us from the
true divine beings we are. We don't want that. We want something different. And so people are always
like, yeah, I want to rest so I can, you know, get ready to do more tomorrow. I got to rest to
get myself boosted up so I can go hard tomorrow. No, there is no more tomorrow. I got to rest to get myself boosted up.
So I can go hard tomorrow.
No, there is no more hard.
Like we don't need toughness and going hard no more.
We need softness.
We need care.
We need community.
We need collective healing.
In its simplest but most profound form,
the way you've talked about your work,
it's that these systems are built to separate us from our humanities. Yes, and your work is to
uplift what it is to be human and
That your that rest is simply the one of the vehicle. Yes, what a man into what it is
Absolutely one of the many. Yes, What about into what it is to be absolutely one of the many. Yes. Okay.
So what?
To Trisha, not Bishop. Does it mean to be human? Yes. And how is that connected to
this idea that our own liberation is inherent in our humanity. Yes. And we don't have to wait for any damn buddy,
government, anybody.
Nobody.
That our liberation's already within us.
What do you find at the seat of that humanity?
Yes.
You preached with that question?
Yes.
All of that.
The question is so good.
Like, yes, because human is.
People always try to distill the information.
And I say simply, this work is just bringing us back to our natural state.
This work is about making us more human.
Taking away this robotic zombie machine-like thing that they've placed on us.
When I was reading and researching all of the slave information and the narratives and
what was happening on plantations, they were literally building human machines.
They were trying to see how far they could push
a human body, could it be automated?
Can they work 20 hours straight?
Could we do 23 straight?
How much could we feed them where they won't pass out
in the fields?
How much water could we give them?
So they were really automating us and creating this idea
of a machine level pace for a human body.
So the disrespect of a human body is evident and key.
This work brings you back to your natural state.
The slowing down, the resting, is such a magical moment spiritually,
but it's also the neurology of it, the biology, the physiology of what's
happening in our bodies when we rest.
This book that I love called Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker, he's a Neuroscientist,
and in it, he talks about sleeping dreams.
It's very scientific, but then it's also very beautiful in the way that he speaks about dreaming
and the idea of when we sleep what's happening in our brains.
I love it. I'm like nerd out on neurology and neuroscience.
When we sleep, there's a chemical that cults our brains
that allows us to heal from trauma,
that allows us to tap into our memory,
that allows us to be more creative.
And so this idea of not doing that,
of not allowing our bodies to be the full human brilliant
thing that it is is where the violence of it all comes
in at. And so to me, to be human is to know that you are divine. It's to know that the person next
to you is a divine being chosen to be on earth that you don't belong to any of these systems.
This all this external world is all here. To be in this world, but not others to understand that everything you need is already in you that the power of your body.
I say one of the tenants of the Nat worst sight. It is a sight of liberation, all bodies.
It doesn't matter what your body looks like,
what color it is, the size.
Every single body is a sight of liberation.
So that means wherever our bodies are,
we can find rest, we can find liberation,
that this body that we are placed in at birth
allows us to always be in tune with liberation.
To always be in tune with the divine.
To always have a direct connect to the divine and the disconnect comes when we aren't understanding
that.
When we don't see ourselves that people don't think they deserve rest.
What this culture has done to us is ripped our self-esteem and self-worth. ["The End of the World"]
This conversation is so,
that so, for me, it's like.
From a professional athlete, like,
I'm a grinder.
I'm a grinder.
Oh, yeah, as you've been trying that way for your words.
I'm a grinder and to tap into the realities of this for a lot of the white women that
are listening to this podcast who benefit from the capitalism that they are working in with and accomplished too in some ways.
Absolutely.
What I would love to know is, can you give us not just the liberation component for ourselves,
but as this form of activism? Because trying to unlearn this, I'm just sitting here and I'm feeling like, oh shit, I'm scared.
Like, productivity is my thing.
That's how I feel.
How does she say that?
That's scary.
How do you feel?
How do you, yes.
