We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Should We Stay & Fight, Leave, or Do Nothing? with Sarah Polley
Episode Date: March 2, 2023We saw the film WOMEN TALKING and we couldn’t rest until we had the chance to speak with the genius who wrote, directed, and is nominated for an Oscar for it: Sarah Polley. This conversation is a...bout hope, survival, imagination, and revolution. It’s about burning it all down and building from the ashes. Please listen to this conversation and then please watch the film. You will be powerfully changed. CW // sexual assault About Sarah: SARAH POLLEY is an Oscar-nominated director and award-winning actor whose works include Away From Her, Take This Waltz, and Stories We Tell. As an actor, Polley starred in a variety of films including The Sweet Hereafter, Go, Dawn of the Dead, Mr. Nobody, and My Life Without Me.  In 2022, Polley released an autobiographical collection of essays – Run Towards the Danger: Confrontations with a Body of Memory. More recently, Polley wrote and directed the film adaptation of Miriam Toews’s novel Women Talking, which has since been nominated for several awards, including the Academy Awards, Critics’ Choice Awards, and Golden Globe Awards. IG: @realsarahpolley 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
Discussion (0)
Today's conversation is with the absolutely incredible Sarah Polly, who is the Oscar-nominated
director and screenwriter of the most powerful film I've ever seen women talking.
In this conversation, which contains a lot of laughter, enjoy, and hope, We also talk about sexual assault including Sarah's experiences and mine. So please take
care of yourselves if you need to skip this one. For those I am just going to tell you as a disclaimer, I'm feeling
a little bit nervy because I feel like the person that we're talking to today, I just
feel like the work she's doing is so freaking important. So I am going to just do my best. Okay, Sarah Polly is an
Oscar-nominated director and award-winning actor whose works include
Away from Her, Take This Waltz, and Stories We Tell. As an actor, Polly starred in a
variety of films including The Sweet Hair After, Go, Don
of the Dead, Mr. Nobody, and My Life Without Me.
In 2022, Polly released an autobiographical collection of essays run towards the danger,
confrontations with the body of memory.
More recently, Polly wrote and directed the film adaptation of Miriam Taves novel, Women Talking, which has
since been nominated for several awards including the Academy Awards, Critics
Choice Awards, and Golden Globe Awards. If it doesn't win the Oscar, we all
March. We'd be pissed. Okay, we all March. So Sarah, I started getting to know you a few months ago. I read your book, run towards the danger,
loved it so much that I immediately watched your documentary, loved that so much that I immediately
watched women talking, and then I haven't stopped thinking about all three of them.
thinking about all three of them, well ever for the past few months. So I go for these walks in the morning and you and I during these walks for the last few months have been having the most
amazing conversation. She comes back and I'm like, so how did you and Sarah do? Like what did you
guys talk about? I really appreciate this because I walk every day since we're covering for my concussion
and what accompanies me on my walks are your voices.
So that's amazing to hear that because truly, you live in my head.
So this is actually a really, really narcissistic dream I'm having at the moment.
Oh.
That makes me feel better because I feel as if the kind of the venn diagram of what it seems to be the ideas that sort of fascinate and plague you.
And the ideas that fascinate and plague me are just a solid circle.
Yeah, I think that's right. So I'm really looking forward to this next hour. And in my head, we've been talking about memory and imagination
and raising kids who are comfortable in their own skin
and women and abuse and recovery and just creating
more beautiful lives and worlds.
And so since I started with your book,
if it's OK, run towards the danger,
which by the way, I love that freaking title,
where Joan of Arc, little Medallion,
just to remind me of that very idea every day.
But there's one essay in the book that when I read it,
I felt like, well, this is the most important essay.
I've read in a decade.
This is an essay that could change the way the whole world looks at women and sexual assault
and the aftermath of all of it.
I don't think I'd ever heard the perspective given publicly.
I've only heard the perspective from friends in private or from women in book signing lines
in these private moments, but I've never heard
anybody talk about it publicly.
So to the pod squad, when we talk about the story, it's just very important to me that everyone
listens very closely because the truth is that of the pod squad, a small percentage of
you all have had no experience with sexual assault.
And a smaller percentage of you have had experience with sexual assault. And a smaller percentage of you have had experience
with sexual assault and have come forward
to testify against the attacker.
But the widest swath of listeners in the pod squad
has experienced sexual assault.
And for a million different very valid reasons
has not come forward.
And those people are never spoken to.
So in your essay about your sexual
assault, you teach us something that every single one of us needs to know before ever passing
judgment on another victim or upon themselves. So can you tell us the story about your experience
with Giangameshie and the way that let's just start with the way you used to tell it, the party story.
Sure. The party story that I told for years, which was a funny story about my worst date
ever was that I had gone on a date with him.
I didn't mention my age.
And it was, he was so kind of ridiculous and did this stupid thing where he,
like, ran his hand over my body and said, I'm the devil.
I'm the devil.
You're in hell.
You're in hell.
