We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Sara Bareilles: How to Remember Yourself
Episode Date: October 20, 20221. Abby shares with Sara the great personal impact Sara’s music has made on her life. 2. Sara and Glennon bond over the joy of solitude, the underrated gifts of being heavy-hearted, and the fact tha...t “there are too many things to be worried about at all times” to be lighthearted. 3. When you are in deep stress, do you try to sabotage your job, relationship, etc.? (Before this conversation, Amanda thought it was just her.) 4. How playfulness and joy – connecting to the little kid who grew up into you – are vital to loving yourself. 5. Sara’s beautiful journey with medication for depression and anxiety – and how she learned her anxiety often arises from an unexpressed need. About Sara: Sara Bareilles is a Tony Award and Emmy Award nominated actor, and Grammy Award winning singer and songwriter. On Broadway, Sara composed music and lyrics for Waitress, in which she was also the lead. Sara also produced original music and executive produced the musical drama series Little Voice. She plays Dawn Solano on the Emmy-nominated musical comedy series Girls5eva, and stars as The Baker’s Wife in the Broadway revival Into the Woods. TW: @SaraBareilles IG: @sarabareilles 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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There she is! Hello! It's been so long that we've
wanted this moment. Yes. Oh my God. Oh. I have no idea. I'm so
excited to be here. Oh my God. Let's just start right now. Let's do
it. Let's do it. Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. This is a big
emotional day for us for sister and Abby and I,
because today we have Sarah Barellis on our podcast. And Sarah, I want to tell you a quick story
that Abby and I just decided we would tell. We weren't going to tell the story, but when Abby and I first got together, after a
little while, I actually had to sit down with Abby and by the way I was just
learning like how to be in a relationship for the first time. Yeah, yeah. And I
didn't know how to do it and so I sat down with her and said, here's the deal. I'm scared. I need you
to stop talking about Sarah, Bareilles. Sarah, it was a serious talk. I was like, I feel like
you get so I don't know what's going on with your feelings about Sarah, Bareilles, but I'm
uncomfortable with it. This was a dead serious. I know people are allowed to have their celebrity crushes,
but we could meet her.
And I don't want to deal with what's gonna,
I just, why do you start crying?
Every time you talk about her, it makes me uncomfortable.
And so this is the conversation that we had.
Sorry, I've been to your shows
and I've been a huge fan of yours for a long time.
And what Glenin didn't understand at
that point is in the LGBTQ community you're a hero for us and I'm actually probably going to get
emotional talking about. No, it's because people don't remember what it was like before 2015 and before marriage
equality happened.
And you release an album that had these songs on it, Brave, and I choose you.
And you made this video of two couples getting a proposal video. And the thing about what you, with these songs
specifically for me and how they impacted my life is that it didn't just
normalize like gay culture and make people tolerate us. It was a celebration of
us. And I think I hadn't seen that.
You know, I hadn't.
For a straight person.
I had, especially from a straight person,
I think that that's one of the things
that I admire so much about you is that you're able
to talk about the problems that your friend,
specifically that you wrote,
Rave for the anthem that so many of us gay folks listen
to and celebrate in ourselves. I think that Glennon at the time didn't realize how important
you are to the gay community and um well I just arrived on the seat. I had to give her
I had to give her the the information that she needed. You are an incredible artist,
and you have not just touched my life,
but all of our gay lives.
And by the way, all of the straight people out there
who might not have known that this is something
that can be celebrated.
So I thank you, welcome to our show.
And Sarah Bareilles is a Tony Award
and Emmy Award nominated actor
and Grammy Award winning singer and songwriter.
On Broadway, Sarah composed music and lyrics for Waitress in which she was also the lead.
Sarah also produced original music and executive produced the musical drama series Little Voice.
She plays Don Salano on the Emmy-nominated musical comedy series, Girls 5 Eva, and stars as the Baker's Life
in the Broadway revival into the woods.
Welcome Sarah.
This is the greatest already.
I'm such a massive fan of the show and of the work
and your activism and your advocacy.
And I'm so excited to make this connection.
You have all made a huge impact on my life.
So, mutual admiration society here.
I'm just really happy to be here.
And so this is my sister.
Do you have a crush on any of us there?
I wish you probably agree on it.
All three of us.
All three of us.
All three.
Oh my God.
Most of the sentences that you say make my little sensitive heart just feel so much less alone
and so seen this one, this something you said recently.
I just felt like the idea of having to be alive for the rest of my life was an impossible
thing to hold. How do you possibly get through
so many days in a life? Sarah, thank you for that. What is so freaking hard about being alive?
