We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Tracee Ellis Ross: How to Make Peace in Your Own Head
Episode Date: January 10, 2023This moving conversation delving inside the “wonderful, dangerous” mind of Tracee Ellis Ross covers: 1. Tracee’s go-to strategies to stop questioning herself, to pick herself up when she feels ...unlovable, and to tether herself to her truest self. 2. How she made peace with the fact that she’s “not everyone’s cup of tea” – and stopped trying to change the things about her that others don’t like (but she does). 3. Inside Tracee’s 50th birthday party – the honor of being “Fifty and Free,” and what moved her to sing her mother’s song in her mother’s dress. 4. Tracee’s recent personal journal entry rejecting the lie that a woman’s purpose is to be “chosen” – and how she creates a beautiful, full life outside the roles of mother and partner. 5. Tracee’s incredible view of friendship: How to be brave enough to become a barnacle in your friends’ lives, and to find your Cauldron people About Tracee: Tracee Ellis Ross is an award-winning actress and producer best known for her roles in ABC’s award-winning comedy series BLACK-ISH and GIRLFRIENDS. For her role as “Rainbow Johnson” in BLACK-ISH, as a comedic leading actress, Ross won the Golden Globe Award in 2017 as well as nine NAACP Image Awards. She was nominated for five Emmys and two Critics Choice Awards. Ross is the CEO and Founder of Pattern, a haircare brand for the curly, coily and tight textured masses. Ross recently executive produced and narrates Hulu’s THE HAIR TALES, a docuseries about Black women, beauty and identity through the distinctive lens of Black hair. Upcoming, Ross will be producing a ten-episode podcast “I Am America,” which aims to break through the noise during this divided time in our country in an effort to create space and to heal. TW: @TraceeEllisRoss IG: @traceeellisross To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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And I continue to believe that I'm the one for me.
Hi!
Hi, Tracy Ellis Ross.
You all welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
I'm going to really rush through the intro because today we have one of my favorite people.
Is that not true?
It is very true.
On this entire planet.
Tracy Ellis Ross is an award-winning actress
and producer best known for her roles in ABC's
award-winning comedy series Blackish and Girlfriends
for her role as Rainbow Johnson in Blackish
as a comedic leading actress.
Ross won the Golden Globe Award in 2017
as well as nine NWACP image awards. She was nominated for five Emmys and two critics choice awards.
Ross is the CEO and founder of Pattern, a hair care brand for the curly, coily, and tight textured
masses. Ross recently executive produced and narrates
who lose the hair tails. Amazing. A docu series about black women beauty and identity through
the distinctive lens of black hair. Upcoming Ross will be producing a 10 episode podcast
I am America, which aims to break through the noise during this divided time in our country.
Did you know that? I did not. And I'm so proud of that.
I can't wait to share that.
I can't wait.
Yeah, I honestly can't wait for you to hear it.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
This is so funny, Lizzy.
You know what's funny about it?
It's funny to listen to a friend read your stuff.
Because it has nothing to do with our connection.
Yeah. And so it's funny.
It was like it my birthday when my friends had the mic
run I was so tickled.
That's what we want to talk about.
We first of all we decided we're going to do this interview
differently than we ever do interviews.
Because we don't want it to be like if this is your
life thing.
Because what I told my sister and Abby is that I just
thought of this category of person, but you are my,
I'll have what she's having. Yes. When you look at someone and you're with them and you spend time
with them and you see who they are in the world, and you're just like, I will have what she's having.
Yeah. And I just truly find you to be one of the most unique and wise and magnificent women
I know.
And it's how kind.
Well, most people are like one thing or another thing.
You just kind of like pick something and go with it.
But you are so raw and real and also glamorous.
Yes.
You're so powerful and poised but also very transparent and tender.
It's just all the things at once.
And so now I get to have you for an hour
and do what I've always wanna do,
which is I need you to tell me everything you know.
Okay.
Okay.
And you're sad.
We kinda did that in my old house.
I know.
I know.
I mean I'm so happy to meet you as well.
It's like crazy.
Your voice is like a part of my world.
I haven't had time with you.
Yeah, so it's lovely to meet you.
This is fun.
It's fun.
First of all, what you just said about me,
it's so interesting to have mirrored back
a version of yourself that is actually the version
you want to be, you know?
And to get to a place in an age where it's happened, back a version of yourself that is actually the version you want to be, you know, and
to get to a place in an age where it's happened a couple, there's a couple of different times
in my life and I go, oh, okay, like despite what it feels like sometimes in the stranger's
neighborhood that is my mind, sometimes it's a great place and sometimes like don't go
in there alone.
Despite sort of some of that inner dialogue and that really bad story that happens in my head.
Every once in a while I catch glimpses of the way
I'm actually presenting and it's a nice moment
of validation and encouragement of like,
okay, you're doing okay,
you're moving in the right direction.
I think so, Tracy.
You are.
If you're not, we're all fucked. If you're not, we're gonna stop trying.
So, can you explain to my sister,
and because I've already talked to Abby about this ad nauseam,
but what you talked to me about cauldron sisters.
Yeah.
Talk to me about what the cauldron is.
So, I have this theory that souls are made in bunches. And I don't know mother
nature, someone somewhere, some beautiful gathering of people, they have these big
cauldrons that they make people in, that they make souls in. And it's souls, honestly, not
people. And, you know, they're like, okay, what's this, and this one's gonna have, I don't know, a little bit of,
a little bit of heartbreak, but a lot of joy.
I don't know, and these are gonna be people
who have really open hearts and whatever.
And then they go, when they're cooked,
when the little veggies are cooked in their souls,
they like sprinkle them out through time.
And some of them are like, you know,
they were back in 1816 and one goes in a dog
and one goes in a lizard and one goes in a Abby
and one goes in a Glenin and one goes in an Amanda
and they're like all over the place.
And then you don't know when or how
or what's gonna bring you to another cauldron fellow,
sister or whatever, whomever.