It was so off-putting.
And I sort of told the story, I would do this little crinkle of my nose
and this fur of my brow, like I was looking at some specimen of something
which always got a big laugh.
And then that was sort of the end.
And that was the end of my ever having casual sex ever again,
because it was so terrible. And people would laugh.
And what I didn't tell was that
it was a really traumatic, violent encounter. And I neglected to say that I was 16 and he
was close to 30. I neglected to say that I was terrified and that I was hurt and that I
asked for things to stop and they didn't. And then women came forward.
This is pre-me too, about a year before the Me Too movement, which is an important point,
because when these women came forward and went to court, it was seen and heard in a very
different way than it would have been just a couple of years later.
And it was really the beginning of this conversation.
This incredible woman named Lucy Ducatura came forward and told her story.
And there was this hashtag that went by millions of people
saying, hashtag, I believe, Lucy,
and telling their story of why they didn't go to the cops
at the time because she was criticized.
We're not going to the cops.
The case went to court.
He was acquitted.
And more importantly, in my mind,
the women who went through being on the stand and that trial
had a horrific traumatizing experience, which is common. And I coming from a family of lawyers
and legal academics, you know, I had a eight week old baby. I had a toddler. I literally
spent weeks just walking the city and talking to everyone I could about whether or not to come forward when these other women did.
Not so much because I felt that I wanted to see him in jail or go through a court process,
but more in a gesture of solidarity because they're these women making themselves very vulnerable.
I had a certain amount of public profile and my thought was could I at least lend credibility
by being a witness? And I was told in no uncertain terms
that there were so many gaps in my story,
as is common, including the having told it
as the funny party story, having not told many people,
having maintained, I mean, I wasn't friends with him,
but I did interviews on his show.
It was part of what you did when you released a film
in Canada as you went on his radio show.
I had had friendly interactions with him.
I was in behavior towards him,
are more deferential and ingratiating
than I was with almost anyone else,
which was I think a sort of fear response
or a wanting to normalize or wanting to make things
not have happened, which again,
I think is really normal behavior poster
and experience like this.
So there are actually videos you can look up online
and believe me, I did when I consider coming forward
of me on his radio show being really nice
to the point where like, I don't know if it seems like
I'm flirting with him.
It kind of seems like he's flirting with me
and I'm certainly not pushing it away.
It's actually out of character behavior for me, like the way in which I was sort of reverting to this teenage actress
demeanor, but absolutely the effect that being in a room with him had on me was this
this terror, which I was really good at masking even for myself, I think. So all of this is to say,
is it turns out this is what a lot of people do after they've had a really terrible encounter.
They try to normalize it by engaging in, you know, friendly behavior. They don't tell the story
as the story of a violent encounter. They tell it as a funny party story.
Of course, I was 16 years old.
I was in my 30s when people came forward.
There were going to be lapses in my memory absolutely.
There were going to be things I got wrong.
So I was given the information that you will not lend credibility to these women coming
forward.
You will, in fact, have just as bad a time as they are going to on the stand.
This is a horrific experience.
And the advice was absolutely don't come forward.
And this is from people who work in the legal system and was very sobering advice to
receive.
So years later, you know, and I carried this with me, I always knew I would end up telling the story.
I knew that for my mental health, my kids had to be older, so that I didn't kind of crumble and impact them in really destructive ways.
But I carried it with me. I knew I would always tell the story in solidarity with those women. But also, I thought it was extremely important to offer a window
into the thinking process behind what, as you said, most women who experience this do not
come forward.
Why?
So, to look at what that looks like and at least try to offer that to the conversation.
Yeah.
And to just explain to people, what is used in court still
or in the court of public opinion?
The behavior of women that is used to say, oh, look, they're
lying.
They can't remember details of the assault,
the story changes because their memory changes.
With you have fight, flight, fawn,
they act in a very fawning way afterwards.
They call the person sometimes
who attack them. They go back to their house because they
are trying to make a different ending. They're trying to
make themselves not victims by recreating the situation
with a different ending. These are normal. These are not
evidence of lying. These are often evidence that the person has been
assaulted. Yeah. Yeah. And it's interesting. There's this amazing clinical psychologist named Dr.
Lori Haskell, who I think is just the person who knows the most about this. And she's now an
expert witness in trials in Canada, which actually has resulted in much better outcomes in those trials with sexual assault.
She does a lot of work on what trauma does to the brain and to memory. And one of the points she
makes that I love is she says, you know, after a major car accident, if the person in the car accident
doesn't remember the color of the cars that we're going by at the time or the person who is standing
there or what they were holding in their hand, we know and we assume that's because their brain
was so traumatized.
Of course, they don't remember those things.
But when it comes to sexual assault,
we expect all these details to be remembered
in a way that's just not,
it doesn't correlate to trauma having happened to the brain.
So there's still part of us
that doesn't actually think of this
in the same way that we would being in a car crash,
and it absolutely is trauma.