How do you, how do you temper some of that fear
that I'm experiencing right now?
Like, what are some things you can say to those listeners?
That is a great question.
It is very scary.
I will, let's just put that on tape right now.
This work will not be easy.
To shift a paradigm and to go up against violent systems
that we're trying to disrupt against,
that is a very scary proposition.
It won't be easy.
Not probably everyone will get this.
There is a place within the culture that the beast of this culture
has eaten so many of us alive
that will we get to that liberation?
I believe, yes, I believe that there is always hope.
If you're alive, I learned this
when I was doing pastoral care,
studying in seminary,
training as a chaplain,
where there is life, there is hope, where there is breath, there is hope, where you is life, there is hope.
Where there is, where there is breath, there is hope.
Where you're breathing, there is hope.
Where there's, even I would say my,
from my tradition, understanding that the end is just
to beginning it even in the other world,
when you leave this earth, there's still hope.
You know, there's still moments that you can tap into
because the end is just to beginning.
This is healing work.
This is not work that's going to be just like, just go lay down girl, you good?
No, this is literally like a full collaboration.
They may look like therapy.
I'm in therapy.
I have the privilege of being able to have a therapist that may look like some other modalities
of I'm healing, you know, raky journaling journaling, art, walking, prayer, dismantling your mind around,
you're a complex, being accomplished to white supremacy, you know, as a white person in this culture,
you're gonna have to go deep into the wells to begin to unravel the legacy that you come from
ever being a white person in a culture like this. There's a beautiful book called The Hidden Wound
by Wendell Barry.
He's a white poet and artist.
And he talks about this idea of how white people
have not had the opportunity to heal from the wound,
not even heal, but even to understand
that there is a wound.
Like knowledge.
You know, there is a wound on you.
I know you think, when you hear white supremacy and racism
and slavery, you think, wow, the shit
that was done to black people is horrible.
But to understand that it was actually also killing you
as well, it is spiritually killing you
to a white person to believe that there's a period
in some way to another divine human being,
that is a spiritual deficiency.
That is a disconnection to your power and to who you are.
So that has robbed you of your own humanity as well.
And so people never feel that.
They're always just like, oh, damn,
I never thought about it like this.
And that's why this work is global.
It's not just for black people.
They're like, is this work just for black people?
Absolutely not.
It's for anyone who needs to disrupt and push back
and heal from white supremacy and capitalism.
Now, the ways in which you're going to have to do that
are different.
My history is a total different thing.
Everybody has their own origin story,
and historic stories of how they're
placed in this sick thing that was created,
you know, not by us. And so we have to land in it, we have to feel it. And I will tell you that you
will have to just feel that energy. You're going to have to just sit with the discomfort of that.
And I say, sleep your way through it, rest your way through it, make small, small, small ways to start with
the 10 minutes a day of just sitting and resting.
Close your eyes, not responding to an email,
making space in your calendar to not be doing nothing.
If I have it in my calendar rest days,
chill days, Sabbath days,
I have very clear boundaries around how I work.
I don't do meetings over 30 minutes.
If you wanna do a meeting over 30 minutes,
we probably can't work together.
Only, it's set in my calendar.
It's only a 30 minute, we gonna be concise,
we're gonna say it and we're gonna move on
and we're gonna go lay down and think
and telepathically communicate that way.
So, I think we just found in that too, for total liberation.
People, you heard it here a minute.
First meeting.
Frisha says that you asked one thing before we move on from this part, because I just,
I think some of the fear, and I'm going to say this wrong, but I'm going to say, please,
like whatever your, your, your ministry and what is the opposite of like feminism.
Yes, it is.
We have been indoctrinated.
Yes.
It's worse than had we never heard of feminism.
Yes.
It's worse.
It's like because we were taught that feminism is to try to be the best at this horrific
system.
It's just leaning harder.
Just be scraper.
Just be scrappy or just beat more people.
Yes.
So that's why it's so terrifying at first because it's the opposite of what we were told
with winning.