Oh my god, all of the things, all of the things. And I sit in an extraordinarily privileged position. I have an awesome life from, you know,
objectively speaking. I think as a sensitive person, it's chaos. Yes. It's the fact that we have
to like learn how to hold the truth of what is, which is that it's all chaos. And it will be forever
until we go away. And who the fuck knows what happens then. So like, where are we supposed to
just sit back and relax? And I'm just, I've never been a person who I've had to come to terms with.
I think I'm still trying to come to terms with. I'm just not that light-hearted, a person.
I'm just not.
I never really have been.
I always like to think of myself as being that way, but I'm, I might just not be that
light-hearted.
Yes.
Easy breezy is not what you're going to ever land on.
No.
And doesn't it confuse you?
I know I've talked about this so much, but I used to sit with therapists
and they'd tell me I was anxious.
And I'd be like, are you sure
or are you just not paying attention?
Are you sure I have the problem
or are you just not concentrating?
That's true.
I co-sign on that.
It just seems like there are too many things
to be worried about at all times to possibly sit
back and kick your feet up and like whatever.
I just can't unplug from it.
I'm trying.
I'm working on it, making peace with the fact that if I can at least stop punishing myself
for being someone who is a little bit oriented towards
the worrisome, but I've learned in my, at least as a songwriter, I get to be a conduit
for that.
I get to be the vessel that holds all of that stuff and try to like move it through and
if it can offer comfort or connection for someone else.
I feel less alone, you know, like what you were saying Abby is that
I really reap the rewards and the benefits of the connection that comes with what happens when I
share how vulnerable and scared and fucked up I feel all the time. People like, oh yeah me too.
I'm like, great, we're all just totally winging it here. No one has any answers and we're all
pretending we do. If at any moment we're coming across as
well adjusted. It's all fake. Clinton and I really resonated with your experience of being at
UCLA for five years on account of you spent a year abroad but it was too claustrophobic to approach the people
to get your credits for that year abroad.
So you just actually went to school
for another year when you got back.
100% 100%.
100%.
I was too nervous to call the Chentro Steudi
where I went to school in Belonia.
I didn't go to Italy and just like screw around for a year.
I went to classes.
I took exams.
I did all the things that students have to do.
And I got back and they're like,
oh, you have to get this information
from the study center in order to get your credits transferred.
And I was like, nope.
I can't possibly call.
I can't do that.
So I just went to UCLA for an extra year.
Oh my gosh.
Can we just talk about that for a second?
Because I just, this is a thing.
So what is this, Sarah?
Is it social anxiety?
What is this thing that makes it so hard for us to just like,
talk directly to a person we don't know?
I think it's a little bit of social anxiety.
Like I won't even know the questions to ask.
Like I won't, like I'll, so I think there's something
that feels, I think I'll feel stupid.
I think I'm a really, I'm a really afraid of feeling stupid
in front of someone.
I feel stupid all the time.
But I, but I'm a really afraid of showing someone
that I feel stupid. Does that make sense? I don't know. I totally make showing someone that I feel stupid.
Is that my sense?
I don't know.
I totally make sense.
I hate feeling so.
So you're saying I need something from you
that I don't know what I need.
And that moment of I need something from you
is totally vulnerable.
And you'd rather just go to school for another year
than deal with that vulnerability.
All my friends graduated.
I was in love.
It was a deep choice.
It's a deep choice.
But I'm thinking about like even now as an adult,
I'm 42 years old, and I'm doing a little bit of renovations
on a music, like a little apartment.
I'm turning into a music studio, so I have a work space.
And I talk to the contractor,
and there's like a thing that happens
where I just glaze over, where I just feel,
I'm just like flooded with like,
there's so many things I don't even know
or understand about this,
and it's not that it's rocket science.
I just glaze over and I'm trying to appear,
like I'm nodding and I'm like,
oh my god.
I'm like,
I'm like, and all I want him, uh-huh, and all I want
him to do is leave. All I want him to do is leave. Stop talking. I can be alone with the
fact that I don't understand anything that just happened. And what am I going to do now?
Because I didn't take the time to understand anything that just happened. So then I don't call
him back and then I start over and I have another interview with another contractor. So I think
I'll try again. You know what I mean? Like it's that high five.
Yeah, I do.
Yeah.
Every time I ask someone for directions, I immediately go, where do I go?
And then I put on my face of, do I look like I'm understanding?
And then I just go home.
Yeah.
Right?
Or every time anyone tries to explain anything to me, I'm only thinking, do I look like
a person who looks like they're concentrated?
Yeah. Wow. Wow. I'm only thinking, do I look like a person who looks like they're concentrated? It's not good.