Yeah, do you feel like that is purposeful? Because I just feel like we know enough to know.
We know that trauma causes absolute disembodiment, which then of course, you don't remember.
We know that in a courtroom about a car crash. Why do we refuse to know that
in terms of sexual assault? Is it just in order for the system to continue this shit? Because
it's famed ignorance. I think it's across a lot of marginalized groups. If you're telling
the story, as you say, Sarah, in your book, we judge reality according to our expectations rather than
evaluating our expectations according to the reality.
And in order to evaluate our expectations according to the reality, we would have to know
the reality, which would mean we would at a fundamental level have to listen to and believe
the original stories of women when they say, this is what happened to me and this is how
I reacted.
If you believed that, you would be able to extrapolate data from that that shows that
that is natural.
But we don't do that.
We just rely on our expectations.
In the legal system, it's been happening.
Black people for centuries, we didn't know in the legal system until very recently that
white people could not accurately identify facial recognition at the level that they do
for white people in police lineups.
And so all those police lineups, we expect, if someone pulls someone out of a police line
up, that's true.
We didn't expect that people would ever under any circumstances confess falsely to a crime.
Now we know that happens all the time. It's because we're getting to these places
where we're actually understanding we need to
adjust our expectations, but that starts with believing people.
You don't believe people, you never adjust expectations.
Yeah, and I think also it's complex, right?
Because in this kind of situation,
someone might go to jail, someone might go to prison.
And so I'm of the belief that the bird of proof
should be very high if we're gonna actually take away
someone's freedom.
I really believe that.
I think for me though, there has to be a way
for being on the stand in a sexual assault case
to not act as a second rape,
which it does for many women describe it as worse, if not as bad,
as the experience of the assault. So it's like, how do we make this less horrific in experience
for people to come forward? And it's really complicated because yeah, we do demand all these
details that are not reasonable at the same time. I do think people deserve a robust defense when
they're being accused of something that could send them to prison. If you've ever walked through prison, which I'm sure you have, like, you know, I, I, I want to know
that we're sure before we send someone and it's really hard in sexual assault cases because
it so often is one version versus another. It's just should people be interrogated in a cruel
punishing humiliating way when they come forward in sexual
cells. Is there another way to do this?
Well, the least we can do is understand trauma when we are investigating trauma, which is
what a trial is, right?
Exactly.
The least we can do is to not have a judge say, well, it's black and white.
It's as simple, are you lying
or telling the truth? Your essay, I believe, is going to do that. Even people
listening to this podcast to understand that the way a woman or a victim acts is
not what we would describe as perfect victimhood. If we as people who are
listening or watching don't say, oh, we'll look of course, if we can understand it and explain that behavior, that is helping. And what do you make of
people over and over again, advising women to not report, to not go into the court system?
Because to me, it's like, do we need a freaking different system for ourselves to protect each other because I am sick of telling women.
Report, just report, just report, no win.
Full well that the system is not set up for them to get any justice or to even be protected.
It's sending them to the wolves.
I think it can be, I'm hopeful it's getting somewhat better.
I do think it's changed a lot since I chose to not come forward.
I wonder if I knew someone like Dr. Laurie Haskell was going to be in the courtroom explaining
my behavior to a jury or to a judge.
I wonder if I would be more inclined to go into that experience.
I think no matter what, it's gonna be really, really horrible
and you need to be in a mental state to go through it
and you have to have your support and your people
and have yourself really set up for it.
I'm hoping it's getting better, but yes,
I think it continues to be a really, really
difficult experience for most women.
Yeah.
Well, it sounds like if the system changes,
it might make women feel more believed to begin with.
Then some of this response with the perpetrator
or in-fending them in some way to change that narrative
for yourself, maybe that in and of itself could also change
if there was a system that could hold
these women's stories and actually believe them.
Yeah, I think so. And I think to just the conversation that I think has been
evolving since the Harvey Weinstein trial and they did call an expert witness in
this stuff, which was key to that case. I do think just I think just having
less rigid expectations around human behavior generally.
Right.
Be nice.
The idea that you did this one thing or there's one inconsistency or you told this one
lie, which means you're a liar.
Or I don't trust you because you took this one position on this one issue.
I can no longer work with you on any other issue.
That might be really useful for a group of people to help progress forward. I don't think social media helps much in this regard, but there's this sense of
with us or against us or good or bad. I think these concepts don't help when we have complex
conversations about how people actually behave and how they protect themselves and how they try
to interpret their behavior to others. And that applies to you say in women talking about one of the characters
as they made us disbelieve ourselves, and that was the worst.
I think this expectation we have of our own self about how we're going to respond
is equally unhelpful as the way the legal system has on us in high school, I got hours later, got
a ride to my haircut appointment from my attacker.
