WHOA That's Good Podcast - Relationship Fears, Hard Conversations + a BIG Announcement | Sadie Robertson Huff & Jennie Allen
Episode Date: March 2, 2022Sadie has a HUGE announcement at the end of this episode. But first, best-selling author Jennie Allen joins Sadie to discuss how to find your people, build meaningful connections, and surround yoursel...f with community. They break down how to lean in and bring your full self into relationships (and why that can mean being the Queen of Awkwardness). They also hit on relationship fears, the freedom that comes with vulnerability, and how hard conversations can build deeper friendships. Jennie’s book, “Find Your People,” is available NOW! - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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What's up friends? Welcome back to the Woodette's Good Podcast y'all. We have a very special
episode ahead. We have Ginny Allen back on the podcast talking about her brand new book.
It's a great conversation. You're definitely going to want to hear the whole thing. But
also, I want to tell y', that I have a huge announcement.
I'll be making at the end of this podcast.
So stay tuned, you're not gonna wanna miss it.
And I just wanna let you know,
for our WoW That's Good listeners.
Y'all are the first people to hear about this.
So stay tuned to the end of this conversation
for an awesome announcement. What's up with us, Good Fam?
Like I mentioned in the intro, we have Jenny Allen back on the podcast,
and this is really exciting because she is a new book.
Out it is called Find Your People,
Building Deep Community in a Lonely World.
And everybody out there said,
Amen. Thank you, Jesus Jesus for this book. Jenny,
thank you for writing this book. So important. Oh, I'm so happy to be here, Sadie. I love
hanging out with you and your people. So yeah, thank you. It has been, yeah, it's been a ride.
You know, it's a couple years of our lives when we take on a project like this, but I'm really
excited about it. And I really hope it changes things,
because we're sitting here post-quarantaining
and all the things the world has been shut down,
hoping to, I think, all of us feel this desire
to do community differently.
Totally.
And so, yeah.
It's good.
Well, we're gonna get all into the book,
and I'm so excited.
But first, can we just talk about passion for a second?
I mean, we can never not talk about it
because what happened there was just so absolutely incredible.
And I mean, I know you, like, the way people don't,
not everybody knows you, I get to see you behind the stage
and on the stage and you're the same person through and through,
but I will say, like, you were a little bit nervous for passion like for sure
That actually made you nervous and I think that people don't think that you would get nervous
But you were totally nervous, but you stepped into that and when you were on the stage
It was like the fear was gone. There was this crazy God confidence in you and you just preach. What was that like?
Well, there was nothing like that. I mean, I don't think I'll ever do anything like that again,
as far as just that the nerves of the first time to do that. I mean, it was just so intimidating.
And yeah. And I think that room, I mean, Mercedes-Benz, it's just, it's overwhelming. But,
but I did, it wasn't even about that, Sadie.
And you and I have talked so much about this.
It was the weight of what we were supposed to do.
And how do we honor God with a moment like that
that feels so important?
And I mean, I would say the more we do things together,
the more I just feel so bonded to you,
because it's just the sense of
there's things behind the scenes that we're praying and that we're hoping and that we're wrestling through together that
that is the Lord like you can't
You just don't want to wing that you don't want to be like try to bring your best talk
You want God to show up and we both felt that way about that day and to be on your
team and to watch even though you know how hard that was for me that you were sick because
we were both so ready to like hold hands and go do that thing together. But you it was
the way it was supposed to go and say you brought a word with such confidence as well.
But yeah, it was it was a lot. It was overwhelming for sure,
but I'll never forget it.
And it was probably one of the best days of my life too,
just because we were working with God and you felt that.
You felt that all day.
That's exactly, that's such a good way of saying it.
You're working with God and you felt it
because yes, like you don't want to just go
and bring your best message.
Like you want God to move and it's so cool
because you can be confident when you step in that moment
and you know like, I'll have a word like from God
Like this is what like God has given me to say and I think that's even why whenever I was sick
I was like I'm not going home like how like what do we do to make sure I can say this because this isn't even like my
Word it's like God like spoke this so clearly and to you
I know you've mentioned that God
kind of shared what you were gonna share in a dream.
And we've actually kind of been talking about
God dreams on the podcast lately.
And so what did that look like for you?
Like you woke up in the middle of the night
and you were just like, I know what I'm gonna preach at passion.
Yeah.
It's never happened before.
I'm actually in a little bit of a fight with God lately
because I'm like, God, I need you to give me a few more things like this. They're very important things and I need
you to be this clear with me because obviously you can be, you showed me, you could be. And again,
he's been clear. It's not like he hasn't spoken like that before, but it was the middle of the night
and I knew my talk. I mean, exactly what I delivered that day, Sadie, with the images, with the boxes that I hold and how I use them.