Wow.
It's not good.
All right.
So years ago, you made the move from LA to Broadway and you tweeted about the decision
and your tweet reads like this.
I love Glen and Doyle.
And she says, we can do hard things.
So here we are. do the hard things.
So when you're down, how do you know
what kind of change you actually need,
whether you need to move to New York
or break up with your partner,
how do we know when we just need change
or when we need help?
Well, I think there's an argument that help is change.
I think as someone who is really learning to ask for help, I'm really not very good at about it.
I have tended to be an insulated person.
You know, I was a really scrappy young artist, faced a lot of challenges, coming up as a young woman, getting told no
dealing with all kinds of body image issues and what happens when you're in a public
facing position.
And I think I have a real, I'll just, I'll do it myself attitude.
So I think change and help in my little world,
my little universe might be synonymous.
And I always think change is good.
I mean, I don't like it.
I can't say that I'm like, oh, I love it when things change.
But I actually think that's where we grow.
It's not healthy to believe there's a plateau
anywhere in your future that anything's gonna just
finally settle down into fill in the blank.
That is not what we're here for.
It's not what life does.
We've been taught that over and over again.
So I think that the more we can lean into the fact
that it is all fluid, you know, my God, what have
we learned from the last few years?
Just like you think you know what anything looks like?
No.
Never answer is no.
That sounds like one of your survival strategies.
Is it just resisting the idea that there will ever be any solid ground?
Well, it definitely feels like, I think on a good day,
it's something that I can find comfort in.
I mean, I'm someone who started meditating
a handful of years ago and not such a tenant of,
it's just like groundlessness.
Get comfy with the fact that everything you love you lose.
Every, every, it just, that's just what it is.
We are, it's sand in our hands.
We just, we can't hold any of this.
So, you know, that's like what what other kind of horrifying terrifying thoughts
I just know I'm excited because I was like if there was a crush. It's over now
Because my wife is not is not gonna subscribe to that idea. She's like I will hold on
Yes, I'm sweating. I have a question about the changes
help and the help is change.
Because you made me think of something
I haven't thought about before.
You said lots of times,
these sisters of anxiety and depression come to you
that you try to break up with your partner.
Yes.
And that you usually do.
And that most recently in the pandemic, you have this beautiful partner Joe and you tried to break up with him. Oh, yeah, and he said
Relax, go visit with your friends and then come back. So
that instinct to change
How do you know when that change is help or when that change is a symptom of the problem?
Yeah, good. I wonder that one. Yeah, I'm in that question. I mean, I continue to be in that
question of, now, you were talking about, didn't know how to be a partner. This is a big place for Sarah to learn how to grow up a little bit.
I'm someone who has had long partnerships in my life and loving partnerships.
I almost wouldn't call them quite partnerships.
I've had long relationships and this is my first partnership,
which is a different, it's a different entity.
It's a different organism.
And I think not to any of my previous,
you know, boyfriend's discredit,
I just don't think I was like available to it. I just wasn't available. I was so protected
and guarded and Joe for many reasons, I think, because of where I was at in my life and just
the alchemy of he and I, I mean, I tried to break up with them. I've tried to bring it up. And the first time, the first time, I was like, the lights went out.
That's what it felt like to me.
I was like, I really, really liked you.
And now I don't.
And that, it just went away.
And I don't like you anymore.
And the lights went out.
And that's how it feels.
And that's what's true.
And I remember we were on a street corner.
And he was like like passionate about it
and it was the first time I heard him
really advocate for himself and I thought it was so sexy
and it was like a little moment for us to really see each other.
But he's like, if the lights go out,
you go into the fucking basement and you check the fuse box.
And it was like, oh, okay.
And he's like, if we're not, you know, compatible or whatever,
if that's fine, but I'm not falling for this bullshit of like, I don't know, I just, it's gone.
The feeling's gone. It was just a very immature, like coping that I had of like scared,
separate. I feel scared, separate.
And so that is a thing that comes up for me over and over again.
And I'm really trying to work through it.
And you know, Joe is my partner of choice at this moment.
And neither he or I know if we live off into the sunset together or not, but it's a choice
to be like, okay, let's really not get,
let's not do magical thinking about it. This is, you know what I mean? Like that's one of the things I
work with with my therapist because I'm someone who likes a little magical thinking. But it's not always
serving the greater good in my life. Wow. Did I answer a question? I have no idea. Yes, I know it's beautiful and perfect because it's
and both.
It is help and it is a symptom and all of those things
relate to each other.
I'm Jonathan and 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, why 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.
You say that it's about being immature, but you're doing that for a reason.
