We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Post-Election Family Meeting
Episode Date: November 7, 2024361. Post-Election Family Meeting Glennon, Abby, and Amanda speak from the heart the morning after the results of the 2024 election. They share how they’re thinking and feeling, what this means, ...what comes next, and how we can better show up for each other. We love you, Pod Squad. Thank you for being our community. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Hi everybody.
It's Glennon and Abby and Amanda.
And we are recording on the morning after the election, we actually planned to get on today and to
have an expert on elections be on with us and to discuss what was going on and give
you information.
And then this morning we decided that perhaps more information is not what's needed right
now.
And we talked about not recording at all because we are so sad.
But then we thought maybe what's best is to just show up and be sad together and be here together. So that's what we're going to do. And we are here today to just share how we're feeling and how we're reacting to all of this and whatever we share today might not be where we land.
We are reserving the right to feel however we feel and share whatever we want to share and need to share.
And as we know during these times,
we might land in a different place eventually.
But today is one stop along the way.
And we're gonna keep showing up as we are.
So, Amanda, how are you?
I am grateful to be with you too
and grateful to be with our community today.
I have been trying very hard
to ground my nervous system
like every minute and a half when I start to think about what
this means for today, for next week, for next year, for my state and country and world.
And it's very easy to fly into a bit of a tailspin about that, but I'm trying not to.
But for me, I was feeling very hopeful and optimistic yesterday.
The first half of the day,
on election day, I was canvassing and it was a gorgeous,
sunny, beautiful day and I just felt so
goddamn thankful to be out there,
you know, going to doors and encouraging people to vote.
And I felt 100% sure that this is where we were gonna end up
is with our Kamala Harris as our president-elect.
And I kept walking around going,
this is the day that the Lord has made.
Let us rejoice and Madam in it. And I was so excited for myself. I was like, we're going
to get Madam President for the first time. And she's brilliant and good and so thankful
that she has taken on what she's taken on to get us there. And then at 7.30 last night,
we're still very excited and about to settle in
to watch everything.
I got a text from a good friend
that asked me if I wanted to know something
that she knew about our other good friend had told
her how she voted and that she had voted for Trump. And that kind of began the unraveling
for me because for me, I just thought anyone within a single IQ point or an ounce
of decency that there would have been, there's just innumerable reasons why there would have
been like, no, that's not what we're doing anymore. If it's for your kid's choice of your body or for the fact that he's a convicted sexual predator
and so compromised that he couldn't get an entry-level desk job at the CIA because he's
so compromised.
With his debt and his impending imprisonments and that he's going to have access to the highest level
of decision-making impacting the globe,
I thought, well, now I'm scared for us,
because if that person is a litmus test
to what people all over the country are doing,
I'm not so sure this is going to go well.
And it also started for me this really internal shakeup
of this person I thought was in my community and what is the purpose of community if not to
protect each other. And this is not protection of me and this is not protection of me. And this is not protection of the people
that are also in community with us,
including black children.
It made me really start thinking about community.
And that thought about what is community
and about this might not go the way I thought it was
going to go just got me thinking about how will this go down?
How will the next four years go down if Trump wins. And so all, I can't stop thinking about black women
since that moment until now.
Like I just keep thinking about,
you know, I'm stomping my feet so enraged
that this system is not fair and not just and not protecting my rights and
not protecting my daughter's rights and how this is just so utterly incorrect and unjust
and that this government is going to be against us.
And I was like, oh, wait, it's been eight years of that, you know, the four years of
Trump and then the threat of the return.
And now it's going to be at least four more.
And how that feels so excruciatingly long and unacceptable.
And then I started thinking about history and black women and black families and thinking, oh, like,
I'm so pissed about this moment. But like, there were hundreds and hundreds and hundreds
of years and generations and entire people lived and died with a government
that was against them, with the purpose of which
was to deny their humanity and the official actions
of which was to ensure that the law did not respect
their humanity.
I mean, we're talking about black families
who were in hundreds of years of enslavement and then pseudo-enslavement
through sharecropping and then the government saying Jim Crow was the way and then state-sanctioned
lynchings of which there was no justice or retribution. We're talking about like the actual
compromise that is the founding of our country that said that black people would be
three-fifths of humans and that Dred Scott saying the Supreme Court saying that no person,
no black person could become a citizen of the United States. We're talking about poll taxes.