But you meet someone and you're like,
oh, we're from the same suit.
Oh my God, this is exactly correct.
Right?
Like, it's one of those things where you're just like,
I don't know what it is.
Like, why do I feel like I've known you forever?
It's like, oh, we have the same map.
We have the same ingredients.
And although the time period were from
or the town were from or whatever,
like, there was nothing that you would think
would make our lives match.
Somehow we come from the same ingredients.
Do you know what those things are?
That's interesting.
I really find that I am from the same soup of people
who, because I say that there's some people
where there's a lot of matches on the external things
and then there's the people that it's just like
the inner road map is just similar,
the things that soothe and comfort
and the willingness to have
the inside conversation,
on the outside, the deep conversation,
the transparency, and the thing that's interesting
is sometimes, like I mean, you know, we don't see each other all the time.
But I have called you in tangly moments and I've run into you on planes.
And somehow there's a connection that is beyond the circumstances of our life. And so maybe the people from my cauldron
the circumstances of our life. And so maybe the people from my cauldron,
also I do think back in the day
I would have been certainly burned at the stage.
Totally.
Definitely a witchy lady.
I know I kind of think our cauldron is literal.
I think it's a literal.
It might be.
Yeah.
It really might be.
We might actually be out of a steaming cauldron.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, it looks so much.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I always say that when you hear those old stories
about the women that were burned at the stake
because of their beliefs and their feelings
and their instincts and their intuition
and their deep soul calling, I read their description.
And I'm like, huh, that sounds like a really great lady.
Yes.
Every damn time.
Yeah, I'm like, hmm, that sounds like someone
I would really want to be friends with.
Yeah, every time you hear of a witch,
you think, cold-dream sister.
I think that's my sis.
Speaking of, so Abby and I were freaking lucky enough to be at your recent 50th birthday celebration
of life.
It was so freaking beautiful.
Yes.
It was a cauldron of your people.
It was, and I really appreciate you guys coming out of the house because I know for me
and for you, that's not an easy thing.
Well, I would do anything for love chasing.
I literally even do that.
I'm one of those people that I'm like, yeah, I would love to go, but do I really want
to leave the house?
Yeah.
I'm always thinking, oh, I wish I wanted to go.
Oh, that's the best.
That's exactly right.
That's exactly right.
So I have to tell you, we were there for maybe 10 minutes when maybe six people had come
up to us and introduced themselves to us as your best friend.
Yep.
Okay.
I just started.
Now that's what I do.
I do interviews.
I just say I'm glad in Toilom, Tracy Ellis Rasse's best friend.
But it was amazing how many people were so you're just beloved to people.
One woman told us that you were the only person who was in her delivery room delivering
her twins and she told us this next to her husband.
I kept thinking, oh.
He was on a business trip.
She was on hospital rest with her twins.
She had to be in the hospital hooked up to things.
And he happened to go for a 24 hour,
he literally had to go somewhere for a work trip.
And so I was on call and I got the call.
Oh my God.
And I was jiv right there.
And then I switched off.
And then when he arrived, I had,
but I was the first one to hold them. Oh. Philly and Clover. And then I switched off. And then when he arrived, I am, but I was
the first one to hold them. Oh, filling and clover. And it was really magical. I have to
say the doctor actually said, because you know, they put the little curtain up. And the
doctor was like, you can actually sit down. You don't have to watch. I was like, no, I'm
fine. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And I was like, actually, can you scoot over a little bit? Yeah,
it was like, yeah, you're blank little bit? Yeah, you're blocking my view. I'm sorry.
It was amazing.
You have described yourself as a barnacle on your good friend's lives.
I just love that image so much that you insist upon and allow yourself to be a barnacle.
Talk to us about that.
Yeah, you know, there's a really interesting thing.
I am single.
I have been single. I have been single.
I've been single for a very long time.
I've had many wonderful ins and outs of things,
but no one stuck to the pan.
And as a result,
I get to curate my family, my chosen family around me.
And I don't think I realized the gift of that
until I've started to get older, but my friend
Samira, she's the one that coined that barnacle phrase.
And she did a toast.
She did a toast.
She did the toast.
Yeah.
So Samira, I met when I was 22 at Mirabelle Magazine when I went to work as an intern in the
fashion department there, and she was also an intern. She's now the editor-in-chief of Harper's Ozark. Yeah, we've been through all these
journeys together and really it's just the best metaphor because it's like you think of a
barnacle like you know I keep thinking of those people that are like chord with scraping the
barnacles off the bottom of the boat that like't want to go and they've made home there
and then they shackle the other barnacles
and they're attached to the boat
and making a life on a thing that's not really
where they're supposed to be
because it's supposed to be on a rock, not a boat.
And that's what I feel like.
I feel like I'm on the back of Samirah's butt.
Just like that.
I got you, girl.
You can't even reach me if you try and scrape me on.
I was like, I remember someone saying once,
I tried to get rid of that relationship,
but it was like gum on your shoe.
There's always like residue up at somewhere, you know.
And it's the best residue.
I mean, you know, the history that occurs over,
so Monica and Samarro were the two that gave
that back and forth speech together. And Monica and Samir were the two that gave that back and forth speech together.
And Monica and I met in college. I was 17, 18, 17. We were both 17. Our boyfriends were best friends.
And they're long gone. Wow. They are long gone. They were not barnacles. They were not
barnacles. They were like, they were like the people with the brush
and you're like,
look with that.
Good luck with that, buddy.
So Monica, 17, Samira, when I graduated from college
and was interning, I met her at 22, I'm 50 now.
So these are long run situations.
And Monica's an only child. So I'm the sister.
I remember her son, we were together somewhere
and there's a video of it.
It's fantastic.
I'm sitting on Monica's lap or she's sitting on my lap.
And he was like, what are you guys doing?
That's weird.
And Monica said, this is what people do.
They love each other.
This is what it looks like kid.
Get used to it.
Cause this is it.