And seeing that as utterly crazy made me question, well, I wouldn't have done that if that
was, you know, and later at my job attacked by my boss that I worked for for years after
ingratiating myself to him. And I think that understanding even helps us because I don't like
this binary that we are put in as a victims, you either go forth as a warrior and bring your case
to the court and you protect other women
or you have to shut your mouth and never say a word and be ashamed of yourself
for not protecting the people who come after you. That is horseshock. All we were doing
is mining our own goddamn business. It wasn't our fault and it's not our obligation
to fix whatever someone did to us. It's their obligation to fix it.
Absolutely. And I have definitely had a lot of people at books,
Unnings and stuff come and sob in my arms about having not come forward.
And the guilt they felt about that. And I mean, I just feel like it's so
awful that people would carry that on top of the experience. None of it belongs to
them. I couldn't understand it more. I obviously didn't come forward in that case for so long.
And also, it's not the only thing I've experienced
like that in my life.
Most people have multiple experiences.
This is the one I wrote about because there was a purpose
in terms of supporting these women
that I felt had been hung out to dry.
But certainly, it's not the only experience I've had.
And in all of them, you do carry all of these questions about, what does it mean that
I didn't come forward?
And again, it's such a complex process to make that decision.
And most people decide not to.
So I feel like for anybody who is carrying that guilt, you're in very good company.
And there's a lot of legitimate reasons to not be ready to tell your story.
Absolutely. And also just praise and kudos to those who find it in themselves too.
Because I think the chilling deterrent effect of knowing that
it is a real and present danger that you will be prosecuted or sued
is very helpful to us to keep us safer. And so all the respect to those people who do come forward
and all the respect to those who don't.
Yeah, or who come forward in different ways.
The court system is not the only way to come forward.
Yeah. I'm Jonathan M. Hevar. I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I want to talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing,
and strangely intimate things about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner,
I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy.
A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now.
Wherever you get your podcasts.
I want to talk about women talking. For any pod squadder who has not seen the movie yet, you will need to see the movie.
This is just like the closest.
We get to a book club, just go see the movie. woman talking was based on a novel written by Mirion Taves, which was inspired by real events that occurred in a
men and night colony in rural Bolivia. It was a 2,500 person, very conservative colony in which boys and men systematically raped approximately 150 girls and women, age 3 to 65.
The attackers used a cow anesthetic to spray it into homes to sedate the entire household
before climbing through the windows. The victims woke up, bloodied and bruised with marks on their arms, but with little memory of the attacks.
And so they were told, these victims were told over and over again,
that the events were the result of quote,
wild female imagination or demons.
In the real life events, eight men were eventually convicted,
and the girls and women stayed in the colony.
But your film, Sarah,
imagines a fictional reckoning. The women in this tight knit,
fundamentalist, pacifist community gather in a bond and they discuss with each other
how best to respond to the abuse. They narrow in the beginning their choices to do nothing, stay in fight or leave.
When I told myself,
you have to go see it sister, just go see it.
I get a text and she gets back and it just says
that was the most powerful thing I've ever seen.
If the whole world saw it,
the world would change overnight.
Oh, thank you.
Amazing.
Just, what do you want to say about it? Just to start off
and then we'll tell you everything we want to say about it.
Sure. I mean, I feel like the most important thing to know about
the film because I think if you see, you know, images from
or the title or or hear what the premise is, I think it can
sound like a lot of hard work.
And I think the most important thing I have to say about it is that when I read this book,
I was really looking for an off-ramp, for grief and rage, and I kind of found it through this book.
And that's kind of what I wanted for this film was that it would give some offering of a way forward
and a way in which we could work together to imagine a better different world.
And so ultimately it was a project of hope. And I think we were we're doing such important work around
identifying harms and we have to continue to do that work. But I think equally if not more important
is imagining what it is we want to build. We want to, not just what we don't want to see. So that so excited me about making this film
and that's what I wanted,
the tone and the spirit of the film to really capture.
Yeah, it sure is how it does.
I know the space on a book and the book is based
on actual events.
To me, it felt like an allegory.
I have been in this conversation over and over.
I've been in actual conversations,
like what happened in that part with women. I know you have. I've been in actual conversations like what happened
in that bar with women and I know you have you've been active forever. I know each of those women
yeah in that circle like I know them some of them inside of myself. I was thinking of people
that I know the one that's just fucking murderous about everybody the one that is breaking down
all the time and we're
mad at her because why does she get to break down? Because we all have to stay strong.
Like, there are archetypes, really, of all of us not in that culture necessarily, but now.
Yeah. I kept using the word fable as we were making the film. This is about all of us. This
isn't a pointed finger. Some misunderstood community where this terrible atrocity
did happen.
It's about looking at all of us and all of the conversations
we're having.
I mean, I feel like you guys do a version of women talking.
Every time I listen to this podcast, I mean,
I mean, some version of women talking.
But it is that sense of how do we get underneath?
You know, what this harm has done to us,
how it's made us treat each other, start moving
through it, have some accountability amongst us and some forgiveness of ourselves and each
other.
And now what?
Like, now what do we get to do?
What do we get to build?
And I also was so interested in the aspect of they're actually not doing this to abandon
their faith.