Yes, it is the opposite.
It is a new idea.
It is a new paradigm.
The idea of perfectionism has been placed on us from birth.
And when you think about white feminism, absolutely.
You are literally trying to be a part of a system
that hates you.
You have to hate that.
It hates your guts.
You're uplifting it and making it richer
and making it more un it richer and making it more
Valleable and making it more worse for everybody Yeah, yeah, yeah, and they're on the news saying we hate you. We're passing bills
We hate you. I'm really what else can we do for you?
How can we make a richer? Yes, that's why Trisha it made me like made me like catch my breath. When you said, our bodies are the sight of liberation.
Yes.
I was like, yes, and because I feel like my,
my body is a sight of oppression as well.
Because when I, these systems,
maybe because they would accept me, white supremacy,
capitalism, it started with external tools.
Yes. Very with external tools. Yes.
Very intentional external tools, but now is so internalized.
Absolutely.
You don't need any more tools anymore.
I'm doing that.
You're doing it so.
You're doing it.
Absolutely.
We're doing a work for them.
I have a quote in my book that says something like, we do the work for them when we don't
see ourselves as divine and perfect already.
We are already helping them along.
We are already like creating and being a part of this system and helping them to oppress
us even more.
So I say the book stops with me, the chips fall where they're made.
I will never donate my body to a system by grinding that still owes my ancestors reparations that hates me.
It's built upon the backs of people that are so violent. It took years to get here also.
Like, so I want people to understand that this is 10 to 15 years of study and research and
experimentation and therapy and personal sleeping and resting. Like, I experimented with my own body to be able to see
how could I make a way?
I did it to save my own life, rest saved my life.
And I don't need nobody else to verify that.
It saved my life and I did it for me.
And from that understanding that I was saving my own life
because I'm a woman, it's not understand
that the holistic view like that for me to be
truly free, everyone around me also has to be free. I'm also a community activist for
20 and 30 years. I was raised as a community activist. My dad was one. I understood that
there was a moment to be able to make this a collective and to share this information
in a praxis. So the first thing that I did was not get on line to start lecturing. The first thing that I did is
borrow yoga mats blankets and pillows from everybody I knew washed them and curated space for people to lay down. So our first event was 40 people who I did not know
sleeping for two hours in this nap little space that we created at an art studio and people waking up crying and being like I
haven't took a nap in two years. I dreamt about my grandmother. Thank you for making this space for me.
People at every event we've done hundreds, they wake up in their interiors. There's always so much
emotion. It's so emotional to understand that you've been lied to, that you've been manipulated by a system that a system is oppressing you, like to be able to start to see that is, it's a grief moment. And we do have to
sit in that grief. And I think resting supports our grief and to be able to rest into the grief and
to understand what's really happening in a praxis, in experimentation, actually doing it. I would
prefer that people not even talk about
they want to rest and retweet all our memes.
Go lay your ass down.
Like that, like use that moment to go,
it'd be like my grandmother told your eyes and sleep.
This is a praxis.
This is like practice and theory put together.
We have to rest.
You won't be able to get to this message
without experimenting with it,
without day it, without
daydreaming, without having a moment of imagination, of skygaze, you know, slowing down and asking
for the divine, the connection that you had with your own body, for making space for others to rash. You brought that up. The idea that I understand that women of color have been historically even
to this day now on the front lines of making it easier for white women to have leisure,
to have bananas there, the cleaning staff, they're doing things to make us that you have
a more leisurely life. And then you have a life that seems like it's allowed to be able
to slow down and just be. And so to begin to understand and see the connections between that
and to begin to say, I don't want to be a part of that.
I want to slowly find ways that I can push back and I can disrupt
and I can make space for others to rest,
that I cannot be an agent of grind culture.
Are you an agent of grind culture?
Are you rushing people all the time?
Do you have all these expectations around people?