It could be actually a really wise response to provoke, to test the sturdiness of that
connection.
I mean, if you say the lights are off and he's like, absolutely fucking not, you're like,
oh, that is sexy.
That's sexy.
I did that all the time.
My first marriage I was abandoned.
I tried to break up with my current husband 150 times.
And it was about if I push, are you gonna fall?
If I push, are you gonna run?
Whatever we're trying to get from that is interesting.
Yeah, yes.
Well, and I think as independent women,
there's a certain layer of self-protection that's happening,
but also it's like,
I think it's a little bit of like,
an underlying belief that maybe I'm not okay.
Like the wiser thing is to be like, look, you can come or go.
I am fine.
I'm here.
I'm fine.
And so let me just stay and see what this is and really talk about where do we miss each
other?
Where do we disconnect?
Why do we disconnect?
And now I find that really fascinating. Like, to be in
a relationship that has a lot of juice. And it's not easy all the time. We laugh a ton. We also have
friction, which I have always equated to being like an indication of something's wrong, if there's any conflict,
but it's actually so lovely to be able to be like,
that really hurt me when you did that.
Why did you do that?
And vice versa.
So it's for learning.
We're like little baby birds.
I'm a little baby bird in this sense.
I'm like, look at me, I'm in a relationship.
Yay!
I'm gonna try not to fly away. Three, three. Three, three. I'm like, look at me, I'm in a relationship! Yay! I'm gonna try not to fly away!
Three, three!
Three, three!
I'm doing it!
So that's so beautiful.
You're such a baby bird.
I wanted to thank you on behalf of myself
and a lot of little baby birds
who have recently started meds for anxiety and depression. And I just to thank you for
the way that you put that out in the world. And it was beautiful. And you were hesitant to go
on them at first. So what was the breaking point for you and what has that journey been like
And what has that journey been like for you since? Ooh.
Um, yeah.
So I started having anxious episodes in my early 20s.
The first time I remember having this association,
I was probably in my, in my fifth year of college.
Was this, you see on the year?
Damn, you Italy.
My solo year at UCLA.
And you tell us what does dissociate of me, just for I know.
Oh, yes, fortunately.
But for anyone who's not an anxious bunny bird, can you explain?
So the way I describe it is that there's, it's a little bit like you leave your body and you are
your observer and you kind of can't, I remember trying to explain it to my mom.
I was like, I can't stop being more aware of the fact that I'm standing here in this
kitchen talking to you than just having the conversation.
I couldn't stay in my body and stay in the experience
or stay in the room.
I was just watching myself have this experience of life.
And it was terrifying.
And I thought I was going crazy.
I thought I was developing schizophrenia.
I didn't know what any of it meant, but I was terrified.
And I started going to therapy and I had a terrible
therapist, but the act of verbalizing what was going on inside me was part of what was
healing. I just started saying it unapologetically and she fell asleep or whatever the fuck she did.
Oh my god. And she was not anxious enough.
Not anxious enough.
Anyway, this is a long-winded tangent.
I started having these anxious episodes very early.
And I managed them through therapy,
through meditation, through exercise.
It was deeply uncomfortable and manageable.
And I just sort of chalked it up to being like,
this is just who I am.
And I'm gonna have these really hard times.
And as I got older and wiser to a certain extent,
sometimes they were easier,
sometimes they went on way too long.
I mean, when I look back now,
I'm like, I just wish I would have tried this as an option.
But the breaking point for me was in the lockdown in the pandemic, the claustrophobia, and this
just like the rattling of dread was so loud and oppressive,
and I really wanted to leave Joe.
I really wanted to, I don't even know what.
I don't even know what I would fill in the,
I wanna leave you and fill in the blank.
I don't have an answer for that.
I was just terrified all the time.
And he was very generous for a lot of it. And we got to a point where he's like,
I can't do this. Like, I can't, like, just, I was going to make me emotional. He's like, I can't
keep being your punching bag because I would like
I would just tell him I would vomit all of these fears on him and it was more than anybody should have to take
and so I finally
decided like okay well this is the one thing I haven't tried
and oh my god the, the relief of the returning to myself. I was so scared that it was going to make me disconnect and go further away from my spiritual
center.
I always felt like my sadness was my identity.
It's part of how I see the world.
My this layer of melancholy is why I'm a writer.
It's why I think deeply about the pain of other people,
and I want to interpret, and I want to hold it for you.
And I felt like if I abandoned that sadness,
somehow I was abandoning my essential self.
But I actually came back and I was like,
oh my God, I'm here.
Here I am.
This person can laugh.
I can, and I still have terrible days.