We're talking about black kids being shot up in the streets and people being acquitted after acquitted after acquitted
up to this day up to the Supreme Court in
2013 2018 saying again like
Voting rights are not protected for you
Over and over the shock to me that this government is not set up for me and to protect me and is against me
in the recent history of my life that this government is not set up for me and to protect me and is against me
in the recent history of my life
has been the reality for hundreds of years of people. And they weren't spending their whole lives
holding their breath waiting for someone
to affirm their humanity.
They weren't saying, I will live when this government says
that I have a right to
live. I will have joy when this government gives me a reason to have joy. They were saying, I'm not
going to them for that. I'm not looking for safety in the court system, in the federal government, in the state government, in the police.
The only place I'm going to have safety, if at all, is in my community,
where I create safety, where I create joy, where I affirm my own humanity
and the humanity of people around me,
or where people had to raise Black sons that would walk out and get lynched with no
retribution after. Up until, you know, you're talking about lynchies, you're talking about
Trayvon Martin. We were talking about over hundreds of years, and they just had to continue to believe
that their children were worthy of dignity and celebration and rights.
And they had to create that for themselves
while they continued to push for the government
to catch up with them.
And that if there's any way through this,
it is going to be that.
It is not going to be holding our breath saying,
oh, we gotta wait four years and then wait
till we can elect someone else so that we can have humanity
and rights and justice.
We were the only place where it's reliable to do that
is with each other,
is the people that we can touch and see
and create that for each other
and push for the government to catch up with us.
Yeah.
Yeah, I keep thinking about
so many people have texted me or said to me
in the last 12 hours, this feeling of almost
like embarrassment or self-flagellation for allowing the hope again.
Everyone from my kid to like the wisest person I know who texted me like is, is like, I feel so stupid for
feeling hopeful and allowing that again and allowing myself to be crushed again. And I,
I feel that way a little bit, but I also think it is not that we should not be hopeful. Hope is not the wrong idea,
but we just have to be more wise
about where we're putting our hope.
Our hope is not in these huge political systems.
Our hope is not in empire.
Our hope is in each other, in community.
And we, I guess, gotta figure out
how to create community that is more honest,
where we know people better than we know them now.
We're clearly not doing it right
if we are surprised as shit by each other
every time people reveal who they are and what they believe.
We do not know each other.
I went to one of my meetings this morning. It was a really good place to be this morning discussing what we can control and
what we can't. And I was just thinking so much. I know I've talked to both of you a lot about how I feel like I have functioned a little bit like the codependent,
complicit, panicky wife of like an alcoholic.
It's like America is my very sick husband
and I am this woman who continuously
cleans up the bottles and, you know,
makes sure the neighbors don't hear,
repeat a million times, this is not who we are and I'm constantly covering for him and
I'm believing in the potential of him and not living in the reality of him. and did feel this weird, very sad,
peace-less, somber, but deep acceptance.
Abby will tell you, even before the last few days,
something about the air outside
and the people's faces and what I see,
I just thought, I don't know,
that this is gonna go our way.
And I think what's interesting about what
happened in the results is that nothing new happened.
Nothing happened except that once again, America
was revealed for who America is.
This is who we are. This is how we were founded. This is who we are.
This is how we were founded.
This is who you're married to.
Yeah, this is who we are married to.
And I do know that from my recovery,
that there is a power in being still with that for a bit.
Like this, we are as divided as we seem to be.
We are in many ways two countries.
We are not the United States of America.
We were not founded on equality and freedom and liberty for all.
All of that has always been propaganda and we have always been who we are, who we were
revealed to be once again.
And the other thing that I was thinking about in my meeting this morning is that so many
of us are just feeling so deeply unsafe and afraid right now.
And I was looking at everybody on the screen on my meeting and thinking about how many
of us, so many of us grew up in volatile families with parents who for whatever reason had various levels of erratic behavior and then complicit behavior.
And we spent a lot of time wondering if we were going to be protected, wondering if we were going to be safe, wondering if anybody was going to come save us. And I think that right now,
there's probably a lot of people
who are feeling deeply unsafe
in a way that is a little bit of PTSD,
that is old,
that is a lot of us are feeling like children
who are not going to be protected
and who have an erratic dad and complicit women
and the leadership of this country feels a lot like
our nervous systems did when we were little.