All of that, he showed me in a talk. All the points, everything.
I never wrote it down. It was like it was blazed up on my bed.
This is what you're going to say. These are the scriptures you're going to use.
Wow.
And then I practiced it twice and I tried to add something to it,
because I thought, oh, I think this would work too
with the boxes.
And I did it that little part.
And my people watching didn't know what was what,
but they looked at me about that part.
They were like, no, that didn't work.
Kept that.
And that was the only part I tried to add.
So I'm like, okay, okay, God, like you literally won't
let me even add anything.
Wow.
I got to give this thing exactly how you gave it to me.
And so it was really humbling.
And I knew I wasn't supposed to script it,
which is really the intimidating part.
Totally.
Because I was asking people to confess,
I normally would write that,
rehearse it several times,
but I knew it had to be for my heart to get them to share.
I knew it had to be a little bit different
than most of my other messages I would give
in that moment.
And so there was parts of that that weren't planned or scripted for sure in my head.
And I think that was maybe the most intimidating part.
There was a moment because I truly was trusting God to show up.
There was a sense of, if I get up there and I'm really nervous and you know the echo that you hear. Oh, yeah
It's hard on the stage. Oh my gosh. It is more distracting everybody tried to prepare me
It the first minute or so I was just out of sorts because my voice you'd hear it's like seven times past your ears
It was the weirdest thing. Yeah, and so I it took me a minute and I thought oh no, I don't have notes
So it took me a minute and I thought, oh no, I don't have notes. I went out there with no notes.
So I was like, great.
You've got to show up because it really was such a personal moment of surrender for me.
And yeah, that he did and it's over.
And it made me trust him, I think, more than I've ever, I ever have
a four, because he did show up.
And the main thing was people can fast.
I mean, I didn't know, like I'm just sitting up there pouring my heart out, but you don't
know, you can't feel the room.
It's not like a normal room where you can feel what they're experiencing.
You can't even hardly see faces because there's so many people that you only must only see
colors, you know, like you see shirts and stuff, but you don't see like a face.
And I always like to like look at someone's face when I'm speaking, but it's too big.
It's too crazy. So yeah, you can't feel it the way that you would normally feel a moment.
But it was so cool you didn't have notes, because I think that made you be so honest.
And it was like so authentic and so honest.
And like people were just with you and listening to you and then people confess and
Like freedom just came into the room. It was just I mean
I've heard so many people talk about that moment and yes, you're talk, but but just that confession moment
You know like what you led them to is so cool and I love how you said that, like the first minute felt a little crazy
because I always say that sometimes,
you know, going on stage and speaking,
especially without notes,
it kinda is equivalent to skydiving.
And the sense of like,
you're so like nervous and you're like,
God, if you don't come through,
I am going to fall on my face.
And the first thing that you do when you skydive
is you go out of the plane
and for the first like 10 seconds,
it feels absolutely crazy.
You're like just going all around
because they haven't pulled any type of shoot yet.
So you're flipping and you're totally out of control.
And within 10 seconds, they pull that first shoot
and immediately you catch the wind.
And it is just so fun.
I mean, you're still going fast, but it's fun.
And then they pull the second shoot
after a minute or two or however,
and then you just float down.
And I'm like, that really is speaking.
It's like, you go up.
And for the first few minutes, you're like,
okay, I found him, I'm a footing, fine.
And then you catch the wind.
And God just speaks through you.
And man, like that talk was such a beautiful picture
of that and it was so good.
Well, I'll always talk about it.
I'll always reminisce on that moment.
And it is so fun.
We are so bonded when we get to do stuff like that
because we pray about it together.
And then we see God be God.
Well, I want to talk about the book
because like I said, this book is so important.
It's so timely for so many people.
I think so many of us are struggling, finding community.
And we've talked about this in my own life.
You've obviously shared so much in the book, but I want to unpack a few things. So many of us are struggling finding community and we've talked about this in my own life.
You've obviously shared so much in the book, but I want to unpack a few things.
First I want to ask you, like, is this a message that you felt like you needed, you know,
as you wrote the book?
Because I think sometimes you write from a place of, you know, been there, done that.
Here's my advice and sometimes you write from a place of, in this, doing this.
Here's what I'm learning. Yeah. Like, like wherever you kind of at in the writing process.
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Well, definitely the second and fact still in it and
learning. Wow, yeah, wow.
I wish this is a hard thing to be an expert in relationships
because they change and you change.