They're actually doing it to move towards it.
Like they're not. To make it really down. Yeah, and make it real. And like let's take down these
insidious power structures that have been thrown up around our faith, crumble them so we can get to
the what we actually believe. And then how do we manifest that? And that really excited me too,
is I think we can be so obnoxious and elitist about faith communities in film and books.
And I just thought the idea of what if we actually look at what these women's faith feels like to them
in its best iteration, its purest iteration, and then let them have the agency to decide what
that's going to look like out in the world. And people do it in every room. Abby and I in the first
10 minutes when we saw the leaves stay in fight or do nothing. Abhinai looked at each other like, what the fuck?
Like that is literally what I wrote down when I was trying to figure out what to do with
church.
Wow.
Because before I even knew I was queer, going to these fundamentalist churches and hearing
the shit about, well, all the stuff you hear.
And this is what we say to people who come to us who are
sitting in church in pews, where homophobia is being taught or racism isn't being addressed.
You don't pretend, you only have three choices.
You stay, and that means you agree.
Or you stay and raise hell.
Or you get out.
But there's no other option.
So it's just, people are doing this in their families, breaking those structures, they're
doing it in churches, they're doing it in nations, is it fable for our times?
And how do we start over?
I mean, the part that gets me so much, so much of it gets me.
But when they're all sitting around, they're trying to create a new world.
You know, my sister was saying, it's like, you got your first draft.
We keep trying to edit it. But the draft is patriarchy and racism. Like we have to
crumple it up and throw it away and start over. But you can't because the women are saying,
what about our boys? At what age are they the old draft? It's the connection between the two that you can't start over because there's always part of the
old and the new. Yeah, and we've also absorbed it within ourselves. They also each other
apologies because they have acted out the suppression of violence towards each other in various ways
or at least been complicit in some way in terms of one relationship where there's this domestic
abuse situation and a mother has actively encouraged her daughter to forgive this over and over and over again.
And those apologies have to happen before this community can move on together.
There was this amazing experience I had when we first showed the film where these two young women
came up to us who were, I think they were 20 and they had come from a really, really religious community
out west in Canada. And they had kind of fled and there was quite a lot of abuse there. And they
had had to like, sever their relationships with their families basically and give up their entire
life. And they were in a deep state of grief because they felt they had turned their back on
God and their families to live this other
life. And they came out of the film and they told me this whole story and they said, and we realized
that we've just become roommates. We came here alone, went after the hour roommates, and we realized
we don't have to think of it that way. We can just create our own colony. We don't have to turn our
back on what we believe. And I just was like, that was just the most amazing thing
to get to hear after this film is it doesn't have to be
this rigid thing you can create your own version.
And your own version, you can make it real.
Like I want to talk about forgiveness for a minute
because in this community, these women's faith
is real and deep and they want to forgive.
But the choice they're given is, stay and forgive.
That's it.
Forgiv, you should forgive, just forgive.
And so listening to their conversation about,
yes, they believe in a forgiveness
that's deeper than the one that's demanded of them.
They don't want fake compulsive forgiveness.
And so they discuss together, okay,
what are the conditions that we need to create
so that forgiveness might one day come?
And I just want every person listening, like, please listen to that.
Forgiveness is real, it's true, but not compulsory.
It's something that you have to create conditions where maybe it comes one day.
And it's not easy.
And I think thinking about those conditions that you create or what you would need in order to forgive
is the most self-loving project you can possibly embark upon.
Because one of those main conditions
is getting yourself out of harm's way.
Yes.
You cannot forgive when it can be mistaken for permission
to continue violence.
So, and that's what one of the characters does
when they're unpacking that word forgiveness, which I'm so fascinated by because it used to
sound to me altogether pat like I was just always as certain as one thing and
then to unpack it and realize no it can be this deeper richer most beautiful of
things if it's interpreted well and one of the character says perhaps in some
cases forgiveness can be confused with permission. And that came directly from one of our collaborators
on the film who had been living with an abusive partner
for years.
And she said every time after he would hurt me,
he would beg for my forgiveness.
And I always granted it.
And it took me years to realize that every time I was granting
him forgiveness, I was actually giving him permission
to do it again.
And so she started to think of forgiveness
as this very naughty, tricky thing.
And in fact, I think it's that bird's eye view
and pulling back to deeply and truly forgive,
not because you're compelled to,
but because it's there,
what would your life have to look like?
What would have to happen?
How would we need to take care of each other in ourselves? ["The First Time I felt real forgiveness for my ex-husband"]
The first time I felt real forgiveness for my ex-husband
was as soon as we signed the divorce papers
and we were on the elevator on the way down.
And that is because there was a boundary restored
that made me feel safe again.