And I think that that brings us back to your point,
which is that we are not children.
And we are adults and we do have some agency and we don't have to
wait for mommy and daddy to get their shit together.
We get to create the community and the safety and the grown up belonging that we seem to
be waiting for mommy and Daddy to do
with our politics. Which is false from the beginning.
Like even if, it is such a good analogy
because it's like, okay, as long as Mommy and Daddy
are calm, we'll be okay.
Exactly.
And that's never, if Mommy and Daddy
are throwing shit around the house, that's scary.
But also if mommy and daddy aren't throwing the shit around the house, it doesn't mean
you're safe either.
We feel this from our homes and our whatever, but as white women, it is new to us to feel
like, oh wait, my government's not there for me?
That's weird.
That's a new feeling and it's not new to the centuries of people who
lived before to the black people and brown people of our country. Like they knew very
clearly their government was not for them. They pushed for it to be and used hope as
a discipline to continue to push it to be, but weren't waiting on that safety. I think
the only safety that has ever existed
is real, like I can rely on you and you can rely on me, which is why I felt so betrayed by that vote because I'm like, oh no, that's how you take care of me. You take care of me by voting
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I want to stop there and ask you, what made you, because this is what so many people are going to be dealing with today, what made you assume that that friend would vote differently
than she did? Because she's smart and because she has a daughter and because she is a decent,
good person.
So this is the problem.
We have been trusting, quote, decent, good people to create a decent, good government that will
give us the safety we deserve. But decent, good people aren't voting for a decent, good
government. And even if we had a decent, good government, that was never going to give us
the safety that is actually only possible when you can really rely on someone.
What I'm trying to say is on my walk this morning, after I was like, oh, we don't get
what I thought that we got, I started walking around my neighborhood and I walked by the house of a woman whose husband is dying and has asked me to try to
help get her kids a therapist.
And I've been so busy trying to get this person elected that I haven't done that yet.
I walked by another friend's house who later texted me
and said how petrified she was that her husband
who works for the government,
because Trump has promised to eviscerate
the federal government jobs, is going to lose his job.
Therefore, they are going to lose their house.
Therefore, her child who has special needs will lose his insurance and access to resources. So she came over to my
house for us to try to game plan. That is the community. That is, I walked by
another friend's house who just learned that this country and the community that
she thought were decent good people did not put the priority on the protection of our black children
at the top of their vote.
These are real.
We can't do anything about the government right now.
That government is going to be that government and we can and should continue to push it
to catch up with us.
But also there are people right now on your street who have very real problems that you can be there for.
I mean, you don't have to,
that is what I'm gonna do with my energy.
I am not going to rail against the machine.
I am going to quiet my heart
and give myself dignity and peace
and know that I'm the only one who gives me peace and then I'm going to look for the ways to counteract what
this government is going to do to the people in my life that I can touch and
feel and make their lives actually better. Yeah, this is the beloved community.
This idea is what activists have been talking about
for so long and it intersects with my spiritual thinking
about this because what you're talking about is,
it's the codependency of I will be okay
if we just get the right government in place. There's always a middleman. I will be okay, we will get the right government in place.
There's always a middle man.
I will be okay, we will be okay, if Kamala, if this.
What I hear you saying is we really
must remove the middle man.
We make ourselves okay and we make each other okay.
And we are hoping and praying and working and canvassing and voting for this idea
of what we think our country could be. And right now, and I know it's not all a distraction, we will
land further down the road, I'm sure, at a different day, but right now,
it feels a little bit insane
that all of that effort could have gone
into loving our actual neighbors directly.
And I do believe, I do believe that fighting for people
who will protect your neighbors is loving your neighbors.
And so for me, it's not either or,
but it's like, I wasn't doing the or.
Yeah.
I was just doing the either.
Like I was just like, as long as this is okay,
this will be okay.
And so the wound from finding out
that my community was not my community,
because I think of community as protection
and safety and love,
and you voting for that person is not protection,
safety or love for me,
then oh, then I have the wrong idea of community.
And I have the wrong idea of like,
then I need to diversify my safety, protection and love.
And I can't have it on something as shaky ground
that it is susceptible to one night every four years
to find out if I have a community of care.