And there's a sense of practicing this
that you can even get out of step with, right?
So even recently, I continually have
to choose to lean in and to bring my whole
self into relationships because I can be guarded and I can hold back because I don't know
how it's going to be received or if it will be used against me or if I'll be rejected.
There's so many fears I think when it comes to relationships that we all experience.
And, you know, people have a hard time with this.
I think the numbers are three and five feel lonely.
That was before COVID.
So, I mean, majority of people now, I would guess it was four and five.
So, we've got a pretty big crisis on our hands.
And what's cool about that number is it means that we're all feeling this.
We're all experiencing the same thing.
But it also is a little bit sad because it probably means we all don't feel very good at this.
I think of you, Sadie, and this is what you do, you sister people, you bring them in, you want everybody to feel a part of a sisterhood.
And I think that's part of the magic of L.O. and what you've created because there's this sense of isolation that everybody's experiencing. And then you say, not only can you come and like listen to my podcast,
but we want you to feel like a part of our family and a part of what we're doing.
Right.
And so I think that is exactly what people are craving.
And and so yes, that's the outside world,
but inside for me, it has been a practice of patterns and habits
that I wasn't good at,
that I've had to grow in and learn and get better at.
Well, yeah, it's so real.
And I'm the same way.
Like, I feel like a lot of times the reason why
maybe I don't make friends is normally
because I have something in my heart guarded.
You know, like, and I'm trying and I'm showing up
and I'm there, but, and we talked about this, but I still feel lonely because I actually am not sharing the
thing that would make me feel connected to that person, you know. And you say in the
book, you say you're only going to be as close to someone as you are vulnerable with
them. And like that part is so hard. And so from someone who is guarded like yourself and me,
like how do you get past it?
How do you know when it's the right people
to be vulnerable with, you know?
That's a great question, because it does matter.
And we can't be vulnerable with everybody.
That's not what we're supposed to do.
I think we can be transparent.
I think we can say things like they are
and say the truth about ourselves
and not pretend to be something we're not.
But as far as the really sharing our guts in a way that is seeking connection and healing for ourselves,
that has to be done with safe people.
And so we wait for that.
And we try, you know, what I tell people people is it well the research says it takes 200 hours to
To become a close friend to go from an acquaintance to a really close friend
So you've got to actually invest the time in your village of people that God's put around you
You've got to invest some hours and see okay who's popping up as one of those safer people for me
Mm-hmm, and as they up, then you spend more intentional time
with them and you say, hey, here's what's going on my day,
here's what's going on my week.
But maybe you don't share what I call the 2% that is more sacred.
And I think it is the 2% that you're afraid to tell other people.
My church actually uses that phrase a lot.
And it's trained me and taught me to, you have to say the 2% to someone.
You don't need to say the 2% to everyone.
And so testing those friendships is okay.
I think it's perfectly fine and a wise move to drop something and then see what happens.
With the qualities, I say to look for in people is humble,
available and vulnerable. If you've got those three things, if you're humble, you'll work
through conflict. If you're available, you still need a friend. You still have margin to actually
spend the hours and time to be there for someone. And then number three, if you're vulnerable,
if the other friend is vulnerable and you're able to be vulnerable with three, if you're vulnerable, if the other friend is vulnerable,
and you're able to be vulnerable with them, then you're going to be able to actually be known.
And that's the thing everybody craves is ultimately to be known and accepted and loved. And so
to build that kind of culture around you, it takes you going first. Almost everyone, everyone
you going first. Almost everyone, everyone that I've talked to in this process about feeling lonely. The ones who are initiators do not feel lonely and the ones that are not do. It is
almost 100%. Wow. And so if you initiate, you will have friends. And if you don't, you won't.
And I mean initiate and vulnerability and transparency, how deep it will go.
We're always looking at the other person and deciding,
can I say this?
Is this safe?
Like, we're always kind of judging that with someone.
Like is this, is this, and then what happens is
if you go first and that person's like,
I'm so sorry and they have nothing to share for themselves,
you can go, you know what, they're probably not super vulnerable.
And not that they can't grow in that,
because if they're humble, maybe they can,
but that might not be your person.
Like you gotta have somebody that's like me too,
or at least I'm so sorry,
and I've been struggling with this.
Just some tennis match,
I'm like, I'm gonna trust you too.
Not just you're gonna trust me,
but I'm gonna trust you too. Man, that're gonna trust me, but I'm gonna trust you too.
Man, that is so gay,
because there is nothing worse than like,
spilling your heart to someone and someone being like,
I'm sorry, that's steams.