It's literally called forgiveness,
and we demand it of people like it cannot be given
until we have made ourselves safer than we were
when it happened to us before it completely
agree with you on this being a film that is
primarily about power and hope. I think it's just one of the most hopeful things I've seen
when you start the film with what follows is
an act of the female imagination and
That is the third way that we never consider. We think our
choices to try to like sit here and just make a very violent situation slightly less violent
as opposed to starting over and being like, what would be the world that we could create
that would not have that? We've been talking about faith a lot in this conversation so far and I think it's so easy
to look at these characters as kind of ultra conservative oppressive culture as foreign and to kind
of pity them and even despise them for staying in a culture that puts their children and themselves
their children and themselves in such a course of constant violence. But that is exactly what we do
every day. We are in the barn with them. Among us, we have six daughters. One out of six girls
will be violated through rape or attempted rape. Five out of six of them will be sexually harassed. In the course of our talk today, 40 Americans
will be sexually assaulted.
And of the child victims of that 95% will know their attacker.
So we are raising our kids and living ourselves
in a culture where families, neighbors,
and community members
are violating our children and ourselves.
What did you want to say about what we outside the barn can imagine for our cultures today? for everyone listening to this.
The first thing that I was excited about was the idea of this radical act of democracy
in which people who really don't agree on some fundamental issues have to sit together
and come to some consensus and work it out and that they have to actually acknowledge and listen to each of their lived experience,
and make amends where necessary in order
to move forward together.
I do think that this requires us
allowing each other to not be perfect
when we come to the table and talk about
gender-based violence,
and to come from every side of the political spectrum,
and to move together. I do think like we
have to let go of this idea of I don't agree with you on every single issue. I hated your position on
that one issue. So I'm not going to sit with you in a room and talk about this. I do feel like there
is this huge reimagining that has to be done around what all genders imagine for themselves to be their role. And I think we have assumed these roles
so intensely and it's such a concentrated forum in so many ways that we can't even track.
And so just the idea of being able to be creative with ourselves and with each other,
I do think that the work that you guys do, these conversations are transformative because I think
you are getting underneath things in a public way and you're forcing other people to as well. So in my mind, what I
most hope for are these really rich, difficult conversations. And what's been super interesting
is, you know, I've had very positive experiences with men and I communities in Canada and I have
a lot of men and I friends with men and I input it all the way through this.
And again, it's about all of us.
It's not about men and I communities,
but what's been amazing is hearing that
all of these conservative men and I,
some old colony male and men and I women
are breaking the rules and going to see this movie.
They've never been in a theater in their lives.
There's buggies in parking lot of movie theaters.
And they're singing in four-part harmony
along with the hymns.
No.
And then, cheering at the end and then all staying
and talking and then war are coming back.
The next day, and that is something
I could have never predicted for this film.
Like this film I knew would never be seen by those women.
And it obviously it broke my heart.
I wanted everybody to be able to access it, especially them.
But the idea that they themselves are seeing
it is thrilling to me.
And I'm hearing stories of people staying in the theater and having debates with strangers
and having conversations with strangers.
To me, that's the great hope is that we can actually talk to each other because I think that
is getting harder and harder to do.
And talk to ourselves.
I mean, I've had so many conversations with myself after because you kind of figure out
when you watch, oh, I've had so many conversations with myself after, because you kind of figure out when you watch,
oh, I'm doing that.
Like, there's this one character named Orique,
who is in the most abusive marriage of the group,
and she is there.
And the vibe of the group is judgmental to her,
because she keeps kind of being what would appear to be less strong about the take,
right? She's just like more afraid and more cynical and maybe she just wants to stay. And I'm
annoyed with her and you can tell the other women are annoyed with her. And there is this moment
there is this moment where she looks at the group
and she says, how dare any of you pretend that I had a choice.
Okay, Sarah, a week ago we interviewed Gloria Steinem
and I was asking her, why the hell?
White women still vote for whatever. And I said
it in a very judgmental way. And she said, well, what we have to do is widen their choice.
So many of them, and by the way, I still feel judgmental of them. But what she was trying
to get to me to was, it's not always, it's because their very survival is tied to this thing.
And let's not always pretend that they have a choice, but to stay aligned.
And the idea of a movement, because I think of these women leaving also, it's literally
a movement, they are moving away from an old thing towards a new idea
that they've imagined, because as Sanur and A Taylor says,
we're already living in somebody's imagination.
What we're living in right now
was a bunch of dudes imagination come to life.
One of our jobs as movement makers
is to make another choice for people.
That is real and sustainable and possible and irresistible. And this watching those
women gather up their things to try something new felt like that.
Yeah. And what they couldn't do in order to move forward and what didn't work and the obstacles
they faced before they could move forward
was when they looked at someone else's point of view as stupid or didn't try to understand the
reasons they got there. And I think that was key is that by the end, the person who's the biggest
adversary in that group, they have taken on her story and how she got there. Like why is she
defending the status quo? How are we part of this problem?
What can we do to help heal that?
That is completely pivotal to the fact
that they can move on as a group.
And she has to be able to go with them.
The part that was so powerful to me
about what you're describing is the way that we take in
the way that we take in this violence, and because it's so unmotable, liable, that we have to find someone to put it on.