You know, I love it.
And yeah, so Barnacle, I'll be there,
I'll be there on there.
What was that friend song?
I'll be there for you.
I only hear it six times a day, so.
Yeah.
I just love that idea of it being okay to be stubbornly stuck
to someone.
Cause I think so many of us are afraid of being a burden.
And I'd love the claiming of that.
I absolutely am afraid of being a burden.
I think one of the things, I can't remember who said this to me,
that not one friend or one person has to be all things to you
at all times, which is really helpful.
Because I come from some wiring and information
that might have told me something a little bit confused.
Not me.
My messages were very clear.
And yeah, really clear.
I'm not unpacking any of those in the adult.
No, no, no.
So patriarchy didn't teach me nothing.
No.
So what do you mean?
Well, so we go back to this model that you're sold,
that we not only are we sold it, but we are fed it,
and we have to drink it, and it's everywhere.
And if you're not careful, you actually think it's true.
And it's the only bit of news for you, which
is that my job as a woman is to learn to be
chooseable. Having nothing to do with who I am, what makes my heart sing, floats my
boat, makes me feel safe, makes me feel comfortable, makes me feel good, makes me
feel powerful, makes me feel smart. Any of those things, but really is more about
how I might be seen
so that I might be chosen so that my life could mean something
as a chosen woman who then gets to have a child
and then be a mother and do that for a child.
So our culture sells us this
and there's nothing wrong with that journey,
but if it's a chosen journey, as opposed to the one that you think is going to make you worth anything.
And and then everything starts to fall into that messaging.
And then if you're a black woman, there's like a whole other blah, blah, blah.
There's so many different versions of that, but that's like that overarching thing as a woman.
And then your friendships fall into that whole too.
So if you haven't been chosen for a guy,
then you're gonna fill all that God-sized hole
and all those different things with a friend,
and then you become the best friend.
And then it just, you know,
all it just gets all real tangled and real confusing.
I've been grateful enough to have found places
where there are eons of tools in different ways to unpack that crazy messaging.
Make sense of it in a way that actually gives me a shot at genuine happiness and a robust life that's actually mine.
And it's like a daily reprieve.
Some days are better than others. Some days the old messaging comes in, sweeps in,
and I've got a really nice matching story that goes with it
of my unloved ability, that narrative that just kind of travels
along with it, and if I'm not careful and go into, you know,
that thinking alone, I get stuck there.
And then, you know, you come out.
But that was a long-winded way of saying, you know.
It was a lot.
A lot.
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 wanna 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.
I want to follow up really quick. How do you not go into your own mind or thinking alone?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like?
What is that look like? What is that look like? What is that look like? What is that look like? What is that look like? and private, some of those, you know, but I don't share them necessarily publicly.
But friendship has been the biggest and the willingness to be completely transparent
and to be able to call people when I am on the floor, whether it's metaphorically or physically
on the floor, but when in my mind I have been floored, which happens often.
I can't remember the, I think it's friendship,
the tools that tether me, this is actually something
I got from you, tether me to what I like best about my life,
which is the basic things.
Yes.
My favorite part of my life is my life. I love all the stuff, but like I really like
my making my bed in the morning or doing laundry or making my food or
taking the garbage out. Like just the basics that really tether me to my own humanity and my own
sense of self and being able to show up and be of service and all of those things. I have so many different tools
that keep me out of my, it's honestly like the, my mind is a wonderful place. It gets dangerous when I get connected to the really bad horror story
that I have been stitching together
since I was young, you know?
And somehow if I get, if I fall back into that group,
it is so dangerous up there.
And then everything's colored by the wrong information.
Everything.
Yeah.
It's like our minds are such, I mean,
yours especially like magical creep, things come out of it that are
unbelievable, not of this world. And that's when you're in charge of it. When you give it a job, yes,
when it gives you a job, like when you haven't directed it, no good.
You know, is it when I haven't directed it?
That's an interesting distinction.
I don't know.
Sometimes I don't know what it is that starts it.
Mm-hmm.
Because sometimes it's not connected
the way I think it is.
It could be like two days ago,
I was with somebody who started me being afraid
about something.
Mm-hmm. And then somehow that fear like starts to snowball somebody who started me being afraid about something.
And then somehow that fear like starts to snowball
and then it starts reaching into other areas.
Like once they start getting afraid,
you could just start with a little anxiety, you know,
and I think I've shared this with you.
I'm one of these people that, I don't know what,
I don't know how this happened, but I don't get scared
of stuff until after. Yeah. Like I'm a girl that like that, I don't know what, I don't know how this happened, but I don't get scared of stuff until after.
Yeah.
Like, I'm a girl that like jumps off a cliff, right?
I'm like, oh my god, let's do it.
This is the scariest thing in the world.
I'm gonna do it.
I'm gonna get organized.
I'm gonna do this.
I'm gonna make this list.
I'm gonna do my research.
I'm gonna make sure I'm rehearsed.
I'm gonna make sure I know what I'm wearing.
How I'm doing it?
Who's gonna be there?
What are you doing?
Follow me.
And then I go, psh, t. And I jump off the cliff and I on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on Why would you do that? Oh my God, you're so dumb.
This is actually evidence.
Put that in the fire of unlovable.
That shit is going to roar.
We're going to make sure that we go back through every single thing that you did with a fine
tooth goma.
And we're going to prove to you that you are exactly the most unlovable, stupid,
humiliating person in the world.
How could you ever, you are filled with shame, you are riddled with it.
And then that's what happens on the next day.
Like it's out of control.
It's like out of control.
Oh, shit.
Risk came over.
Wow.
Yeah, it's a risk hangover.
And then what's crazy is like in that state,
someone could say, oh my God, that was so amazing.
They could say one thing and I can hear that they were covering,
they were telling me the part they liked.
But then it's my job to figure out all the things
that I did wrong that they didn't like.