I need to create that community of care
because guess what, we think it's bad now.
We don't know how bad it's gonna get.
And that is why we need to be outside of this system
to care for one another. This is why we need to be outside of this system to care for one another.
This is why we need the trickster energy that Trisha Hersey talks about to figure our way
around and through these things that for generations, people who have been billion times more marginalized
than us have had to do. That is a survival tactic.
And there's a few survival tactics here.
One is how we are going to get through this intact
in our personhood.
And another is how we're gonna help the people around us
get through this with the very real, very tangible
realities that this administration
is going to impose on them.
And like, we can't just scream at Trump
for the next four years,
berating him for doing these things to the people we love.
We need to actually activate and start helping
the actual people in their actual houses to do these things.
And I just, I feel like I need to stop and circle back
because I can't start talking about black women as the model of
survival and resilience and the alternative trickster way of surviving in a system not
meant for you and not talk about in line with the misconception of faux community that I have relied upon and not talk about the fact that
55% of white people voted for Trump.
59% of white men voted for Trump.
Those men looked around over the last eight years and said,
yep, this looks good to me.
Only 2% of them changed their mind with all of the horrors that we have seen.
52% of white women voted for Trump.
They looked around and said, looks good to me.
Okay, that went only down by 3% from the last election.
It doesn't matter.
There is not a line.
They voted for that.
And also just, I'm not going to pontificate about anything,
but I just need to say one thing about the things that everyone choose your own adventure here, but no one come to me
and say a goddamn word about the black vote or the Latino vote. Why on God's green earth do we keep
talking? First of all, let's just put that to bed because the exact same number of black people
voted for Trump this time as last time, which means the exact same number voted for Democrats.
Black men went up by one for him, but black women went down by two.
They are the ones that are holding the community line, and they are the ones that have been
making real community out in the world and taking care of each other.
And the Latino vote, that's fine.
That did change, okay?
That went more for Trump.
But also like, do not look at the speck
in someone else's eye without looking at the log in yours.
We are 66% of the vote and Latinos are 13%.
And so we're gonna say it's the Latinos voted for Trump.
That's why he got elected into office.
Fuck that. We are 66% of That's why he got elected into office. Fuck that.
We are 66% of the vote.
We voted Trump into office.
Yeah.
Yep.
White vote.
Love, I would love to hear from you.
What are you thinking, my love?
Well, I just am listening to you both
and I'm so grateful for your honesty
and all the beautiful things that you've said.
I'm sure so many people are like listening and really relating.
And I also think that there's probably a sect of people who aren't even close to getting
through the feelings enough to be even able to establish the what-ifs
and to think about a plan.
Because today I feel,
I feel stuck.
And stuck in this weird way because we have children
and I have lived through a time
when gay people couldn't get married and now we can get married and what does that mean?
And I think everybody's kind of playing out these like possible things. But I think we might be skipping over the real deal.
And to me, I have extraordinary rage and confusion
around why people hate women so much.
Even women. And I don't, you know, I wouldn't work out this morning and I'm not going to be the person that stays in my house because I can't do that. I'm not
going to be afraid. I'm going to go and face the shit. I'm going to put my fucking body in the world and figure out how to live within it.
And I cannot tell you the solidarity that was energetically felt between all of the
women inside of this gym.
And I am sorry for all the men listening because you are allies and I love you. But I have a kind of rage that is directed towards men right now.
And I know that this election is beyond gender and I think it's more about race. I understand that.
But I can't understand. I feel silly only because our country has only shown us this.
Why did any part of me think that there was a possible different conclusion that we could
come up with?
And you know, they say progress takes a long time.
And I am just dumbfounded and sad.
And I feel rage.
Yeah.
And that's the only place I can get to
because I'm stunned and I'm,
the men in the gym couldn't look me in the eye.
As they fucking shouldn't.
And I was looking, and I was looking for it.
I was like, you fucking look at me.
Yeah.
You fucking vote that way, you fucking eat it.
Cause what you're gonna get is you're gonna get
fucking rage eyes today and tomorrow and the next day.
Because I don't give a fuck.
That's what I have to say.
You want a dude bro on your ballot, like you're a badass
and you can't even make eye contact and own it after.
Yeah, fuck you little fucking man.
Stupid little man.
I do want to say this.