Are you pushing? Do you have boundaries? Are you upholding your own boundaries? And so people have
to begin to do some internal work and to begin to look at themselves in a mirror and to say,
this is something that we're all in. It's a collective journey. What can I do? And the main thing that
you can do is begin to heal yourself.
It's to begin to make space so that you are in a space where you can feel like you're connected to the divine and that you're helping and you're seeing yourself as simply someone who will no longer be a part of the oppression, like I'm done. You have to say that I'm done with it.
It stops with me.
And I think people have to get to that only on time.
Like it takes time.
Some people will hear my message.
And it might be two years before they get it.
Some people email me all the time,
like I love what you're doing,
but when I first heard, I was like, I don't know.
I don't see how it can happen.
And now I've set with it longer.
I've started to take some more time off work, you know?
I've been reading more about the slave nearer
than she told me to read.
I've been reading Bell Hooks.
I've been trying to slow down.
I've just been trying to like,
sit and deepen into the world.
Two years later, they'll be like, I get it now.
I know, I'm resting.
My life is changing.
I'm being able to see better.
I can feel better.
My health feels better.
I'm able to make better connections. I'm living. I'm more human. My health feels better. I'm able to make better connections.
I'm living for human. I'm more human. I'm more human. I'm a human being now. I'm a human being now.
Take so much courage, though. It's very courageous.
What you keep saying, which is what no one is willing to do, is this phrase of let the chips fall where they may.
Oh, God.
But we trained in perfectionism and grind, believe that the worst thing in the earth is
if anyone else sees us as not a perfect cog, right?
Like, can you talk to us about what it has meant to you
in your life to let the chips fall where they may
professionally, namely, this is the thing we're terrified.
I can't stop or what's the or and how do we survive the or?
Yes.
I think this goes back to my upbringing in the black church and the idea of black liberation theology and how I was raised by a black
liberationist, you know, activist black man in Chicago who would look at me and
tell me, you're perfect because God created you. God is on your side. You're a
black woman in this culture. You're a black girl in this culture.
And there is nothing else that you need to do, but stay true to that. And just so I was never really
taught in a lot of ways that I had to be perfect. I understood that there is no such thing as
perfectionism. And I was boosted up and held up in a way that allowed me to just explore
what it has meant to be able to say let the chips fall or they may professionally.
I say no to 90% of things asked of me.
It's a joke now that when people ask Trisha and that bitch would do something, she usually
will say thank you but no, I really don't overbook my calendar.
I feel like if I do that, that it would not allow space for mystery
curiosity and for the sacredness of what could happen in those spaces. I want to say yes to things
that I only feel like really a yes about. It's meant I've lost money, I've lost projects and I've
been able to get on because they wanted to rush me and micro manage me and I had to return the
call in two minutes. That's not the pace that I'm living on.
I'm not working on the unsustainable pace
that white supremacy work culture wants me to.
I just am not.
And so blessings on your day, but I'm not gonna do it.
And so I've lost money, I've lost opportunities.
I really also feel like I'm an outlier in a lot of ways
because the deeper I get into this,
it can be lonely to be really frank about it.
There isn't a lot of people around me
who have got to the point where I'm at.
So, grind culture has its grips.
It just has its grips on people so tightly.
Even people in my own family, my own partner,
my own brother, everybody, I'm like,
let's go hang out and take a walk.
Let's go look at some ducks by the lake. And they're like, I gotta go to work. I got my second job is coming. I gotta do this. I mean, the way that our entire lives are built
around labor and what we gotta do next, that there's never a moment to just be specifically
with black people. We don't even understand what the word leisure means. What is a leisure?
What's a hobby? You know, everything has to be monetized. Everything has to be a part of our
life to be able to eat and live and make it. And so in a lot of ways, this is an outlier movement,
and I feel like an outlier in a lot of ways, and that people are beginning to see that
grind culture does not have, it's your best interest at heart.
And so it's a slow, meticulous thing for people
to get to that point.
It's gonna take years.
And I'm also grateful for that.
I'm grateful for the slowness.