And like, you're like, yeah, yeah, that is like,
do you, or are they like, oh gosh, you know,
like, oh gosh, you know, I have that.
That's the word, like, oh gosh.
Oh gosh, that is horrible.
Never, I should never be thing
That you ever say to someone after they say oh gosh just cut it out
But like no, I've been there and you know, it's I was selling Christian this literally last night
I was like man
I feel like I finally have like my accountability like friend that and because I'm such a I really read the room
I really watch face so expressions
I'm such an imitator and part of being an imitator
is you notice people's faces and their patterns
and the way that they talk.
And so I'm definitely an attendant.
I'm like watching, like as I'm talking,
like are they in this or are they back in a way
or do they think this is weird, do they, whatever.
And so that's why I don't always go there with people
because I feel like, oh, I'm reading it
and I'm not trusting it.
But I finally have a really just that person
that I feel like I could say anything to
and she's always like me too,
or this is what I'm walking through
and we genuinely pray for each other.
And a few weeks ago, we had this moment
where we were both at this retreat together
and it was so cool because there was this
moment of like confession and I looked at her and said I'm gonna tell you something, the
only two other people know. I said my husband and Jenny Allen. And I shared this with her.
And then it was really cool and she ended up sharing stuff with me that was really powerful.
And then we went on and we've texted each other
and like, how are you since you said that?
How are you?
And it's just been so good.
And I was just thinking about that 2%
and I was looking at that like my husband, Jenny,
and this girl.
And I have one friend, one mentor, and my spouse.
And I think that that is like so,
it's been so good for me.
Like I had these three people that know that 2%
and it has made me so much more free in my life.
And so just to like a test of the message
that Jenny's saying that really is so important.
And it really brings so much freedom and areas of your life
that you didn't even know we're like held.
You didn't even know were like held. You didn't even know were like bound,
but whenever you're, you know,
a slave to your thought pattern or a slave to loneliness or a slave to your shame,
like you don't realize how that actually is keeping you back from like the freedom of life.
And so I just encourage people out there listening, like, yes, get the two percent out.
Find the people you can be vulnerable with.
I want to ask you about another aspect of friendships. There's one that's like, okay, I feel really garden. There's other people who just feel like super awkward. They're like,
I'm just an awkward person. I don't know why I'm awkward. I don't know why I'm weird. I just
can't make friends. And so, one I want to ask, do you ever feel awkward? And then, too, like, how do you press past awkward
to be in community?
That's the best question ever, because yes.
And you can ask it because you know me.
Of course I go awkward.
I am like the queen of awkward.
I think that might be my only skill
so I going into writing this book with you.
But I actually believe that it requires being awkward
to have friends because all the steps of it are hard.
All the steps of it feel awkward.
I just did an interview, Sadie, today with a guy
out of Africa and I told his story in the book
but I wanted to dive even deeper into it
for the season that we're doing.
And I was reminded of how broken our communal lens is in America.
He talks, he lives here now and in fact he lives in Atlanta.
And he talks about how he just stopped by his friends house in Africa.
He said, when I go home, I just show up and I know I'm going to, this is what he said,
I know I'm going to have an epic day. Well, that's awesome what he said, I know I'm gonna have an epic day.
Wow.
That's awesome.
He said, I don't even have a plan,
but I know I'm gonna have an epic day.
It's crazy.
Because he knows he can go to this restaurant
and see 10 friends.
He knows he can step by, stop by anybody's house
and they're gonna stop everything in front of an hour,
they're gonna talk.
Wow.
Well, he talked about in America how he would never do that
because that's so awkward.
And I'm like, Jay, just do it.
Like, who cares?
That's honestly the whole book for me
began with one, seeing how people lived in Africa
and wanting something better.
And then two, God, giving me a friend and Dallas
who was this way.
She would just bust in my house with her kids.
And be like, hey, what are you doing?
And like just coming, and she called me,
I mean, she just called me today,
and said, hey, tonight let's do this.
Like, there's an energy and a passion,
and a clarity and initiation that she brings to relationships
that just change the way that I do relationships.
Because it's so much more, let's go with the word epic.
It's so much more epic. Because you actually do crave this. It's so much more epic because you actually do crave this.
We all want this, but this is not the culture we live in.
And so my thing is, why don't you just be awkward
and begin by just awkwardly showing epic people's houses.
Like I know that sounds crazy.
Yes.
But I really think part of our problem is we don't just show up.
Now, what I tell people to do is if that feels like way too much for your people,
because I realize some people live in the Midwest and like there's a different,
you know, it's like this is how we do things, I get it, then you and your friends
read it together and y'all build a code of contact of how you can act with each other.
It's great.