We have to, and so she becomes the person that receives the anger from everybody else
because she is seen as the one that is the
excuseer of the anger. And that that intergenerational moment where her mother comes to her and accepts
the responsibility for telling her over and over to forgive and to stay. And then as the woman's
own daughter is watching her be attacked by the other woman and she's standing into defend and then you see this moment where she realizes, oh, I understand why my mother could not do that and comes to her feet. most powerful moment I have ever seen in a film. And they cry together because their grief is together.
Their grief is not against each other.
And that is, I think, what we need to do,
we have been doing, as they say in the film,
we've been passing the sack of stones.
The stones were given to us,
and we're just passing it around with each other
because we need someone to hold it because it's too heavy.
And that moment of crying with each other
and just like setting down the sack of stones so that they can move together later was fundamentally transformative.
And everyone needs to see it for the systemic things we're talking about and for the ways that
you can put down the sack of stones that you're holding in your own families. I mean, just
absolutely breathtaking. Oh, I'm so happy to hear that. And also, that sequence for me is my favorite sequence in the film,
also because of how it came to pass, which is Kate Hallett,
the actress who plays Ocha, who comes over to her mother in that moment.
That was not scripted.
That was something she had to do in rehearsal.
She had to do that.
And then Jesse had to kind of whisper, I'm sort of her,
and they had to hold each other.
That was not scripted.
The other thing that wasn't scripted,
the way it is in the film is,
so the apology wasn't in the book
that Greta gives Tamarika about how she's forced
or to forgive her husband over and over again.
And so I wrote it and we shot Jessie's side of it
and one of my closest crew members
had a very emotional response to Jesse's reaction
to this apology, which is just basically everything, all the structures inside her crumble,
and she sees things differently in that one moment of someone apologizing.
And he had an incredibly profound response to it.
He had grown up in a very religious community.
There had been ongoing abuse.
He had never received an apology.
He had been forced to forgive and he needed a minute
after seeing Jesse's performance
and it was really, really profound for him.
And then we turned around on Sheila
and she gave this beautiful performance
but there was something that felt missing
and I turned to him and I said, would that be good enough for you? Like if your parents said that, would it be good enough for you?
And she said no, because she never actually said, I'm sorry.
And I was like, oh my god, I'm so sorry. We can figure this out. So I went to Sheila and said, okay, say the rest of the thing.
She had been crying. I said, don't cry. Let it be about her and center her here. And then if you have to follow apart, like if you can't hold it any more,
see if you can find the words I'm sorry. And then we shot it.
And she said it three times. That was Sheila.
And it was my crew member and Jesse.
And it was this everyone bringing their lived experience to the table to create
this thing that, you know, I could turn to him and say, would that be good enough? And he could look at me and said, yes, absolutely.
I could move through something with my parents after that. And then the daughter, I cannot believe
she did that spontaneously. And then she is the one that gets to cast the final vote.
She is the one that says, we must go because we cannot stay because it isn't just about
protecting herself anymore. She sees her mom, she sees her grandma,
she's got suddenly, it clicks about we cannot.
You must go.
And by the way, that line too
came from someone's love and experience on the film.
It was actually someone who's very close with Sheila,
who talked about getting out of a really bad relationship
and she said, I'm leaving because I cannot stay.
That's the reason I'm leaving.
So we just had so many moments of crew and cast coming up
with these moments and insights that made its way
into the film.
It just felt like this kind of extension of the haloft
where people were bringing everything they had.
And I think it was a very profound experience for a lot of us.
I bet.
Well, it definitely comes across in the film.
I actually haven't been able to stop thinking about it
because I keep finding myself and everybody,
and every character.
And I keep having to forgive myself
for having certain reactions and certain moments
of my life for not saying something,
for being status quo, for being the one who's like,
we gotta get the fuck outta here.
I could see all of this,
but I didn't have a place to go with it.
And so it was just living inside of me,
and it was like, I don't know,
your film has given me a pathway,
not just in terms of creating a future
that I don't have yet or a path,
but it gave me an opportunity to forgive myself for being every single
one of those women in that barn.
Amen.
And to show us how to love each other, I relate to two mostly, well three, but one was the
one that just wanted to kill everybody.
I understand that deeply.
I have that in me just like fuck it.
Like they are killing.
I have that in me and burn it down.
Burn it all down. Yeah. So to have the other women, I could start crying talking about this,
but to have their reaction be, okay, y'all, what do we have to do so that Glennon doesn't
kill anybody? Yes. Not like you shouldn't want to kill anybody.
You shouldn't, you change that.
What do we as a group have to do?
So she doesn't do this thing because actually
there's a part of that that's right and true.
That's right. That's right.
And not to protect them.
To protect me.
Yeah. Yeah.
She cannot be the recipient of or the perpetrator of violence because
that's not good for her soul.
That's right.
So what circumstances do we surround her with so that she doesn't have to become a murderer?
Because she will have to be a better version of Goodbye Earl.