Yes. And the truth is, some of that is an ace in my deck, right? Because
I'm not going to make a mistake twice. I'll say that. Some of it's an ace in my deck,
but when left unchecked without compassion and tenderness and kindness, and when I'm alone with it, he's in no when
Gentle gentle gentle gentle one of my favorites like give it twice And then I have another friend who always says to me give yourself a thousand breaks and when those are done
Give yourself a thousand more. Yes, and I'm much better at that as I've gotten older one of the things I learned from
Pay my children that was the most not that I know her
But from her from from her books.
From her books and the two.
But she's walking around going, hi, I'm Pima Children.
I'm Tracy Ellis Ross's best friend.
Best friend.
Listen, there's a guy in the background.
By the way, Glent and Abby, when people found out that you,
they were like, wait, your friends with them?
Oh.
Oh.
It was amazing.
I was like, yeah, that's whether, yeah, we're best friends.
That's where they're.
What, you didn't, yeah, I don't, I don't talk about, you know, my, my, my, my, my friends.
So, um, but one of the things I learned from my dear friend, Pima, um, was if I can't take the
information in, like, there's times when it's not the time for me to look back.
And I can wait until I can actually look back constructively and not in a way that's going to
create another wound. It's good and more wound. And I'm learning as I've gotten older to be
delivered about my aftercare. So like I had a plan the day after my birthday. What was it?
So like I had a plan the day after my birthday. What was it?
It involves going somewhere
where I could have proper support
and be a part of a community that supports me in that way.
And I gave myself the day I left for copper the next day.
So I had all day to look through and make sure I felt
okay about it.
I have to like see it back for myself, to hold it in a way that it actually remains.
And one of the things I do with my therapist is before something, we now ask the question,
how do you want to feel after?
And what do I need to put in place to support myself in the after?
And I'm such an independent person.
One of the things I really am not good at is I think I'm good and I need to better plan
being not alone, because I'm always, I like to go places alone,
but I need the the partnership in it.
And so it's really interesting.
You just gave us a, uh, to do list on how to support people who have events or situations that might be a big deal
and to work through how it was and also to take care of
yourself post because going out of the house is a thing.
It's a thing, and it's more of a thing now post pandemic.
A lot of that stuff that kicked back up for me.
Yeah, did you feel like the birthday would be
so would be vulnerable because so many people
were there that you loved.
How did you decide that you wanna feel after it?
One of the things my mom loves a celebration.
She just, since my mom loves Christmas,
so I'm a child that came from celebration celebration
for the birthday.
Like, birthdays were just, it was magic what my mom would do.
She would draw on all the mirrors,
there were balloons, so like, you would look in the mirror
and it would say, Mommy loves you, happy birthday.
It was just the most glorious, like she just loves celebration.
I am honestly, it's taking me a long time to realize,
I'm not that person.
I don't decorate for Christmas.
You gotta take it down, that's exactly right.
It's exactly how I do.
It's the same reason I don't wear mascara.
You gotta take it off.
Yeah.
After care.
It's like, no, thank you.
You know, like if I'm not doing it for work,
you've gotta be kidding me.
So I celebrate in different ways.
It's like different for me.
So I made some conscious choices
because it was 50 about what I wanted to do.
Last year, I had the most perfect birthday ever.
It was six people at dinner, a restaurant.
I always go to, at order, the same things I ordered. And we were just talking, it was just a regular dinner. It's all it was. It was six people at dinner, a restaurant. I always go to, at order, the same things I order.
And we were just talking, it was just a regular dinner.
It's all it was.
It was fantastic.
This felt important for me.
It is an honor to turn 50.
There are people, particularly after what we went through
with COVID, so many people lost their lives.
People don't make it into this age,
and I feel honored.
Even the things that I'm really challenged by,
like really challenged by,
but I feel like thank you.
Like look where, like this is evidence of my life
and my history and my legacy and like my laughter
and my things, you know?
And so I really wanted to market with that.
And so I had to ask myself, what would make it feel like a celebration for me?
Some of those things were, I wanted costume changes.
Oh, God.
Mm-hmm.
Just wait, because we have so many things.
Clothing, clothing, really.
It just dressing up is just, it's, I don't know,
people might think it's, I love it. When I am having a bad day,
one of my favorite things to do is go in the closet and play dress up. I woke up this morning,
I bought a new sweater and I woke up this morning at 630 and I was like, oh, I have the outfit.
And I in my glasses, my hair everywhere, I stripped down and went in the closet and made the look
everywhere, I stripped down and went in the closet and made the look with the new sweater.
And literally looked in the mirror and was like,
yeah, you got it, you got it, you got it.
That's what I'm talking about, Tracy.
I have no idea where I'm gonna wear that outfit.
I never leave the house.
But I was like, that's what I'm talking about.
That's Tracy.
Ha!
All right, now I'm gonna brush my teeth.
Ha! I need to ask a question about it.
Okay.
And this might be totally, I'm just,
you have said about fashion.
It's not look at me.
It's this is me.
Yeah.
This is me.
Okay.
I need you to explain to me what the hell that means.
I understand like a chef can be like,
here is my heart and mind and soul on a plate. Tracy Ellis Ross can be like, here is my heart and mind and soul on a plate.
Tracy Ellis Ross can be like,
here is my mind and my heart and my soul in a sweater.
I'm amazed by it.
Okay, so when I was young,
I've always loved beautiful things.
I used to trail after my mom and pick up the beads
that fell off of her dress on stage
after the curtain went down.
You could hear them crunching under our high heels
and I would get those little 35 millimeter
like canister things and I would collect them
and then I would separate them by color
into the different beads.
And so I've always loved the artistry of clothing.
I saw a woman, my mother, use clothing and glamour
as a way to transform herself into a different version of herself,
but still herself, and a woman with agency.
It was about her.
It wasn't about pleasing someone else.
It was sort of adorning herself with all of the bubbles that she felt were a version of
this part of her life.
And so that was always my relationship to clothing and glamour and sparkle.
And then I started to use clothing as armor.