I still have, I'm still very much in touch
with my sadness and my anxiety. There's not like a blanket of bliss put over anything.
I don't feel like another person, but it was a really hard decision to make.
I felt like I was cheating.
I felt like I was trying.
I was skirting some excavation I should have been doing on myself. I was, yeah,
I was taking a shortcut. And I'm so glad that I, that I, like, took the leap. And I'm still
on them. And Lexa Pro has been an incredible tool, whether I'm on it for the rest of my
life or not, I don't know.
But it's just a tool.
And I just want to encourage people, you can just see, you can just see if it helps.
And it might not.
And there are, you know what I mean?
I just was scared to try.
And I'm so grateful that I did, because the relief is as wide as the universe.
Thank you for that vulnerability.
Oh, I'm just a cryer.
Yeah, I get it.
Me too.
Wow, when I remember myself is what you said, I remember myself.
And so for anyone listening who feels like they've forgotten themselves, it's.
Is that what you had you felt to say?
Because you, I felt like you were getting emotional doing that.
That's kind of, you felt like it would be cheating too, right?
I didn't really feel like that.
I'm all for shortcuts, but I think I just,
I was afraid I'd feel changed.
That like the magic of me would be different.
Kind of like I'm like what you're saying Sarah,
except I'm way less talented.
But like, I feel like maybe more less,
you'd be less efficient.
Right?
Yeah, the meanness, but really it helped me remember myself.
I felt so distant from who I was
and that I was almost a new somebody
with all of those things attached. And I feel like it
brought me back to me. But when hearing you talk about Joe is so beautiful and the ways that you
have partnered through all of this are amazing. And you said something about him that was so beautiful.
You said that being loved by him feels like
he can just exist next to you in the pain
and that love and that presence
is allowing someone the dignity of their own discomfort.
someone the dignity of their own discomfort. And that, I feel like we could talk about that for three hours.
The way that you put that, that that's the reason it feels like when people come to you and they try to fix or they come to you and try to help,
it's stealing your dignity. Can you talk about what you mean by that?
Yeah.
I had a therapist for a long time
and that was a phrase that she used a lot.
And I, I, has stuck with me because I'm a fixer
and it's a real practice to just be next to someone
in pain because it's uncomfortable.
It's not only just from a place of,
you love this person so you don't want to see them in pain,
but it's also ego.
It's thinking that like, I know better, do what I did.
I've dealt with this with, I have a close friend
who's going through some shit and I'm having
a hard time not like, I'm just trying to pull.
And really that's not for me to do.
Like that's real friendship, real love, real relationship is, you know, to a certain extent
when someone's landing in a place of harm, of course, intervention is necessary.
But I think just allowing someone to move at the pace they're at, you try to meet them
where they are.
And yeah, Joe's not a saint.
He's the good, the good, the good.
I'm sure.
But don't have to tell me I'm always on the on-strain.
Oh, yes.
Well, okay, just the dignity of you comfort too though,
for people who use Mal and Collie sadness pain
as part of their process.
The dignity of discomfort to me,
it's like respecting the process.
It's like if we went up to a cocoon or a chrysalis
and we were like, hey, it's too dark,
get up, wrap it up, bashing the chrysalis, being like, hey, it's too dark. Wrap it up. Wrap it up.
Bashing the chrysalis.
Being like, get your ass out of there
because that feels uncomfortable for me to see you so smushed.
Yes.
Right?
And then the frickin' whatever the stage they're in,
they're like, well, guess I'm not gonna become
a fucking butterfly now.
Yeah.
I'm becoming something in here.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And because you can't handle this chrysalis part.
I can't handle the chrysalis.
I can't become a butterfly.
It's so hard for me.
Yeah.
Watching suffering is so impossible.
But also like being as chrysalis people,
we have to know when to to not everybody needs to hold the mess either. I'm having
to learn of like, oh, this is, I just am, I'm working through some shit. Give me a minute. Let me
go just walk this off or take a day or whatever it is. And because it might not be your math
problem to solve,
it's just, it's something like you said in process,
but it's really easy.
I mean, I, as you've seen,
like I'm just like vomit everything on everyone
at all times.
And yeah, often feel like totally alone.
I'm like, nobody understands me.
But I'm like trying so hard to, you know, share everything authentically all the time.
Are you in any gram four?
Yes.
Okay.
It's interesting though.
I have a follow up here because both of you are chrysalis folks.
You both chose people who want to help and fix.
I won't speak for Joe.
No, you're right. Would you ever come out of the chrysalis to become a butterfly?
Would you ever choose to leave the cocoon?
Are you in a chrysalis coma?
He's out there for the rest of your life.