Because I think there needs to be some agreements together of like, hey, yes,
you can stop by my house.
But we cannot just keep living the way we've been living.
Something's got to change.
But I think the main ingredient it's going to require is awkwardness because it is awkward.
It's awkward to initiate a friendship.
It's awkward to get in a fight and then to work it out.
It's awkward to be vulnerable the first time.
It's awkward to invite someone the third time when they haven't invited you and you're not sure they even like you,
but you're like, I like them, so I'm going to keep inviting.
It's awkward, the whole process.
And so to cheer everyone about there, if you feel awkward, that's great.
That actually is on in line with how you should be feeling.
And I would say you always will feel,
because the deeper it goes and the longer it goes,
the more likely you're going to have a fight,
the more likely you're going to need to work through something.
Yes.
The more likely you're going to get hurt,
and then the awkward all has to come back.
So I would just say to lean into that feeling,
that's okay.
And at one point in the book, I wrote something like,
I should have called this book like, you know,
the road to living awkwardly or something,
because that really is what's required.
It just is.
Yes, it's so good.
It's so encouraging and so freeing,
because so many people think the awkwardness
disqualifies them from friendship,
but what you're saying is awkwardness
is actually a requirement of friendship.
Like, it will happen, it's gonna happen, it's always gonna happen, and it's so freeing, from friendship, but what you're saying is awkwardness is actually a requirement of friendship.
Like it will happen, it's gonna happen,
it's always gonna happen, and it's so free,
because you can look around and be like,
oh wow, like it's not like my problem that is awkward,
it's actually just part of it that it's awkward, you know?
And so I love that.
And let me say this, well for so long,
I'm really good at asking deep questions, right?
Like that's kind of very good of that, yes. That's what I do. And so I remember getting made fun of in my friend group, and this isn't an adult,
right? Just, Jenny, you're always too deep. You're always so heavy. You're all, well, so I
stopped doing that because I thought, I don't, I don't want to be awkward. And it's so interesting.
The girl that used to say that to me reached out to me recently and said, Jenny, I'm sorry,
I said those things to you because she's going through a hard
time and she's like, that's who I'm drawn to.
She goes, I think I was just, I didn't know how to receive it, but we all need that.
And we want to go, we all want to go deep, but we don't know how.
And even the person making fun of me, let years later eventually admitted to, I didn't
know how to do it.
Like, I didn't know how to do it. Like, I didn't know how to match your depth.
And so I just made fun of you
because that was easier.
So I think what we've got to realize is,
the world needs what we're craving.
You know, at your craving deep friendship,
you're craving a deeper conversation,
you're craving your friends actually opening them up.
They do want that and they do need that.
They may not know that and they may not know how to do that.
And that might even make them seem like,
that's too much for me or I don't know what to do with that.
But push through it and be the awkward one,
be the deep one, be the one that says,
you know what, y'all, I'm sick of talking about,
you know, what's going on in our love life
or what's going on with our kids
or what's going on with work.
I want to talk about something real so let's talk about
How we're really doing what I say is talk about the thing behind the thing
One of the close to somebody
Talk about the thing behind the thing because the thing behind the thing is a fear a
Feeling of inadequacy and insecurity. That's the thing behind the thing right you did that to me
Even at the beginning of the show,
say, you're really good at this.
You're like, I know everybody knows and watch passion,
but I saw behind the scenes.
Like, I saw you were afraid, and I want you to talk about that.
And so that's what we're talking about.
If somebody listening doesn't know, it's those kind of conversations.
It's not just the surface level of what's happening in someone's life.
It's how they feel about what's happening in their lives.
It's so true. Gosh what's happening in their lives.
It's so true.
Gosh, it's so true.
And I'm so, thank you for saying that.
It actually is like such a great compliment because whenever I started this podcast, I wanted
to be a great interviewer, right?
Like I actually wanted to ask questions that are meaningful.
And I felt like I have been interviewed so many times in my life because of Doug Dynastie
and it's with the stars and I've done so much press.
And I always just felt like people ask
the obvious questions.
And I'm like, I just feel like everyone already knows this.
I'm answering the same thing over and over and over again
because that's the obvious things.
But like, I wanna ask people the questions
that aren't obvious that, okay, maybe this is obvious,
but what's the why behind that? Or what happened to you that made that such an
obvious thing about the way that you live you know and it's so cool that's what
I asked people like the best piece of advice they've ever been given because
it's kind of the story behind them it's like what was given to you that made you
who you are you know or why did write this book? Did you have this message happen
to you? Because to be honest, every book I've written is because I need to learn more about
that. I need to learn. I'm struggling with it. I'm lost in this big world too. And so I love
that you said that. And I also love that you just mentioned that someone came after
something that is actually a gift to who you are,
and you toned down because you were like embarrassed by it.