I say in the book, give thanks for the idea
that this doesn't have to be rushed.
That this doesn't have to be urgent.
Like why will we use the same tools that have been taught
to us to be urgent, to be rushed to the same tools that have been taught to us to be
urgent, to be rushed, to try to heal? It just doesn't make sense.
You're five minutes.
Yes. Five minutes. Here's your bullets.
Here's your bullets.
Where's my workshop?
Number 12 to 1215.
I will rest.
Yes.
Liberation is a process. It's ongoing.
It's always happening. Give thanks for that.
Give thanks for not having to have it perfect right now.
And not having to always have it right.
And I also feel like the idea of this being an experimentation
and this being work that is going to be expanded upon.
These are the tenants of I believe that will help get us free,
but expand on this work.
This is your work to expand on. This is your work to expand on.
This is your work to experiment with.
This work is in static.
It's gonna move, it's gonna flow as things happen.
You are the best teacher of what you know is right
for your own body.
Your body is this beautiful temple
that has all this information,
but it can't share that information with you
if you're in an exhaustive state.
I have a meme where I talk about
go like create a conference for your body.
You know, like all these conferences
that everybody wants to do.
How about you do a conference
and that conference is a snap?
You just doing a gender,
the conference call that I'm gonna be on
is one of sleeping and resting
because in that state,
I will be able to gain information
and I can't get in an awake world.
And so the more people can understand that this is not a waste of time
that there's information waiting for you in your dreams.
There's information your body wants to share with you.
There's information, I believe, my ancestors want to give me,
but they're like, she won't stop.
She won't slow down enough for us to be able to transmit, to download, to be able to grab and hold that information because you're always
spinning on this wheel. And so to slow down is to allow the portal to open the antenna
to open, the antenna to link in, to allow you to get some information, to allow you to see your way out, to heal your way out,
to create a new world really, to create a new world.
And you create a new world backwards too. Because when you talk about the downloading the gifts
from your ancestors, it's also so important to your work that you give to them. And when you talk about this being a slow process,
it's like they couldn't rest.
Right.
And you are gifting them the rest.
Absolutely.
Yes.
And it's beautiful to then think about the next generation,
whatever the imaginations that you are dreaming,
that then will be radically different
than the imaginations of the next generation and just like you're giving back and then they're gonna give
Yes, it is it's imagination work is dream work
It's it's bending time. I believe when we rest we've been time we queer time
We allow for a new way to be made and I love this idea when I think about reparations
and I have a poem where I talk about this.
And I say, I will recapture the dream space
that was stolen from you.
We'll be resurrected in our dreams.
And so for me to be able to recapture the dream space
that was stolen from my ancestors in this dimension
and in the now, to say, you rest was stolen from you. Your whole autonomy as a human was stolen from my ancestors in this dimension and the now, to say, you, rest was stolen from you.
Your whole autonomy as a human was stolen from you.
What could they have figured out if they were more arrested?
I believe that my ancestors probably could have had
really detailed in more unique ways of escaping if they were arrested.
I think about Harriet Tubman and her underground railroad,
and her prophecy of seeing my people are free. You know, she was
screaming, my people are free. She woke up from a dream. One
day in his document, and she was like, my people are free.
She said it in this tense, it wasn't there going to be
free. They're free now. So this prophecy, the prophetic
idea that we are free now that the now is this is now, we
don't have to wait for anyone to tell us that to give us that and I think about her
stopping on the underground world we're walking to freedom and not having a map not having a written map but she did have a map
she had her internal spiritual map and she had the stars so she was a
beautiful astronomer and she could track stars and track the sky but it's written that she stopped to pray so many times that there was no rush even trying to run to freedom.
It was freedom of death.
They were caught.
They would be killed.
And so to understand that she wasn't even rushing trying to walk to freedom, to walk
from Virginia to Philadelphia, walk from here to Canada, taking hundreds of people with
her and stopping and never once being called. Never once being called.
And she's stopping to pray.