This is my confusion, because I'm like, all right,
so you're having a time, but life has to continue.
You deserve to become a butterfly. And by the way, both of you, because you're both artists,
the world needs you to become a butterfly for them to actually experience what you've learned
in your cocoon. I hear you. I do hear what you're saying. I see what you're laying down, Wombok.
I do.
We are buddies.
We are butterflies.
Birds are butterflies.
Everybody's got wings around here.
I just want to ask you,
you said my anxiety is usually attached
to some unexpressed desire,
some wish, some resentment that's building
something I'm not communicating.
Uh-huh.
Can you give me an example of that from your life?
Feels true.
Feels real true.
Yeah.
So I am someone who my battery recharges in solitude.
I need to be totally alone, not even with Joe, not with friends.
I need to go like have a nice wander and kind of just feel the edges blur a little bit.
And that is a thing that I have had a really hard time learning to ask for.
had a really hard time learning to ask for. And I think I have some old shit about
what it means to be in relationship
and like I'm living with someone for the first time.
I was 40 before I ever moved in with anybody.
I was there, I'm like, I love being alone.
So, sometimes it's just space.
It's just like I need space.
I bought an apartment.
I bought myself a place I can now go to go away.
Oh, this is the music studio.
This is the music studio.
The carnivores that has a bedroom and a kitchen
and a TV and all the things I'm gonna need
to go just like be like,
I'm gonna take the dog and go away for a minute.
Record.
I'm gonna record. I'm gonna record. I'm working to take the dog and go away for a minute. Record. I'm going to record.
I'm going to record.
I'm working on a project.
Which is my sanity.
Which is my sanity.
But sometimes it's asking for space.
It's just space.
Without an attachment of guilt, it doesn't have to mean anything.
It's not space with a capital S.
It's just, I just need some room.
Yes.
It's just going to fill my tank. And I don't ask for that easily. And that's something I'm really
working on. So some of my anxiety, like my anxiety oftentimes can feel like claustrophobia.
Like it gets really close to that feeling of like walls closing in, like something's getting choked.
feeling of like walls closing in, like something's getting choked. And I don't even know, it's not, it's not, I don't equate it as much to like, oh, I didn't tell him that it really pissed me off when
he said this. It's not as much that. It's just like the sense of, it's my spirit that just needs
some room. And I'm trying to learn to ask for that more.
some room and I'm trying to learn to ask for that more.
It's a good question to ask yourself when you're feeling anxiety.
Yes.
Do I have an unexpressed need?
Because sometimes anxiety can feel like,
oh, I've chosen an inner conflict over an outer conflict.
Like, yes.
Right? Like there's an outer conflict I need to have
and I just keep eating it and choosing the inner
and I need to make it out.
Yeah, because it doesn't it feel like sometimes or at least for me it's placating. It's like trying
to just it's trying to absolve anybody else of their discomfort. And so what you do is you're
just suppressing and eating all of the things that like what do I actually want? Oh, you want this for dinner.
I really wanted this other thing.
Well, get two fucking dinners.
Yes!
There's no rules about it,
but those very like rudimentary things.
For me, our new learning, that is just like new programming
that I can be sovereign in love.
Ooh!
That's the name of this podcast.
That's the name of this podcast.
And oh my god, I already have like,
I have the entire album for you
of song titles just based on the last 20 minutes.
Yeah, great.
We're about to write a record here.
Oh yeah, well we've got the apartment,
so we're gonna have to write a record.
We're gonna have so many new albums just because she wanted to be alone.
It's gonna be your solid.
It's gonna be very pretty.
You said that knowing what you want, but you've also said that this idea feels so simple,
what do I want?
Sometimes I find that question to be impossible to answer.
I can't possibly know. Yeah. So do you have to learn how to figure out what you want
before you can get to that place where you can name that need?
I think it's helpful for those around you.
Know what you want before you start asking.
For me, that disconnect of not being able to know
what I want for something stupid for lunch,
what do you want to eat?
You know, not knowing that is usually a symptom of like,
okay, I've been like going away from myself for a while.
Like, for example, in this moment in my life,
I have been in post-production
for we made a live capture of the waitress stage production.
And I've been in post-production for that and doing into the woods in the evening. And Joe is
gone. So I'm taking care of this really wonderful dog that we got together by myself.
Louis. So I just, I was at this place where I was so, and I know a lot of people listening,
deal with this, where you're just, just like my head is just barely. I'm swimming so hard,
and I just have no extra minutes in the day. Every moment is spoken for,
and there's a little bit of like a hide that comes from that too of like, what a bad aspect, I am like I can get so much done,
but I'm not thriving by any sense of the word.