And now looking back, I can define,
there were two ways that I fought racism
without realizing that's what it was.
But I came from a wealthy world
and I was living on Fifth Avenue,
but I was still one of very few black people
in many environments, in stores in different places.
And I didn't know that what was coming at me
sometimes was micro-aggression and micro-racism
and all those kinds of things,
coming at me in these different ways.
And so the way I presented myself was part of my armor.
I was going to play the role of somebody
who couldn't be fucked with.
And so I did it in grade school,
high school, like I just,
there was a way that I would see,
it was just, it was my armor.
And then it sort of transformed itself
and transmuted itself out of armor
and into a form of creative expression for me. And it's one of the ways I wear my insides on my outside.
And so I dress in all different kinds of ways.
And back to what you said when you described me at the beginning,
like all these different parts of me that seem to match or don't match or whatever,
like I let my clothing be that.
So sometimes I want to feel really sexy
and then sometimes I don't want to feel sexy.
So it just depends on like what I'm covering up
and what I'm wanting to share and all of that.
And I worked in fashion and was a stylist for a while.
So there's a language to clothing that I really speak.
It's like sometimes I watch dancers
and I think my God, the language of their bodies.
Like they're literally speaking a language.
And for me, style as opposed to fashion,
but style is an expression the same way,
a loke defines beauty in a way that it's the imprint
of your soul and it's beauty is something that blossoms
and I feel for me clothing is a version of that.
I really wish everyone would adopt that understanding
of beauty, by the way, just blows my mind.
I think it's wild that you just mentioned a look
because that's what I was thinking of when you were talking.
I, yeah. Your costume changes that night. I get what you're doing. I can see the language just
speaking. I'm like, oh, there's the majesty that's inside of Tracy is now outside of
Tracy. Oh, the sexiness that's inside of Tracy's outside. The like ancient spirit that is
inside of Tracy was in that first costume.
Yeah, that first outfit was genuinely
like some futuristic like time.
I don't know.
Yeah, aliens or romance.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Or I don't know if it was going backwards or forwards
or upwards to heaven or downwards.
Yeah, we were outside of time.
And then the dream to wear one of my mother's dresses.
There's the love tradition, honor of the lineage,
the that outside of Tracy.
I'll take it.
Can I tell you a cute part of that dress?
Please.
So I sent my mom a picture of a black version of that dress.
And I was like, so where's this?
Where's this?
She was like, oh, we can go to the storage
and we can find it.
And then she said, but there's a red one.
And I was a great, so the red one was even better.
But so I went to my mom's house.
And I have spent much time in her quick change booth
when I was younger learning how to get her
in and out of a dress in three minutes.
And there's a way you hold the waist,
you butterfly a dress on the floor,
so you step right to the floor,
and then the dress comes up because there's way like 30 pounds, those dresses. Oh my gosh.
Oh my gosh. Yeah, so you hold my mom's waist, so she's steady as she reaches down to pull the
dress up, and then you switch once she's got it up enough, you switch, and her arms go in,
and then you can zip up, right? And so I've done that many a time and all through the years.
And so this time I went to her house
and there I was, totally naked, with my mom holding my waist.
And I said, mom, I'm so sorry,
because I took my underwear off.
I'm like, I'm so sorry, mom.
And she was like, I know that thing.
And I was like, I know what you haven't seen in a long time.
You know what I mean?
It's like a little bit out of your reach now, you know?
She's like, I made that thing.
I know.
And as I always say, which really drives her crazy,
I'm like, I know I came out of your vagina.
I'm always makes her crazy.
She's like, so inappropriate.
So she's there.
I'm naked and she's zipping me into her dress
and then taking the pictures of me.
And it was really moving for me, very.
Because so much of my life, I'm dying a ross aside,
but I saw my mother.
I saw this incredible woman in a sparkly dress on a stage.
And what it meant to me about being a woman in charge of your life,
the example a woman that was saying,
this is me, not look at me.
A woman that was in her full glory and freedom
with her arms up, her heart open,
in her sensuality and sexuality.
And so it was a lighthouse that I've been walking towards.
So then at my 50th birthday, to actually be in one of those dresses
and to strangely out of nowhere, grab the microphone.
And unrehearsed, sing her song, it's my turn
and change that line to 50, I'm 50 and I'm free.
That was just kind of magical.
And in the cauldron of my loved ones.
I mean, and also the same beads that you were picking up
as a child.
Everybody was jaws open just like how are we witnessing this?
Yeah, it was, it was a really unplanned
and unbelievably special moment.
It was so interesting because after my birthday,
which is what I'm in now,
it feels like I had a new year's eve. You know, and I'm on the other side, and
I'm the dust has settled from blackish, and I was tethered to that for so many years where everything was around it. I'm also going through pariamenapause, so I have for my entire life been tethered to a very routine cycle.
And I'm very connected to my body. So I would know I'm ovulating. I would have all the feelings
of knowing that and all of that is out the window. And I turned 50. And here I am in this open space.
Now sort of allowing the bubbling up of whatever might be here, because I'm really specific
about my life, and I'm somebody who doesn't just go where the tide is taking me.
I really, I manifest quickly, so I language deliberately, because otherwise I go places,
I didn't mean to go. And so it's a really interesting and open, special moment.
I know.
You're so fucking cool.
So I want to say so many things.
Say things.
Are you crying?
Is anyone not crying?
I'm not the first.
Sister.
Correct.
That doesn't happen in our family, Tracy.
I'm just sitting kind of in awe of the life
that you have built with such intention
and how utterly uncompromising you've
been in terms of being
yourself and like all of the passions and agency and choices that that means, what do you attribute that to? Like what do you attribute your kind of ability?
Well, what you do, Tracy doesn't abandon herself.
Well, you know, it's interesting.
I've really learned how to do that because I think that I have abandoned myself way too many times.
Way too many times.
But each time in the aftermath of the hurt,
I do ask myself the question of,
how do I not end up here again?