But we can't, well, then people tell me they don't have a moment to take 10 minutes of a little
day in the session like, you got a cell phone, you got things, you got that.
And they're stopping on the running for their lives, stopping to pray to get,
she would say she would get a word from God on which way to go.
Should we go left at the river or right?
Let me stop and she would feel that engine, she would go the other way.
And she never was caught to be that in turn with spirit and your body and
and the idea of slowing down.
Those are the people who I modeled.
Those are the ones I say I gain access from that to I know that this is not
impossible.
People would have thought a woman like that would have never stopped to pray. We got to get our beds
We got to run the dogs are on us, but it wasn't that she was
Understanding that we're in tune with our freedom that our freedom is waiting for us
That our body wants to be well that our body wants to be healthy that our
Wellness is our way of life. This is a natural state to be more human to be more human is to be healthy, that our wellness is our way of life. This is a natural state to be more human.
To be more human is to be well, is to be connected,
is to understand that you don't have to rush.
It's to be a counter-narrative, to say no to all that was taught to you.
Everything taught to you was a lie.
And it's not trying to benefit your divine body.
So to begin to re- reimagine and bring new language
and new ideas into that space,
that's what rest can provide.
And that's wellness.
That is wellness.
It's not, if you remind me of,
I keep thinking of the scripture,
the kingdom is not out there, it's inside of you.
Yeah, I love it.
And we are rushing out to whatever capitalism tells us
we will find our liberation.
Like, yeah, the system's out there.
It's out there.
And you're saying, all it is, it's always been in here.
It's here, absolutely.
The body is where you're liberated.
Mm-hmm.
Beautiful, yes.
And it's like, Audra Lorde's caring for myself, self-preservation.
And that is an act of political warfare.
Exactly. That's right. One of my favorites. I that is an active political warfare. Exactly.
That's right.
One of my favorites.
I love all your losses.
I think the only challenge, the only challenge I see
with your work, really, besides dismantling everything.
It's awesome.
Yeah, try to burn down.
Should be done by 2023.
All wrapped up by this time next year.
That's a problem.
Is that it's so completely grounded in faith? 23. All wrapped up by this time next year. That's a problem. That's a problem.
Is that it's so completely grounded in faith.
Yes.
And enough.
Yes, enoughness.
Yes, we are enough now.
That's what we're trying to have.
And we have enough.
And to hear someone like you say, yeah, I turn down things all the time.
But aren't you scared of being around it?
I'm never worried.
I'm just scared of running out.
No. I trust the divine timing of my life.
I trust my gifts and towns that were given to me by God
to make a way for me.
I've always trusted that.
I never have to worry about that.
I just don't, my faith.
When you talk about a faith walk, a leaping, a faith leap,
it is deep, radical, radical faith to understand and to be courageous,
enough to push back against the system and say, I've had enough. And I trust the divine.
And I trust myself and my gifts to make space for what is possible. I really do. And so this
is radical faith work, is radical trust in work. And I know that that work will not happen overnight.
I know that that is a slow ongoing life-long process that we want to have for ourselves.
We want to pass on to our children, to our families, to our cultures, to our communities.
And so we can't do this work alone. This work is for the collective. It is for the community.
I have written 55,000 words from my new book and I don't mention self-care once in it.
We know this.
I don't say the word.
And it was on purpose.
It's community care.
It's communal care.
It's community.
How we make it along?
Community care will save us.
We can't do this without each other.
And toxic individualism has taught us that we don't need nobody else help.
That's the lie.
That's what's killing us.
That's the lie of it all.
And so Marlita King Jr. has been saying that we are mutually tied need nobody else help that's the lie that's what's killing us that's the lie of it all and so
Marlita King Jr. has been saying that we are mutually tied in this inescapable interconnectedness
whether we want to or not and because of that we have to see the collective as we're the spirit
lies and we're our healing lies and making space for others to rest, for ourselves to rest, being a model for that. And going slow, I tell people, go slow.
This is 10 years and I'm still just unraveling from it.