And that happened in my own life for so long,
and unintentionally, my family would kind of,
they would just be joking about it,
but they would just be like, you're so dramatic, Sadie,
you know, you're so dramatic
and how you tell stories,
and I was like very embarrassed by that.
And so I always try to tone it down.
Like tone down the storytelling,
like tone down the way that I communicate
because I didn't want to seem dramatic
because I thought that was a bad thing.
And then finally, it was like last summer
on our family trip, I was like,
you know what, all you people keep saying
I'm dramatic and it's stealing
from how good of a storyteller I am. I was like, this is like my All you people keep saying I'm dramatic and it's stealing from how good of a storyteller
I am.
I was like, this is like my family so I can say this.
And I'm like, and I'm owning it now because this is how I got made me and this is what
makes my messages better because I retell stories in the Bible in a very fun way.
And it was just a funny moment for me to just like own what I felt like not they took
away from me, but the enemy in my mind and the way I shame myself took away
for me for so long.
And I was like, I'm actually not gonna let that stop me.
I actually am gonna own this and here's why.
And I think there are so many things in our life
that people say unintentionally, like they're not meaning
to hurt, they don't even care.
They don't think it's a bad thing.
But like, what the enemy does with those words,
it shames you to the point where you're like,
well, then I'm not gonna be like that.
I'm not gonna ask the deep question.
I'm not gonna be dramatic.
I'm not gonna tell stories in a funny way or whatever.
And that's when we lose that essence of like who we are,
you know?
And I think that's a scary place to be.
What do you have to say about just people wanting to conform to, I guess, find community?
Because you know, some of the times people so desire friendship that they might conform
to what certain groups are like for the want and desire to fit in, but say that that's
not really who they are.
So what I guess I'm asking is,
say you're looking to be in community
because you know you need to be in community.
But what if your community that's around you
is not a good one to be a part of?
What do you do in that sense?
And how do you not conform?
Yeah.
Well, I think it's really important
to have two distinctions in your life. There's
one group of people that you need and one group of people that need you. And I'm not saying
that some of the people you need don't also need you, but in your head, when you're viewing
your relationships, you're inventorying. Because if we only are around the strong believers
that make us better, right?
That's not what Jesus called us to do.
He called us to deep community to walk in in oneness.
I mean, the type of community Jesus actually talks about is so radical to live in oneness
and to love each other with reckless abandon, that type of connection and love is, I would say, super rare today
in friendship.
And so, and the way that he walked with the disciples and modeled how we're supposed
to do life was eating regularly together.
I mean, they literally live together day in and day out.
So we're talking about a radical kind of relationship that Jesus modeled for us.
So that's supposed to be the core of how we survive and what's surrounding us.
But we also have to remember that there are people that need that love and that part of the way
we are supposed to live in this world is to give that love away.
Now you've got to know your proclivity, right?
You can't just run out and be around all the part of yours
because you're going to minister to them
and that be your temptation.
And that's not going to work out for you.
So I think you've got to have those people that hold you
accountable that you're primarily doing life with.
And then you've got to understand there are other people
you're going to love and be in relationship with.
You can't just be friends with people
that are making good choices.
And then I think there's also the wrong expectations of people hurting us. Everyone's going to hurt you.
Everyone's going to be a sinner. Everybody's going, no one makes a perfect friend, right? This is,
this isn't what you're looking for. You're not looking for perfect people, but you're looking for
people headed in the same direction. Paul actually describes people to avoid and he says,
their God is their belly and their glory is their shame. Basically, that they are comfortable in your
sin. They love their sin. They boast about their sin. That's not where you're going to hang out.
That's not where you're going to do life. Where they're cravings or appetized. That's what they're
chasing. And so you want to find people that are killing their, you know, their sin and they hate their
sin and then they're running toward God.
However, they're still going to hurt you and they're still going to be imperfect.
But I do believe one weakness of a culture right now is that we too quickly give up on people
and we walk away because it gets hard.
And I think it's a disposable friendship kind of thing
where we just go, you know what?
I can go find other people.
This isn't comfortable for me anymore.
I'm gonna walk away.
And, you know, I think that's where we've got to go.
You know, I'm gonna say that sometimes we make excuses
to shut out people in our lives that are hurtful or hard for us when really
God has also called us to love them.
So it's a fine line as to which category people fall in.
And yet I also bet you everybody listening can go, yeah, I know the people that I need
that I've got to have in my life.