And I realize that like, I'm just so focused
on meeting the needs around me and the expectations
and what's being asked of me is that like,
I go away from myself somehow.
Self-care is just such an overused word,
but those ways that we tend to our needs,
that we nurture our beings, those are the practices
that very quickly I think dissolve
when you just start feeling like it's important
that I am this place at this time
and I'm meeting this person's needs
and I'm showing up with pastries
because I'm gonna have a really fucking great attitude today.
Like all the things that you're doing that you get off on
because you're doing such a great job.
And yet I was just withering.
I got sick, I get canker sores when I'm stressed out.
My mouth hurts, I'm trying to sing.
And like all those things,
and then your body talks to you,
and you're like, you're not paying attention.
You know, it's not equilibrium, that's not balanced.
So I do think staying in touch with that desire,
staying in touch with your wants
is an indication of paying attention.
When you're paying attention to yourself
and you're remembering yourself,
what are the things that make you feel like
you're remembering yourself and nourishing yourself?
Um, playfulness, joy,
a spirit of like,
I like me.
It's why I like being alone.
I like kind of get a kick out of myself.
I think I'm kind of wonderful.
And when I lose that, when I get into this really
critical minded ideas about all of the ways
I'm not living up to my potential or I'm not
meeting someone's expectations. I've really abandoned that part of myself that
knows how to love Sarah and not Sarah Barales, but Sarah, like a person that's
like kind of caught in between these worlds. And whether you have a, you're a public facing figure or not,
there's our, our personhood that we meet the world with,
this role we play.
And then there's that like little kid
that grew up into that body.
And I think there's something really precious
about maintaining a connection to that little spirit.
Oh, I love that so much.
I'll get a kick out of ourselves.
Okay, kick out of you.
So I have a question because we have a little artist in our family, our middle child.
Very talented.
Very talented.
Oh, come on.
I'm such a fan.
Oh my gosh.
Well, so for a person where you've described life as in the world as like chaos.
How does music and
Art make your life like a little bit easier?
I don't I would just I
Would melt into a pool of
sadness without it. It
It's like an organizing principle. It makes sense, not of
everything, but it will just make things bite-size for me. So I can take this one
experience that's tragic and overwhelming and I can try to hold it, I think
about it as like these songs are just like,
their little vessels, they're just containers that can try to capture
the essence of an experience.
And then I move on to the next one.
And then I'm impacted by something that I've seen and I'm trying to capture that
and sort of hold it here.
But it just makes me feel like I can sort of organize the madness.
And that was another thing that was so scary to me about the pandemic
was that like, shit got so big, and then I had nothing to say.
You know, I was very struck by a lot of artists who had a lot to say.
And they were organizing and they were writing songs about all the things.
And I was just like, I don't have anything to add yet.
There's nothing to say.
I'm just like two, the feelings eclipse to any ability to try to, you know,
metabolize it out loud.
Do you remember when that changed?
Or is it?
Do you remember a moment, what was she's writing again?
So I figured like, do you, did you have a moment
where you were like, oh, or do you not notice
that transition back to creativity,
back to having something to say?
Well, I'm gonna be honest. I'm working through some real insecurity. This is the first time I'm writing
on medication. And there's a part of me that's like questioning, is it making an impact on my ability
to synthesize and to have a creative output.
But when I go back, I try to just keep a voice memo
and ideas come through, they come through when they come.
When I go back and listen, I feel like,
no, there's something here, there's something here
that I need to just kind of walk forward
and lean into that help, you know, collaboration, I think
is a new, it's a new space, a newer space for me. And that's also been really helpful
to just be validated and work with other artists who can relate. If I can offer some validation on this for you, I was going back and reading
a lot of what you said. And when you originally signed with your first record label, you cried,
you're so upset when you first signed because you were so afraid that they would take something from you that
you didn't want to give and you said
this prayer
please let me remember me
mm-hmm
and then it struck me you know
years and years and years later when you were talking about your meds and what that did for your
life, you said, this medicine helped me see myself again without the cloak of depression
and anxiety.
I remember me.
That's awesome.
And so you are you and no one's taken it from you and your meds aren't taking it from you and you Sarah are the writer of Sarah and it's gonna come.
Thank you for that. That's really sweet. I did not think about that. That's very meaningful. thank you.
So brave. That song, do you want to tell Sarah?
I know you want to tell Sarah about the concert.
Just go ahead.
Okay, so I don't quite remember, but it was a concert in Buffalo, New York and it was raining and
A rainbow showed up
Outdoors, yeah, I mean, that's where rainbow's happened. Yes, yes outdoors. I was there
Yeah, that's all I just your little queer heart just burst into a thousand little butterflies.