But if you're listening to this,
you're probably one of the good men.
You're not a stupid fucking little man.
You're probably a big great teddy bear of a love bug.
On my meeting this morning, three different older white men were absolutely broken down
and bawling. Like, legit.
And that was important for me this morning.
That is why you go to 12-step meetings instead of the gym.
Yeah, exactly.
You need to find the right clientele.
I did grab, just on principle, heavier weights than the two gentlemen in my fucking gym.
I was like, fucking stronger than you.
Good job.
Don't you think, though, Abby, though,
like what you're describing, that is exactly how,
if I was a black woman, that's exactly how I'd be looking
at every white woman I saw.
That's right.
Ups-a-fucking-lutely.
Look me in the eye.
Yeah.
Look me in the eye. Yeah.
Look me in the eye.
Me of the eye was a 98% vote for Kamala Harris.
You want to fucking look me in the eye?
That you are, you have literally nothing to lose.
You middle class white woman by voting for Kamala, except that you're afraid that you're
going to piss off your daddy.
Your tribalism is so ingrained in you that you're willing to let the ship go down.
You were actually probably hoping that I kept it up.
And look me in the eye.
Mm-hmm.
That's right.
And I just think we have to be like, I, that same rage that I feel about men six out of the white men
you walk around and see today they voted Trump and six out of ten right yeah
six out of ten yeah 59% but also five out of ten white women you see today
also did this is what I mean about community. Where is it? Where can we find it?
Where can we build it?
Because it isn't this, whatever this thing is.
And the rage they must feel, I don't know.
I don't know.
I sensed the community that I want to build
and be a part of and spend all of my energy and time and
love in over the last like 14 hours through the people that were texting me and like specific
people.
I could feel it in who I wanted to reach out to.
And I could feel it in who was reaching out to me. And I feel it in the
energy of, oh, we are in apocalypse times. Like this is an apocalypse. It's, which
just means to reveal. It's just nothing has happened except for it has been revealed what is.
And I think for me,
I'm not gonna have fake community anymore. Yeah.
I'm not gonna have bullshit.
What is that?
Because you're all in the same neighborhood
or you're all in the same team,
or you're all in the same,
even the whole like decent, good people.
Like what does that mean? Exactly.
Because I don't agree with you.
Like I don't think that person is a decent and good person.
And hello, maybe I'll land somewhere else eventually.
I'm just saying today, love is as love does.
Decency as decency votes.
Like what the fuck does that mean?
She's nice?
I don't know what it means,
other than when it comes down to it,
I will put my vote on the line to protect my community.
So, and that doesn't mean...
What I'm saying is that's my version.
That is what the community I want.
That's my version of trust and care and being cared for.
So, shame on us for having fake community
where we actually don't know each other's hearts.
Because I kind of feel like that's aversion,
that's whiteness.
Like that is whiteness.
Just keep it surface, call everybody decent,
don't get under the hood, don't ask the hard questions,
don't have the hard conversations.
Like if I don't know you well enough to know your values
and whether or not you are for people who are hurting
and whether or not you have my family's back
when it comes down to it, 100% we're not in community.
Yeah.
You're not my people.
And I think we have to figure out
what really constitutes community,
because it's not a zip code or a convenience thing.
It's intentional.
It's knowing each other.
It's knowing each other's values.
It's feeling the way you felt on election night,
feeling the fear for your family,
and knowing who you want to reach for.
That's them.
It's like, Lovey says, it's accountability.
We have been like,
people who are friendly become friends,
but there's not an accountability there.
That is what community is.
It is you have, this affects you, I see it.
I am part of it with you.
You are part of it with me.
And there's no going rogue.
There's no lack of accountability without breaching the community.
For those of us who are new to this, which is most of white people, right, who are even getting in this game and trying,
has been in the last, like statistically, our consciousness was shaken up by Trump.
The white people who have gotten in it have mostly gotten in it since then.
And we continue to be shocked by each other.
And what, how convenient of us. We continue to be shocked by, like you said, Abby, that the reason 2016 for me was so fetal
position, bawling, stabbed through my heart is because I didn't know the country hated
women until then.
I didn't. I didn't know they hated us. I didn't
know the country hated women so much that they would vote for a sexual predator, six-time
bankrupt, xenophobe, misogynist, racist, because he wasn't a woman.