And I know the people that need God or need something from me at the same time I do think
God also makes it clear to us.
All right, so you've been talking about hardship
and friendships and how people hurt you
that's just a part of it.
And I think so many times people think when you're hurt,
then it's over.
But I love how you write conflict
should make friendships, not break them.
I've never had a truly intimate friend
that was free of conflict.
So good that you wrote that because it just allows you to know
that it's okay, not only okay,
but it actually makes it better.
And so how do you embrace conflict
and learn to like embrace that and not run from that?
Well, I think the first thing is we never really learned
how to do this.
Nobody ever taught us like, oh, this is how you have a fight.
This is how you say I'm sorry, this is how you work it out.
It's largely why people are in marriage counseling
because we never learn how to work through conflict.
And so this is something that you cannot be afraid of.
When you feel something towards a friend
and it doesn't go away within 24 hours,
you should reach out to that person and say, hey,
let's talk about it.
I tell the story of my sister-in-law,
who's also one of my best friends, doing that to me. She reached out and said, hey, can we go talk? I. I tell the story of my sister-in-law, who's also one of my best friends doing that to me.
She reached out and said, hey, can we go talk?
I need to tell you something.
And what she had to tell me was that I'd heard her.
Well, it caught me so off guard.
I mean, immediately my heart starts racing.
I'm like, how did I heard her?
I can't find it in my head.
I can't figure it out.
And I just panic.
And in the moment, though, I remember just feeling like the spirit was like just be quiet.
Like just try to understand.
And so I did and I apologized and I owned my part in that I felt terrible and I walked away.
Well I came back into the friendship over the next few weeks and I kept feeling like I was walking on eggshells.
Like I might make your mad again, or I might hurt her again,
and it really changed the way that we were acting
and behaving.
And I had a choice at that point to say,
you know what, I'm not gonna call her as much.
Or this isn't as fine, like, I don't know if I trust her.
She could do this again, get mad at me, hurt by me.
And I, I mean, that was honestly a temptation for me.
And instead, she had been brave enough to, to do this with me.
I said back to her, we were at dinner, I said, honestly, it's been hard for me because I,
I feel like I have to walk on eggshells and she immediately grabbed me and she was like,
do not feel that way. She goes, Ginny, the one time I've ever been hurt by you, I told you.
And it was such a breakthrough for me because I realized, oh my gosh, she's right. This should be my safest friend. This friend actually, she wasn't hiding anything. She wasn't secretly angry at
me for six months and then busted out with feelings. She was mad at, she was hurt by me for a few days
and brought it to me and we worked through it. And it changed the way I thought
because I was like, this is actually a safer friend
than the one that wouldn't bring something to me, right?
But we are trained to think conflict is bad,
conflict isn't safe.
And so immediately I stopped walking on eggshells.
I was like, you're right.
If she's ever upset with me, she'll tell me.
I don't have to.
She's telling me.
Wonder.
And so I think we're so afraid of conflict because mainly we don't know how to handle it. So even in
the book, like I laid out, like this is how you say you're sorry, like this is what you
say if you get into conflict because I didn't want anyone to not have to have that excuse,
that that would be the reason that they they wouldn't so stay. I want them to know, you
know what, this is doable, you listen and you apologize and you own your part.
And then the next question is, and is there anything else I can do to make this right?
And a lot of, it was great.
Her answer to that question was she had some things.
She was like, actually, it helps me if you can be sensitive to this thing in my life.
And I was like, oh, okay, I can do that.
It wasn't even a hard request, but I did know prior to that
So I think these conversations should make friendship deeper. It's great. So good y'all
I'm just gonna remind you of the title of this book find your people and if you are struggling in any way
With community this book is so important and Jenny if you've never read Jenny's books
I just hope you have and if you haven't you have
So much to do in the next few weeks and months you'll
Learn so much from all of the books that she's written
But you're so good at being so well studied for your books like they're so filled with
Information and facts and data, but you're also so practical and so relatable and such as a friend and a mentor
and a mom who comes alongside and says, hey, these are like some things. Like, here's how you say,
I'm sorry. And sometimes we just need to know that. Like, we need to know how to do something. And so
you're so good at the how to's as well. And so thank you for writing books that are so wise and so
practical at the same time. I want to ask you about how you moved from
Austin to Dallas and of course when you move there's an opportunity to build
a new community and most people know my story. I moved from Nashville back to
Louisiana but I didn't have community in Louisiana. I like I did in Nashville.
You might think since I was from here I would but I didn't have any community and
I had an amazing community in Nashville.
And it was so easy for a little while to sit in that, well I have friends, they're just not here, right?