It's like a better version.
If we could get a step further from Goodbye by our all it would be women talking.
Okay. That's our new tagline. That's our new tagline. All the posters just change.
But that's why every woman's perspective and experience is so important. You need the
rager. Yeah. Because sometimes the rager is the one that gets you like up and on your
feet and like, oh, fuck, we got to get out of here. But then you also need the other folks in the group, in the barn, in your homes to be like,
hey, listen, we need to find a new path.
So you actually don't commit violence because that wouldn't be good for you.
Yeah, but you don't have to change.
This thing has to change.
Yeah.
All of their perspectives are essential.
Like they can't, they wouldn't get to where they get if they didn't have all of those
responses. Yeah. So I also love they have the three choices clearly. And then one, I think it's one
of the little girls who says we could ask the men to leave as a fourth option. And everyone just
bursts out laughing because it's this almost like shocking,
fully humorous idea that that would be on the table.
And it really stuck with me because it's like,
we continue to ask ourselves what we can do to avoid right.
How can we decrease this violent epidemic
through policy, judicial, educational system change
as if asking men to stop raping is shocking and laughable.
It truly was a must-eat chance.
Because it's like, wait, they could leave, wait.
We could do all of these things over the next 60 years,
or men could just stop raping people.
Yeah. I'm so excited. I'm so excited. I'm so excited. I'm so excited. I'm so excited.
I'm so excited.
I'm so excited.
I'm so excited.
I'm so excited.
I'm so excited.
I'm so excited.
I'm so excited.
I'm so excited.
I'm so excited.
I'm so excited.
I'm so excited.
Sarah.
Sarah.
Yes.
We like your work.
Sarah.
Sarah.
Sarah.
Sarah.
Sarah. Sarah. Sarah. So thank you. I mean so much. I was like getting people when you at some point
were saying on Twitter or Instagram, we were like, who should we have on? I literally had like 20
friends go on social media and recommend me. So I feel like, is this a stalker's dream come true?
Women's tweeting, women's tweeting. No, let me tell you, Alison, who is our person, who is our,
When she's eating, no, let me tell you, Alison, who is our person, who is our, we have Alison Dina and then the people you see here.
And Lauren, she said, I just think you're, I really think you need to know the Sarah Polly
person.
And then I just dove in and she's, she's always right.
Thank you to her.
So I will be watching the Oscars.
I don't always, but I will this time.
Thank you.
How are you feeling?
Is that so weird?
Like what?
It's thrilling.
It's totally thrilling.
I'm a little bit out of it,
and I don't follow these things closely.
I didn't realize that when you get nominated for best picture,
way more people see your movie and talk about your movie.
Yes.
Of course, that's a bit.
I just don't know, because I never do that.
I'm too lazy to watch all those movies.
So that's been really exciting.
And I've gotten to meet some amazing other filmmakers
and get to be part of conversations.
And so the whole thing has been kind of incredible.
I'm so happy for you because I know through reading you
that you used to have this idea, the activism,
and art are like two different things.
And then art is in like real activism,
which is I'm constantly struggling with all the time.
But this movie is freaking, it is activism, it is,
it is, it's gonna change everybody who watches it.
And then one day, will you come back and talk to me
about your documentary because.
Oh my God.
I would love to.
So fucking good.
I feel like, just like, slot me in here.
I'll stand this little box for ever.
Okay.
God.
I got nothing else.
My sister said, it's too much.
You can't also talk about her documentary, but I have our interview written up.
I just feel like we are both trying to be the mystery and the detective of our lives and
just chasing our tale over and over again. And so I'd love to come back and talk about narrative.
Pod, squad, go see women talking. Also pick up front towards the danger. I could have
talked about every essay in that book. I just loved it so much. We're in your corner.
We will continue to be women talking. I just want to thank you because I feel like that film that you made. It's a gorgeous story, it's a powerful story.
It's also, it has all of the elements of revolution, of a female new revolutionary way in it.
And it is like a text for how we can have a different world that isn't just editing this
shitty draft of a world that we have now.
And so I truly desperately want you to win an Oscar because I desperately need the world
to watch this film every single person.
It would be a different world.
And if you're wondering what squad if guys should watch it too, for them, it should be mandatory.
Yeah.
Okay.
They need to watch it twice.
Yes.
I also think, Sarah, I think that it's important just to say this, keep going because whatever
you come up with in terms of a plan, I'll follow your shit.
Let's go.
Just write it up, put it in a movie Wherever you go like you are a person that that is
Just incredible your genius and call us call us next time. I'm collaborating with you by myself
We can get so much more done if you are real
I can't let I made it through this without sobbing. I'm so proud of myself
I just felt it just don't cry.
Don't cry that you're on that beautiful,
with those beautiful women.
I didn't cry, but I came close at the end.
I'll be almost got me.
That's you really does.
She always gets serious.
She's just.
Thank you, Sarah.
As Abby says, keep going.
Thank you.
Bye, Potsquat.
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