And this time, it was easier in a way
because I already knew that.
I already knew we hated us.
And it was harder in some respects
because everyone knew exactly what they were getting
and bought it anyway.
But that's the shock.
And the first term, I think part of it is creating the community of people
that you can actually trust in this world and building it on that more solid ground of each
other rather than this world out here that we can't control. But I think part of the answer is how
are we going to get through the next four years? Because the
first four years, it was every day, he does something, reaction. His craziness, we're
equal and opposite crazy. We are everything. We have to respond. And that took time off
our lives. That was giving him our lives. and we can't opt out of this because too many people
who are much more precariously situated than we are need us not to opt out of this. But also,
I'm not doing it like that again. Well, that's not doing it. I mean, that's not doing it. That
has nothing to do with doing it. If we decide, I mean, as I told you last night,
I'm drastically changing my life
in terms of what I expose myself to
and what I waste my energy on.
And if we choose to turn on our TVs every day,
scroll, do the doom scroll,
if we choose to do that,
then we cannot call ourselves victims of it.
We are volunteers of it.
We know now that being hyper tuned in to the media machine does not work.
It doesn't do anything.
It doesn't help anybody.
It doesn't do anything except pay the bills of those media companies and jack up our nervous
systems and trick us into thinking we're doing something. pay the bills of those media companies, and jack up our nervous systems,
and trick us into thinking we're doing something,
it does nothing.
So if we choose to live that way,
then we do not get to call ourselves victims of it.
It is not the hardest thing to do,
to decide I'm not letting that in my house.
I'm gonna stay clear.
I'm gonna stay engaged.
I'm gonna make myself, I have one life and I am going to give myself a calm
nervous system, not in a way that helps me check out,
but in a way that actually helps me check in. I just wanted to say that, and this is dangerous territory, and it's not for me, all this is
just swimming in my mind, so I might not say it exactly right, but I don't believe that we know
what we think we know. I don't believe this is much as of a binary as we are even presenting it today.
I'm not saying that to be correct in any way. I actually don't believe that it's true. I don't believe
that it's bad guys versus good guys and the bad guys won. I think our whole system is bad.
And I think that the MAGA party is horrific.
And I think that there is a lot of problems
with the Democratic party as well.
I think that there's something that is not true to the core.
I think that when you are setting yourself up
to be the good guys and to be the ones
who are protecting human beings
while actively funding genocides,
while actively having foreign policy all over the planet
that does not jive with what you are presenting yourself
to be,
when there is rot at the core of anything,
you're gonna see that in the fruit.
And I believe that we are now raising generations
of people who aren't buying it anymore.
And I'm not saying,
I'm not discounting anything we've said up until now. But I am
saying this is not a clear case anymore in my eyes of good guys and bad guys. This is
we are in the hunger games. And the only way that I see I just texted a good friend this
morning and was like, I just want to be out of the fucking arena and I want to be at fucking bonfires
outside the Capitol with people who are, have ejected themselves and are just taking
fierce care of each other and are just fucking lawless. I just wanted to say that. I do not think
that there is any purity or rightness even at the center of either political party. Yeah. And I think that if we go back to starting it with the model of survival and perseverance
of the black community in this nation, none of them would say that there was ever an ounce
of purity in any of these parties.
Even that idea of like, there's a really good guy
and a really bad guy is not a luxury
that has been entertained.
It was who is the least likely to kill us?
The idea of politics being a notion of harm reduction.
We're not counting on you to keep us safe. You weren't built for that and you're never going to
do it. We are going to keep us safe is their model, but we're going to vote in the people
the people who are most likely to reduce harm against us. So I think that that is an idea that has been around for a long time. And I think in some, when we're talking about whiteness
throughout this whole thing, I think we have not thought that. We have thought there's a good option, a good option for me, because we've been less confronted with the daily truth
that nothing was made for us.
Yeah, the good guy, bad guy is a white progressive idea.
And like, so that in some ways helps me to be like,
oh, if there's no one coming to save you,
your only choice is to save yourself
and the people that you love.
So find people that you love.
So find people that you love because it might not be the people that you think.
Who are you going to put in that boat with you when it's time?
You got to know who those people are and who's going to do that for you.
And I think the other way to survive this, I was thinking about it.
I'm like, the answer is not opting out.