And what I have discovered is I will end up here again.
Oh, God, it's true.
Damn it. Why don't we just learn
in those same lessons over and over?
I just think that's it though.
It's funny.
I just, I have been nursing another just deep
disappointment and my little inner child was she was just
crying, just crying so hard. And for the first time, I was able
to sit with her. And I was like, here's the thing my love.
I'm not going anywhere. I'm not going anywhere.
I'm not going anywhere.
I don't know.
I don't know how to be anybody else.
I just don't.
But what I know how to do is to be me and to just hold that space with as much compassion
and curiosity and gentleness as possible and to find all the things, even if it's a bag of
freaking funnions.
Like what is it?
What is it that we need today to just try and hold that space of love?
I think that's the thing we're sold that's wrong.
I don't know that life is supposed to be a thing that just feels good all the time.
But how can we hold the spaces and the days and the periods when it just doesn't feel good?
And I just feel so unlovable. And like, how can I have the hurt without deciding it means
I'm unlovable? How do you not give meaning to it? And that's where the work is, like, in that little space, right?
Because I tell you, I mean, I mean, this is, I'm on the floor half the time.
I'm one of your questions.
What was the question?
Like how often do you feel bad?
What is, I saw you.
Yeah, how often are you down?
Oh, lots.
Lots of times, like three last year.
Anything.
Three last year.
I like doing yep, do you mean, like what?
I don't remember last year.
I am bogged down by this year. Thank you. I'm bogged down by this week. I like doing yuk, jimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimim And why am I two days later still in a hangover? Why is it a week later? And also I've learned that both things,
two things can be true at the same time.
I can be really productive and doing really well
and also like heartbroken.
Yeah.
Something you just said,
I don't know how to be anything but me.
To me, that is so incredible.
Because I know how to be anything.
Like I almost anything but to me.
Right.
And so there is an equal amount of pain and loneliness in being able to be everything other than you. Yes. And so like that thing, how did you get to the place where you could AB you and identify
it?
Like this is Tracy.
I can see it.
I can smell it.
I can put it in a sweater.
And then how did you get to the place where you just couldn't be anything other than that.
Well, I actually think that's the question is actually how the entrance into it was making friends
with the loneliness and the hurt
that comes on either side.
Mm-hmm.
Because I was other than me forever.
And I still have days where I'm like,
what the fuck did I just say that?
I don't, I didn't believe.
I don't believe what it is.
Who was that person that was so weird?
Like, what did I do?
That's like, you get home and you're like,
I got that person thing,
so I'm a person who does, I don't do that.
Yeah.
No worries, I'll just move.
Yeah, like, that's what I think every time a bug comes in my house.
Well, good for you.
And this is your lovely new home.
Thank you.
I also, you know, I don't have kids.
I don't have, I haven't had a partner.
So I have been forced to go like, well, I don't know,
what do I want then?
There's so many things I don't do
because there's only so many things you can do alone.
And I do a lot of the things alone
that most people are like, I can't believe you do that alone.
I go on vacation alone, I go to dinner alone
on a Friday night at seven or eight o'clock,
you don't even be like, I do all those things,
but there's certain things that I'm not gonna do alone.
I'm just not.
And so I've been forced to kind of figure out
that going in my closet and making an outfit
like really makes me happy.
And I mean like I get jazzed up and I'm like,
that was good.
Now I'm gonna go watch the crown.
Get my head up.
I'm like, whoa, this day was good.
You know, I'm gonna eat a whole jar of olives,
all by myself.
Even though my sister said I smell like olives.
My spot.
I like olives, I'm gonna eat. My spot. I like olives.
I'm an eat-all-dark.
Like now, I just, I literally, people put a bag,
you know, open a bag of potato chips.
I take a jar of olives and I pour the liquid out
and I dump it into a bowl and I eat the bowl of olives.
I can't believe it sounds like heaven.
It's heaven to me.
But so I think it's more the other thing.
Because I think we all suffer with,
am I this or am I that?
But like, how do we tend to, how do we hold really lovingly and gently the aftermath that
comes up?
The shame, the all those things that you should be doing something different, living a different
way should have done it differently, said it differently, or whatever, like, how do
you hold that part of you?
Because that's the thing I think that holds us back
from actually having a life that we wanna live,
but I struggle with all, I mean,
I'm just bumbling along over here.
Don't compare your insides to other people's outsides.
You know what I mean?
That's right.
It always looks like it's easier over there.
But it's also knowing that losing somebody hurts,
and then the losing yourself hurts more.
Yeah. Yeah, I love you, but losing yourself hurts more. Yeah.
Yeah.
I love you, but I love you more.
Yeah.
And that's a really hard one that doesn't work every day.
Yeah.
It doesn't work every day.
Yeah.
I love you, but I love you more.
So fuck it.
You know what I'm saying?
Today, you win, buddy.
Right.
Today, I have thrown me out the window with your friend.
I got this.
And I'm going out.
Yeah.
And tomorrow I will deal with the aftermath.
That's right.
We will call the therapist and the squad of friends.
And we will try and put me back together because I obviously threw me out into a whole
bunch of pieces.
I also used to be a person I swear to God.
I would run the things by everybody,
like go to, like, put $20 on the gas tank number 12.
And let me ask you a question.
So there was this guy that said,
and so he called and then I called,
should I do I call him back?
I don't know, I mean, I just, I know,
oh yes, on 12, number 12, the gas.
But do you have any experience with this?
Because you're objective, and I know you don't know me,
so I just wanna run this my you.
Is there anything you could tell me about your choice
when it comes to the calling in Magdow
with two days, like, you don't even like I do.
I do.
I'm a, I try to do.
I'm gonna try everybody, you know what I mean?
Or the my life is mind speech, like that was all,
my favorite line in that was I asked my ex-boyfriend.
Tell us.
Get out of here Tracy.
Like come on, like you have not been with this person and how long what you do in girl.