I totally remember that.
I totally remember that.
Oh, that was rainbow during Brave.
Brave is about a lot of things.
One being saying on the outside who you are on the inside.
Yeah.
Would that be correct?
Yeah.
Okay.
Great, great.
It's a definition of Brave from the song. What is something the world still doesn't know about you?
Something on the inside that hasn't been translated. Maybe something that's true about Sarah, but is not yet publicly true about Sarah Bareilles.
Oh God.
What is something that's true about me?
I don't know if people don't know it, but I just like,
I just still struggle with like a tremendous amount
of insecurity, an extraordinary dedication
to not believing in myself.
Oh, my God. Let's, let's reframe it.
We are just committed, Sarah.
I am committed.
We are committed to don't.
My question is so, another, another song title like this.
What the fuck will it take?
Sarah, I know.
What will it actually take?
I asked us to, to Glenn it all the time.
Because I don't have any insecurities about, no,'t what I did as a soccer player. I just think
that's so awesome and it's incredible. It's a part of that was because I had so
many other women around me throughout my career looking at me saying you are
one of the best and so I had that affirmation for a long time. Yeah but what
will it take like this is my question.
I don't think anything, this is okay.
I don't, I think that's the wrong attitude
that you're having.
Oh, she's humbly.
She humbly submits.
No, what I already said, we need the wrong attitude.
We don't need Sarah Borellis to suddenly be a different person.
We need Sarah to keep being Sarah.
We need Sarah with her commitment to doubt,
to continue to show up and make shit,
even in her insecurity, even in her doubt.
That's what we need to see people doing.
Of course.
We don't need Sarah to become a different person.
What's inspiring to me is people who continue
to be themselves, to continue to not know,
to continue to have no ground beneath them,
and to still show up and be their butterflies selves.
If I could reorganize the atoms in my being
and be like a fuck it kind of gal, I would,
oh my God, I would.
I just, I don't even know,
I wouldn't even know how to begin,
but I do think you're right, Glen.
I was on tour one time in Australia,
and I was having a real show of a time
and a lot of anxiety, and I was in a bookstore,
and I saw this book called Feel the Fear and Do it anyway.
I felt so dopey,
was reading this book at lunch, covering the edges,
you know, like,
the elephant, do it anyway.
But it became my mantra for a little while
because I was having these really obsessive thoughts
that like if I left the hotel I'd get lost
or like I wouldn't be able to find my way back.
Like it's things that are just like not,
it's not attached to reality in any way.
It has stayed with me where I'm like, you can be scared and do the fucking thing.
Like you can just let fear be a passenger and not let it stop you from your life.
Because I don't want that would be the only tragedy that could happen is if I don't engage
with the world because I'm too afraid of what it might mean.
What do you think we're so afraid of?
Like if I'm talking to therapists,
I'm talking to a astrologist,
I'm talking to whoever I'm asking
to tell me what the fuck's wrong with me, totally.
There's usually a moment of where's this fear coming from?
Like what are you so afraid of?
And I'm actually trying to figure that out. I don't know. What are you so afraid of? And I'm actually trying to figure that out. I don't
know. What are we so afraid of? My current therapist encourages me to like, I think it's a little
kid thing. My little Sarah is like really scared of getting left behind or being abandoned in some way.
She's like, look at her, get a picture out,
bring her into your consciousness and tuck her behind you
and say like, you don't, I got you.
Like stay with me, you get behind me and I'm gonna handle.
This wise-minded grown-up is gonna handle it
and you don't have to be in charge. You don't you don't let the kids drive the bus. It's not safe.
Mm-hmm.
That's good.
So I've been thinking a lot about that and you know, hand on your heart and just like that you're not going anywhere. I got you.
Beautiful.
Sister, you got anything to say before we wrap this up because I
mean I need to stop so I can go listen to it. I mean thank you. Thank you. You're so wise and
wonderful. Just for us. Thank you. I just knew we would be friends one day. I'm so I would love to. I really, I can't thank you enough.
I this podcast and all the three of your presence and work in the world has been such a companion
for me and good times and dark times and it's really, it's important work you're doing
and I'm grateful that you invited me to share for a moment.
Thank you for being brave.
Thank you.
Even when you're scared.
Yeah.
Hand on the heart, everybody.
Pads, glad hand on the heart, deep breath.
Think of your 10 year old self.
Oh, that would be great.
Tell that baby that you have their back.
I got you.
I got you.
I got you.
We can do hard things.
See you next time.
Bye.
We can do hard things. See you next time. Bye.
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