That is too much privilege.
But how do we keep our
sanity and keep our life?
Because I've been thinking about what Trisha Hersey says about white supremacist capitalism
and how she just says over and over, like, I don't belong to that.
You can't have me.
I'm not the one you're going to get.
And I keep thinking about that for the next four years.
You circus that you're making over here,
you can't have me.
I'm not the one you're gonna get.
I'm not trading the next four years of my life
and my joy and my nervous system to your fucking circus.
No, no.
I'm not gonna do it.
It's a, y'all, it is a riptide.
MAGA is a riptide.
And what we have done, what I have done up to now,
is the force of that riptide pulling us out to sea.
I have just conjured every bit of my strength
and my rage and my endurance.
And I have fought like hell to have an equal
and opposite swim back to shore
against the tide.
And that is not right.
If anyone who does that literally exhaust themselves
to drowning, that is how you die in a riptide.
It isn't because you're not trying hard enough.
It isn't because you don't have enough passion.
It isn't because you don't wanna live enough and It isn't because you don't have enough passion. It isn't because you don't want to live enough
and you don't want to save the people around you.
It's that you're moving in the wrong fucking direction.
To save a riptide, you move a few feet
in the opposite direction
and you just swim out of the riptide.
And that conserves your energy
and you swim back to fucking shore
where you can pull people in.
Because when you're swimming in a riptide,
you can't pull people in, you can't save yourself,
you can't save anyone else.
You have to stay calm and conserve your energy.
You have to get off of Twitter.
When you are in the current,
you don't have any hope of helping yourself
or anyone else.
It is not a question of effort, it's not a question of belief,
and it is a question of direction.
Which direction are you moving from and are you on solid ground
when you're trying to help people out?
Yeah, and it's not your own human failing
to stay calm when you actually have jumped in the riptide.
Like it's not that you just don't have the strength. It's what the riptide is
is made for. The only two things a riptide does is push you out to sea or
drown you through exhaustion trying for you to swim to the shore. That's the
only thing a riptide does. That's the only thing MAGA does. Yeah.
I just want to leave us with a few thoughts and ideas.
First of all, as I can tell you a hopeful thing,
which is that if you do decide to not ride the Riptide,
so not to opt out, but so you can actually opt in
effectively and you decide to cut off whatever it is that is the riptide to you. Okay, whether it's the news
on your phone or whatever. I did that 90 days ago or 60 days ago. And I'm here to report to you that I am a different human being.
Two months after I stopped all social media.
I am telling you that I am clearer,
I am less terrified all the time, I am braver, I am saner.
And I'm telling you this not as a braggy thing because I actually am treating it now like a very important part of my sobriety. I am sober
from social media. I am not being hyperbolic. I have been trying to avoid
admitting that I was powerless over social media for the
last seven years, 10 years.
I have found myself deleting it and then days later frantically asking people for my password
so I can get it just like I used to hide booze from myself behind refrigerators and then
a day later get chairs and try to find the booze again. I am powerless over social media. It is designed to make me insane so that I
will stay on it and buy shit. That is not just me. That is all of us. You have that
power. When we are choosing what we can control and what we can't control, that
is something that every single person is choosing.
It is an addiction, it takes a minute,
but there is hope.
I am telling you that my life is different.
Secondly, when I got up this morning,
I went upstairs, turned on the coffee maker.
When I tell you, I looked outside the window and saw that the sun was rising.
And when I tell you that I was surprised, I had a moment of surprise that the sun was rising,
okay, because it was unbelievably beautiful.
And the rays were coming over the path
in front of our house and it was gorgeous.
And I kept thinking,
nature is voting.
Okay, like the sun has risen again.
Some force that is nature has decided,
and yet, yes, we are still gonna go on,
and yes, there is still beauty,
and yes, there is still light.
And that force is not manmade.
I am looking at two different, there are different realms that we can live in.
And the one that brings us the great despair is the one that's created by the middle men,
but there's one beyond that and there's one within me. And this might sound crazy, but it's,
I can feel it in my bones. There are two sanctuaries that I have right now.
And they're the truest ones. and one is this deep inside of me.
When I go deep inside of me, there is a part that is beyond all of this madness, that is
like a low level of river of peace.
And there is one outside of me, and that is nature. It is not touched by racism or misogyny or any of this shit that we have built.