This unraveling will be a lifetime.
My son is 15 years old and since he's been a little,
a baby, I've taught him this idea of slowing down,
of like chilling.
He made up a word, chillaxing, chilling and relaxing.
So he's like, I'm gonna go chillax.
So even now that he's 15 and he's in high school
and there's things like the speed of high school life.
He's a musician and an artist.
And some days he'll wake up and be like,
I just am tired and don't want to go to school today.
Can I just take a break?
You want to go for a walk, you know, chill out.
If you can't finish your homework in time,
you'll be okay.
You're working.
You're working.
You're working.
You're doing for him what your dad did for you.
That doesn't matter.
What matters is that you are divine
and you are born and you exist.
I'm not sure if real yet, you'll figure it out.
If you don't get that one quiz in today,
believe me, honey, you'll be fine.
Look at how brilliant you are.
And so trust the divine energy and understand
that the systems really are working in collaboration
for you not to rest, public schools, churches, hospitals.
Every system in our culture is in collaboration
for us not to rest.
And so when you know that, it kind of gives you
a boosted sense of energy to know they don't want this.
They're all in collaboration for this not to happen. That's why it's a resistance and that's why I see
that's so important and that's why I give myself grace. I do. You can get pulled and caught up in
this grind. One day you might have to stay up to two and a more in the finish of their line and
you're like what is going on with me. But understanding it's a balance and it's gonna be a full on slow, slow go.
Take time with yourself.
Be careful with yourself.
Be soft with each other.
Be intuitive about what's necessary.
I say you are enough so many times in the book.
I repeat so much in the book
and I do that for a reason.
People were like, there's a lot of repetition in the book.
Yes, ma'am it is. because I believe our brainwashing calls
for that.
I believe our deep programming calls for repetition
and the message will keep repeating,
the downloads will keep repeating.
And it will become almost like a lullaby,
this incantation over you to be like,
what can we provoke in a spell cast over you to understand I am enough now.
I don't have to do another thing. That was already given to me by birth. So I'm going to rest.
Okay.
So our next great thing, Pod Squad is obviously going to be just to start this one over again.
And listen again. Okay. It's just going to whole thing, start over right now.
But lay down and close your eyes while you do it.
Yes.
Not necessarily right now.
Take your time.
Whenever.
Right.
And we're changing the name of our forecast
and we can do soft things.
Or we don't have to do anything we don't want to do.
No, Trisha.
I'm fully expecting as soon as this is over to try,
we have a meeting, but I'm expecting
none of my staff to show up.
Yes.
And because they're going to say we can do no thing.
Yeah.
Give them some grace.
You are a revolution.
For the rest of you, I'm just going to repeat, please.
The upcoming book is called Rest's Resistance.
Our copies, Trish Aldershund send you some pictures
Underline I'm sure that's not how we're supposed to be reading it
I love a highlight. I love I'm writing the books. That's my favorite thing. Yes, okay
Resistance a manifesto and you can learn more about Trisha's work and the book at the nap ministry.com.
Get ready everybody. Go visit Trisha. Trisha, thank you so much for goodness. Okay, so much fun.
What if we all played with the question? Everyone who's listening to this play with the question of of it. Instead of asking yourself, what do I need to do today and in this life, to get
free, to fight for freedom? What if you said, what if I'm already free? How would I act?
And how would I fight if I were already free?
That's it. That's the imagination, or yes, ma'am.
That's the question.
That's why everyone's going to be quitting, and then
my team's not going to be there.
Yeah.
This is my resignation.
Everyone asks me some of that question except for Sister
Dina Nelson.
Thank you, Trisha.
Bye.
Love you.
We believe in you.
Go forth and rest. Thank you so much, guys. We'll talk soon. Bye.isha. Bye. Love you. We believe in you. Go forth and rest.
Thank you so much, guys.
We'll talk soon.
Bye.
OK.
Bye.
Bye.
We will see you next time, Pod Squad.
Until then, rest.
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