We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - The Pep Talk You, Your Grad & the Country Needs!
Episode Date: May 24, 2023For graduates (and all of us), it’s scary and hard to know the way forward. Listen to Abby tell the Class of 2023 (and all of us) the way! Thank you to Loyola Marymount University.  To lear...n 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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So it's graduation season, my favorite. And today, I'm celebrating every single member of the class of 2023.
Everyone who is graduating and everyone who loves a graduate. This is such a thrilling
overwhelming, inspiring, and sometimes scary time, and we are thinking of you. In honor
of all you've endured and accomplished, and all the promise and hope you're bringing
out into the world you will create, I'm sharing with you the message I gave to the graduating
class of Loyola Merrimont University, a Catholic University. In it, I finally speak up for my little
Catholic gay girl self and for all who have felt unsafe or unvalued in the places they deserve
to feel most safe and valued. I got pretty emotional at the response. I hope it might bring you
or the little self in you, some inspiration today.
And share this with all the graduates you are celebrating this month, or anyone who needs
a little encouragement to keep doing hard things.
Congratulations, graduates and families.
We love you. Abby Wombach is a two-time Olympic gold medalist, World Cup champion, six-time winner of the
U.S. soccer athlete of the year award, a national soccer hall of famer, and has been most influential people in the world by Time Magazine. Abby's professional soccer career is without equal.
She is still the highest all-time goal scorer for the US national team, the lead scorer in two World Cup tournaments and as more World Cup goals
than all other U.S. players.
At the time of her retirement in 2015, she was the highest scorer in the world for women and men
with 184 goals.
That's only part of Abby's story.
Her impact extends well beyond the field.
She has leveraged her prominence to advocate for and advance social justice causes
that are consonant with LMU's mission.
Seeking to create the world we want to live in, social justice causes that are consonant with LMU's mission.
Seeking to create the world we want to live in, Abby is an activist for equality,
pay equity, diversity, and inclusion, and serves on the DEI Council for the U.S. Soccer Federation.
She is on the board of directors for Together Rising, a program that has revolutionized
grassroots philanthropy to support women,
children, and families in crisis.
Abby is an ambassador to athlete ally and part owner of Angel City FC, Los Angeles'
team in the National Women's Soccer League.
And if that weren't enough, Abby is the author of three books, including number one times bestseller Wolfpack, how to
come together, unleash our power, and change the game, in which Abby's unwavering commitment
to celebrating the accomplishments of her teammates and rushing toward the joy and
shared feet of achievement is particularly inspiring on this glorious day when we honor
every single person here.
For her remarkable achievements,
Loyola Mary Mountain University is proud to bestow
on Abby Wombach, the degree of Doctor of Humane Letters,
O'Narris Causa. Congratulations, Dr. Wombach. Congratulations. Graduates, families, and friends,
I am proud and pleased to introduce
our commencement speaker, Dr. Abby Wombok.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Wow, that's exciting.
Dr. Wombok from now on.
When I was four, dreaming of being a professional women's soccer player one day, I was imagining
a world that did not exist.
There was no such thing as being a woman professional soccer player.
Last week, along with the other owners, my wife and I stepped onto the field at the bank stadium
for the home opener of the first majority-owned women's professional soccer franchise
in history, Angel City FC.
Applause
Sheldor to Sheldor with Billie Jean King, Mia Hamm, Julie Fowdy, and Shannon Box.
I looked up into the sold-out stands, packed with ecstatic faces of thousands of Los Angeles
families, as fireworks exploded and smoke cleared to reveal the angel city players triumphantly
taking the field.
As we left the field to go to our seats, I saw
a father holding the hand of his daughter, maybe four years old, wide eyed, with ketchup
already dripping down her tiny angel city jersey. He caught my eye, pointed at his little
girl, and then at the sold-out crowd, and yelled to me above the roar, this is the only world
she'll ever know. Thank you. The next morning, I started writing the speech. I said yes to
the invitation to speak to you today when I learned that LMU is a Catholic school in the Jesuit and Marymount
traditions.
You see, I was a little gay girl in Catholic schools and churches, and while there was
much about it, I loved.
While there was much about it, I loved, I didn't always feel loved back. I often felt unvalued and unsafe,
being who God made me be.
In the one place I should have felt safest and most valued.
So I stand in front of you today in honor of that little girl
and in honor of everyone who has felt
otherd in their school, in their church, in their family, in their nation.
Over time, I have come to understand the Christian mandate to do unto others as as you have them do unto you like this,
that every good thing a Christian wants for themselves and their family, they must demand
for everyone and all families.
So if one calls himself a Christian and wants a fair wage, healthy, affordable food, gender affirming
healthcare for his children, the right to marry the love of his life, save schools for
his kids, the protection of the law and police force, the security of his bodily autonomy and
dignity.
If he wants that for himself, he must fight for these things for everyone. That clear mandate to do to others as you'd have them do to you, no matter how it's been
bypassed or co-opted by power, is still to spend one's life fighting.
Fighting for black and brown folks, for queer and trans folks, for women, for the neurodivergent, for
the poor and old and disabled, for all who have been othered.
That is our what.
So our next question is how?
As you already know, tables are a big deal in the corporate and social justice worlds.
We are forever discussing who does and doesn't get a seat at the table.
How to get a seat at the table?
And what to say when and if we get to that table?
My understanding is that Jesus was into tables too.
Specifically, the flipping of them.
I think he had the right idea. Here are three ways to flip tables of power.
Number one, dig deeper, demand numbers.
When you go out into the world,
stop believing organizations when they tell you who they are.
Demand to see proof, not with
words, with numbers. Pride Month is next month. As you might imagine, I am very, very well
employed during Pride Month.