You don't need his permission, but it still comes up, you know.
And I also think people who haven't listened to that
glimmer speech. It was the realization that Tracy came to after she found herself
stewing over the need to tell her very ex boyfriend that she was interested in seeing other people.
If you're listening, you couldn't see.
I rolled my eyes so hard that I thought they might get stuck behind my head at the thought
of myself doing that.
This is the thing.
I have a friend who also says, you know, we know better.
We don't always do better.
That's amen.
Sometimes we know we're not doing better and we choose it anyway.
And we choose it anyway.
That's right.
And so what?
And that's the same person who says, hey, babe,
why don't you give yourself a 1000 breaks? And I have that friend's number also. You do. Exactly. She's my actual best friend. Because it's crazy. Like you just, yeah,
you don't know. She always says to me, it's not always what you're doing. It's the questions
you're asking. That's the right questions, you know.
You know what's interesting to me is while you're talking and you're talking about how you talk to yourself and I know how you've talked to other people in real life. And I was thinking
about how you've mentioned twice that, well, I don't have kids, but, and I was thinking that
the people, I have three people in my life who I consider to be the best mothers. Like,
you know what I'm going to say right now. Yeah. Who just have the most pristine mothering energy.
And it's you, and these are the people in my life.
You, Liz Gilbert, and Alex Edison.
And what's, do they all three have in common?
They don't fucking have kids.
They're all very difficult.
I always think.
They're also all gorgeous.
Yeah.
They're the best mothers that I know.
I will say, I say this to people all the time,
I'm a wonderful mother.
Wonderful. And I'm a wonderful mother. Wonderful.
And I'm very mothering.
And it's been hard for me to claim that.
In a world where I don't have the thing that says,
I mean, what was I just writing?
As I'm trying to, let me see how that.
I can feel my body's abilities,
this was journal entry from like three or four days ago. I can feel my body's ability to journal entry from like three or four days ago.
I can feel my body's ability to make a child draining out of me.
Sometimes I find it hilarious, and as if there's a fire sale going on in my uterus, and
someone's in there screaming, all things must go.
And then I look down and blah, blah, blah, skip that.
And then this is what's interesting to me.
As my body becomes a foreign place to me that doesn't really feel safe or like home,
and I don't know how to manage or control or fight the external binary narrative of the
patriarchy that has hunted me and haunted me most of my adult life.
Is it my fertility that is leaving me?
Is it my womanhood?
Or is it really neither?
But I have to fight to hold my truth because I have been programmed so successfully by
the water we all swim in, by the water we all are served.
And I feel fertile with creativity full of power, more and more of a woman than I've ever
been.
And yet that power that I was told I must use was not used.
A power, um, yeah, I mean, just trying to figure out sort of what that means.
Like, because my ability to have a child is leaving me,
but like, I don't agree that that's what fertile means.
I don't agree that that's what woman means,
which is why the freedom that the expansion around gender
has offered me.
And the knowledge that is being shared with us by the trans community is like, oh my God,
thank you. Thank you for finally unpacking something that like I had no ability to unpack
because of what was handed to me in a culture that like thought of it in such a limited way. And so trying to make sense of that at this age
with my own limited point of view is really fun, honestly.
Thank you for sharing that.
Yeah, I was gorgeous.
And what if that idea of fertility from so young
if it was handed to us and saying,
what are you gonna do with this fertility that you have?
And one minute aspect of that might be that you choose
to reproduce.
That's your fertility.
That's the place.
Is this big?
And then we would realize God, how many generations
and generations of follow ground
because we were never presented with our own
creative, forward-thinking, beautiful fertility.
And then all the women who just have kids
who everyone looks at them and says,
well, you should be freaking happy.
You did the thing.
You did the one. You did the
one fertile thing. And no, they maybe had a wide vast of what their fertility could have
birthed into the world. Now, it's it really, it's heartbreaking. It's a heartbreaking
thought. It's heartbreaking. And I'm grateful to be able to look at it with curiosity instead of heartbreak. And the heartbreak does come
up and I get to hold that gently and lovingly and then say, remind myself, like, I woke up
every morning of my life and I've tried to do my best. So I must be where I'm supposed
to be. Well, thank you for speaking up to you on behalf of the trans community.
I've never thought of it that way.
And being a person who won't have my own biological children,
you just kind of gave me a little bit of a roadmap of work I need to do.
And I just, I'm really grateful for all that you just said that was unreal.
Thank you.
She's something this one.
She's something so hard for me to take any of that in.
But it is an unbelievable injustice that is laid on all of us as human beings.
that there is one pathway
that is informed by this random construct
that somebody came up with around gender. When I pull back from it, I'm like,
that's like a joke, who did that?
You don't even, I'm just like, who did that?
That's not, that's so silly.
You've just limited so much, so much life.
You've limited so much life.
And so much like that was the point.
Yes.
Yeah, it's almost like that was the point, you know?
Really, like, it's like terrifying
when you think about it.
You're just like, oh my gosh.
So yeah, I ponder these things a lot,
and then every once in a while I hear something,
and I'm just like, right, like, why did I, why, why did I,
and then I have to forgive,
we all have to forgive ourselves
because we come by it honestly.
It's what we've been served, it's what we've been given.
That's right.
And the courage of those that give us a different roadmap
that shares something that opens up and unlocks
a space that we had locked down unconsciously is always such a gift.
When you're sister Ronda who I love so much, when she gave the toast.
You know, she's the wise one, by the way, like I'm chopped, like I'm chop liver in my family,
like my siblings.
She's something.
She's my siblings.
She's my siblings.
Just like they're just magical. They take care of me. You know what I mean?
The love you are having each other is just the love is so palpable.
Yeah, that was one of my favorite things about the night.
It's just watching your siblings watch you when, anyway, glowing, all glowing.
Okay. I forgot what I was going to say.
Ronda.
Ronda.
Okay. And then she said, she to say. Ronda. Ronda, okay.