It is what has been consistent from the beginning of time,
and it is the same today as it was yesterday.
And so, when you are finding yourself in despair in that second realm where everything is shit,
go to nature today. Okay, just look, walk, just it is the living manifestation of hope,
of the idea that somehow much is untouched.
And there are places to find peace and beauty and joy, and we do not have to wait for anyone
to give us those things.
We can have them now in the first or third realm.
I would love to add my things to that too of like things to get through.
I set up three monthly donations.
One is to the Southern Poverty Law Center that does a lot of anti-hate crime work and monitoring of hate groups, my local
abortion fund, and the ACLU. Find the places that are what you care about. That is your
equal and opposite response. It isn't your rage. It's your dollars and your time. Also,
the people that are most hurt by this are the people who are going to be impacted by the policies,
but also the people who are shaken to the core about who is actually standing with them
and for them.
I was seeing a meme go around that was like, if you don't understand why your trans friend
is scared right now, you don't have a trans friend.
You know a trans person. If you don't understand why your black
friend is scared and enraged, you don't have a black friend. I'm going to be
reaching out to those people in my life and sharing my sorrow and figuring out
what I can do to learn to be
with them in community,
just like I'm learning to find the people in mind.
The part, I didn't really cry this time.
I think I just, after 2016,
it was all of the tears and all of the times,
and I just was kind of dumbfounded again,
except when I realized I had to wake up and tell my kids, all of the tears and all of the times and I just was kind of dumbfounded again, except
when I realized I had to wake up and tell my kids this morning what happened.
And I think that is just so fucking sad.
Like none of this is pontificating about isn't this a nice little bow, here's what we do.
It's really fucking sad to have to tell your kids that this is the America that they live in.
And we can also do the same thing with our kids.
In this neighborhood, I know we have groups
that are looking out for and standing
with immigrant populations who are right now sitting
in their houses trying to figure out
whether they take their kids with them
back to war-torn countries,
or whether they live their lives without their children
and can find anyone that they trust enough
to take care of their children in this country.
We can show up in our communities.
These are national issues,
but they are people. We're saying the country did this. No, the country didn't do this. The
individual people in our country did this and the individual people in our country are the ones that
are being affected by it. Like we can show up in our communities and that is stepping outside of
the Reptide. And there are a lot of us. I mean, that's the other thing.
When I say this is who we are, what I mean is both sides.
We are also almost half the country who showed up and didn't vote for Trump.
That is also who we are.
We are both.
And showing up, we need to expand what we think about when we think about showing up.
It's not every four years.
It's for the people who are in our communities right now that are terrified.
Our friends who are going to lose jobs as a result of this, our community members who
are going to be separated from their families as a result of this.
We can show up in the way to give each other the safety in the only way
that safety has ever existed, which is in reliance
on people where there is accountability between you.
Yeah.
And if you're a little bit like me
and you don't have the capacity to even go there quite yet,
sister, I love how you're thinking about this I think that's giving me a
lot to think about I'm just like trying to get through this one day yeah and I
don't think I even have the capacity to like do all of this beautiful thing that
you guys are even thinking I'm just like sad and I feel like I just want to reach
out to the people out there who need a second to just like, let
this simmer, let this settle.
So that I just, I'll speak for myself so that I can feel a little bit more strength in whatever
I choose to do going forward.
I think that's the bravest thing.
I think a lot of the like jumping to action or nextness or hope or even like,
okay, now we don't put it in this, we put it in this.
It's also just a lot of times that flurry
is trying not to just have the first, first the pain.
It's like jumping to the rising and like.
That's not what I'm doing. This is how I channel my pain. This is my new...
Yeah, I'm just responding to what she's saying that it's not... I don't think that that's a
lack of courage to stop and sit with the sadness. And I think could be world-changing actually.
If everybody just sat with it for a good long minute.
I love you three, two.
I mean, there's actually, I do love me too.
Yes, you do Abby.
You're the most, keep it up.
Y'all we love you so much.
I know it feels like a lot of people feel like nobody's got them, you know, but we do
have each other.
We've got each other.
We'll see you soon.
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We Can Do Hard Things is created and hosted
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and the show is produced by Lauren Legrasso,
Alison Schott, Dina Kleiner, and Bill Schultz.