Many organizations want to use my face
to prove that they stand for equality.
So my job is to first make sure they actually do
so we're not all lying.
So when they asked me to show up for Pride Month,
I asked them to first show me their history of speaking out
against inhumane laws against
trans kids, their electoral contributions, the queer leaders that they employ at the highest
levels and how much they pay them.
Instead of being distracted by institutions waving flags of Black Lives Matter, Pride,
Women's History Month, and Earth Day, ask them to wave their budgets, leadership rosters,
profit reports, and environmental impacts instead. Flag alone does not tell you who a family or a company or a school or a country is.
Its investment does.
Do not accept performative support without systemic proof.
Flip those tables by digging deeper and demanding numbers.
Number two, at every table you find yourself,
get aligned and stay aligned.
A few years ago, during a fancy meeting, I attended,
the agenda included the topic of women's experience
at the intersection of sports and media.
Serenoliums and I were at the table,
along with many other male executives and athletes,
one of whom was an NFL quarterback.
This question was posed to the table.
What do we need to know about women's experience
in sports and media?
I paused, I looked at Serena to see if she wanted to start.
During that pause, the NFL quarterback
began speaking with great authority
for a very long time.
About women's sports.
At a table with Serena Williams and me.
I sat there silently for too long.
I was internally screaming at myself,
why are you being silent?
The answer is, I was nervous
because this quarterback was a big deal.
I wanted him to think I was cool.
And I wanted the other powerful men at the table
to see me as a team player.
If I were to get really honest with myself, I think I wanted those men to see me as one
of them, as one of the boys.
That's when I realized I was misaligned.
I wasn't there to fall in line with the quarterback at the table.
I was meant to stay aligned with every woman in sport
who wasn't yet at the table.
It is very tempting, you can clap.
You can clap.
Thank you.
You can clap.
You can clap.
You can clap.
You can clap.
You can clap.
You can clap.
You can clap.
You can clap.
You can clap.
You can clap.
You can clap.
You can clap. You can clap. You can clap. You can clap. You can clap. very tempting when we finally make it to the table, to do everything we can to stay there.
We think we are there to preserve our seat.
Instead of remembering, we are there to use our seat.
I finally held up my hand and I said,
I'm gonna interrupt you, NFL quarterback.
He got quiet and Serena and I held the rest of the conversation as God herself intended.
When you are the one at the table with the least privilege, speak up and when you are the one at the table with the most
privilege please shut up. Number three, live your solidarity out loud. I'm a
member of a group that makes decisions about soccer in America and for
background the US women's Soccer team
has been more successful over the years than the men's team.
We've won four World Cup championships.
Well, the men haven't yet won one.
They've got a chance this year.
And I will be cheering for them, because one of my core beliefs
is that boys can do anything that girls can do.
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Four times.
Four times.
So even though an American soccer success has been female led, most of the governing bodies
are still widely and disproportionately male led.
I decided to say something about this inequity on a formal conference call.
I was nervous, so I prepared in advance.
I gathered up all the other women who I knew would be at the meeting and told them to be
ready so we could amplify each other. The call began. I sat in my little Zoom square and looked
at the 40 other little Zoom squares, mostly filled with men, and I stumbled and stammered,
but I said the things. They were obvious things. And even though the borrow is proposing was so very low, not a single
man on that call spoke up to support my suggestion that we begin to even the playing field. Not
a single one. I got off that call feeling shaken, embarrassed, and enraged. And then
this amazing thing started happening. I began to
receive texts and emails from some of the men who had been silent on that call.
These messages said things like, hey Abby, that was really brave. I totally agree
with you. Or, hey, loved your courage. I've got your back. I stared at those messages. I've got your back.
And I thought,
do you? Do you really Chad?
Of course not.
You see, Chad wanted solidarity points
for silent, secret, too late solidarity.
He didn't want to show solidarity when that support
would have put his alignment with the old boys club at risk. He wanted
solidarity without risk, but there is no such thing as solidarity without risk.
When a brave soul at a table dares to speak up for those not at the table, for those not
yet in whatever club that table represents, do not let her fall down and then privately
swear you have her back.
Catch her in real time.
Let us once and for all decide that there is no such thing as silent solidarity.
So, LMU Class of 2022!
We've got the what and we've got some house, so now we must address the where.
The world out there is big.
Sometimes, when I watch the news, it all just feels too big, too broken, too
far gone. It's hard to know where to start. Jewish wisdom tells us, do not be
daunted by the enormity of the world's grief. You are not obligated to
complete the work, but neither are you free to abandon it. As you head out into the big world,
forget about the big world.
But don't you dare abandon the small worlds,
the ones you can see and hear and touch.
The only worlds you're obligated to change
are the small ones, the office you're in,
the relationship you're in, the uber you're in,
the dinner table you're at and the relationship you're in, the uber you're in, the dinner table you're at,
and the community in which you live.
Remember that little girl in the Angel City, Jersey
whose whole world was at stadium?
After that game, she went out into the bigger world,
the future.
Understanding the world as a place
where women play at the highest level
and women run organizations at the highest level and women run organizations at the highest level
And women stand shoulder to shoulder with other women on the most important fields in the world
She left the stadium with that reality and she will become a ripple that affects eternity
So for God's sake
Don't spend your life watching the news.
It's all bad news.
Instead, be the news.
In fact, you're supposed to be the good news, right?
The good news I have for you today, LMU,
is that there are worlds out there waiting to be forever
changed by you. Loyola Merrimaut University, graduating
class of 2022, go forth and make a new world by doing unto others as you'd have them do tables. If this podcast means something to you, it would mean so much to us.
If you'd be willing to take 30 seconds to
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