And then she said, she quoted you back to you
when she said my life is mine.
And then you sang a song that was your mom's song.
And then as you said in the beginning,
you were saying, I'm 50 and free.
I'm 50 and free.
What are you free from?
When you were saying that?
What were you thinking?
And maybe freeing from,
like maybe we're never free from anything,
but like, yeah, I don't, I don't, I don't,
I don't know that all of it.
For some of these things.
I've actually read little things I wrote
when I was like 15 and 12 and I'm like, wow,
I'm chomping on this stuff forever.
I almost done.
Almost done.
Almost done. Fasten it in. I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, wow, I'm chomping on this stuff forever. Almost done.
In another 15 years, you're gonna have it nailed.
I am gonna have this stuff nailed.
I'm telling you.
Think of the costumes.
Think of the costumes.
I remember this moment, I was crying so hard to this particular friend.
And I was like, I just don't think,
I just don't think, I just am not right.
It's just that people have just not lovable,
I do it all wrong.
And it's like, oh, hold on, hold on.
Maybe you're just not everyone's cup of tea.
And I was like, but I love it.
Everybody's like, I want everybody to just,
I want everybody's going to be everybody's day. Like I want everybody to just like, I want to be everybody's going to be.
Like it's like,
people maybe you're not.
And I was like,
I don't like that, I'm like,
I'm like, I'm like,
and she's like, what do you do this?
Why don't you make a list of all of the things
that you like about yourself?
And I was like, that's huge, crazy.
And I made this list and I realized that so many of the things
that I like about myself are the things
that I do think are difficult for people.
But they're the things that I like about myself.
That I'm not afraid to say when I don't think something
feels right, that I'm not afraid to say when something doesn't
feel right for me, no matter how far and deeply
into that thing I am, that I have a really loud laugh. Like a lot of these different things,
right? That make me maybe not everyone's cup of tea. And that like totally changed my
relationship to those aspects of me that I think I was trying to hide in order to be chosen
to be lovable and blah, blah, blah. So I don't know that my discomfort with not being everyone's cup of tea or the unloved
ability and self-loathing that comes up, I don't know that those are ever going to go
away.
I think that what I am free from or that I have a different relationship to them.
And the same way you say we can do hard things, which I use all the time and is just such
a good guiding force.
Like I can do hard things.
I can also be uncomfortable.
I can also be comfortable when I'm uncomfortable.
I can also be happy even if I don't like how everything's going.
I don't know if it's what I'm a free from,
but I have a larger container to hold myself.
And I know myself really well.
And it's taken a lot of time to have the courage
to actually live my life as that person.
to have the courage to actually live my life as that person.
But I have a lot of experience chewing on ground glass and sort of not really.
And sort of sitting with the discomfort of, I might have ruined that thing.
You know, my big fear was, am I going to ruin the course of my destiny if I make the wrong choice? And my spiritual awakening in life has been, I'm okay.
You can't ruin it, babe.
You're okay.
That's it.
There was no burning bush.
It was just, you're okay.
And sometimes enough is enough.
I have to make it better.
It's just fine. It's just fine. You're fine, you're okay. And sometimes enough is enough. Now I have to make it better.
It's just fine.
It's just fine.
You're fine, sweetie.
Fine.
You don't have everything you want.
It's fine.
I love your laugh.
My laugh.
Think about how weak you have to be.
I have to be.
To be everyone's cup of tea, you'd have to be the weakest S.T.
You'd have to be the weakest S.T.
You'd have to be water.
No, you'd have to be water.
And you can't be water.
You're gonna be like lukewarm. And by the way, some people start like water. No, you have to be water. And you can't be water. You can't be like lukewarm.
And by the way, some people start like water.
That's right.
Some people hate water.
It's not possible.
No, it's not possible.
And the more flavorful you are, the narrow your tea
audience might be.
Yeah, it might be a narrow.
It's the same tea audience.
Yeah, you know.
I do think that your audience is pretty
jam wide though, Trace the other.
I don't know.
I think I bug the hell out of a lot of people.
I think they're the right ones.
I think they're the right ones.
Okay, baby.
Very different culture.
And then we are going to let you go because we could talk forever.
But how long have we been tired?
Has it been like seven hours?
It's been an hour.
It's been an hour.
It's been one of my favorite hours of this entire show. Seriously.
And once again, you have shown up with all of your power and vulnerability and somehow
they're the exact same thing.
And once again, I just really love you.
I feel the same way.
I just want to say to the three of you is that I am so grateful.
I'm grateful to Amanda to know you,
but to also have the honor of being a cauldron sister
with you and to live in a world where we can have conversations
that are this gentle and real and quiet and loud
and that you have these conversations with lots of people. Like what a blessing. And you have them publicly and then you also have them
privately. Yeah. That's a really special thing that I don't think exists everywhere. It's
a special thing that you're bringing it into the world and I'm happy to be a part of it.
That's why we give you Tracy Ellis Ross. I'm not gonna promise that it's ever gonna get better than that.
Realist okay Every other episode enough is not down hell from here
And when life gets hard this week, you're going to remind yourself, it's okay, sweetie.
It's okay. It's okay. It's okay.
It's okay. It's okay. It's okay. It's okay.
Gentle, gentle. I'm right here. Right here. Not going anywhere.
I...
Bye.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle.
I walked through a fire I came out the other side.
I chased as I er, I made sure I got one smile and I continued to believe that I'm the one for me.
And because I'm mine, I want the line
Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak So man, a final destination
We're glad we stopped asking directions
And some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache.
I hit rock bottom, it felt like a brand new star.
I'm not the problem sometimes things fall hard and I continue to believe The best people are free And it took some time
But I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers and heartbreak
So man, a final destination with that
We stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This world finished yours and the heart breaks on land.
We might get lost, but we're only in that
Stopped asking directions
Some places may have never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
Through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things. Yeah, we can do hard things.
We can do hard things, is produced in partnership with Cadence 13 Studios.
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you