You know, like I have friends, they're just not here, I have community, they're just all over the world.
And I think that that is a, that's a good thing to have, it's good to have friends at other places,
but you talk about in your book having proximity and how important friendship is to be in proximity with people.
And I loved how you made it even just a biblical thing how Jesus was in such close proximity
with friends.
And so can you speak to that like why is it important to not just have friends from afar
but actually have friends who you can go have a meal and sit in their home and hang out
with? you can go have a meal and sit in their home and hang out with.
It's so important to look at each other in the eyes,
to have somebody grab you by the shoulders,
to hold you, to hug you.
These are things that we've lost,
even in the last few years,
even with the neighbors and people we're close to.
And so to prioritize that is, to me,
it's not the only thing you can absolutely have those friends
around the world.
I do too, but if I don't have somebody
that sees the look behind my eyes
when I'm sharing something and they know
you're not saying the whole thing, Ginny,
you're not okay, you're saying you're okay,
but you're not okay.
You can't always see that on Zoom,
you can't always see that on a phone call.
And so to have somebody that calls your bluff and grabs you by the shoulders and says,
I love you and I'm here and I'm not letting go.
And then brings you dinner or pulls you out of your robe and like, let's go out.
Those kind of things we've got to have in our lives.
And so it's not enough.
It's not that we can't have those friends around the world.
It's that that's not all we can have.
We've got to have a few friends.
And so when I moved to Dallas, I had this desire.
And we moved really close like you did to family.
We live really close to Zach's family.
And they're really, really good friends of ours.
We enjoy them so much.
But I was going to need more than that.
And so I began to pray.
I think that's the first thing you do.
As you say, God, will you please show me the people in front of me? And then you be open to all
the people God's put in your life. Because throughout history, and this is something I talk
about way more in depth in the book, but throughout history, everybody lived in a village,
about 100 to 150 people. And you knew each other your whole life, you never left. And so
those people that make up that village, and you have one to everybody has one,
Sunday school teachers or people that your kids are growing up with or for some of you
that are single, it's people maybe that you work with or you live in a apartment with
or a neighborhood with, all of us have people in our lives that we see on a regular basis.
And maybe they're not your exact age group and maybe they're not exactly who you think you'd be friends with.
But that's part of the fun of God too,
is he always surprised you.
And that village is actually going to meet needs for you,
that maybe two to three best friends couldn't.
And so you want to really invest in that village,
and I bet you to some degree, you did have that part.
But we also need the circle.
We also need the inner
circle of the two to five people that know our ins and outs and walk with us day in and day out.
And that does take a little bit more intention to find. But when you have the village in place,
you're probably going to find that other group. And it's just going to take time. It just takes time.
So true, that's so good. Time is like the thing that no one wants to be the answer for
anything, but it's oftentimes the answer for most things, you know? And I love what you said about
even grabbing people by the shoulders because I'm reading this leadership book right now and it's
been so good. And it was talking about how just the power of touch is actually so powerful. Like in
our brain, something about it, like when you shake someone's hand,
that's not just shaking someone's hand,
but even when you're going to make a deal
and you shake someone's hand,
it actually is like a sign of trust.
And it's like telling your brain,
like I trust this person.
And they were talking about how,
if you were about to sign a contract with someone,
and you're like, okay, I'm so excited.
Let's shake on it.
And they say, no, it's okay. I don't need a shaker.
Hit on, I'm going to sign it like we're good.
If they did that, you know, you would be so much more likely
to even just say, okay, I actually don't want to do it
with the stool with you because now I don't trust you.
Or you'd be like walking into the stool, feeling like you
don't trust them because they weren't willing to touch you
to shake on it, to show you that they trust you.
And I think in the same way with friendships, it's like it, to show you that they trust you.
And I think in the same way with friendships,
it's like, that's why you can't just have Zoom.
That's why you do have to go in person,
because showing someone by touching them,
or hugging them, or loving on them,
like that shows I trust you, I love you,
I'm here with you, I'm in community with you,
and it really does make such a difference.
So I love that.
Lastly, I wanna talk to you about your love
for the show Friends because
Christian and I have not watched Friends
and we're like, should we watch Friends?
And so should I watch Friends?
And what have you learned from it?
Because I love that you learn from all things.
I mean, I have a hard time recommending it
because there's certainly things in it that are PG-Core.
Of course.
But I would say their relationships, I think,
made everybody jealous.
Why was that show so popular?
Everybody wanted that.
You wanted to go down to a coffee shop downstairs
from your apartment and see everybody.
You didn't want to lock your doors.
You wanted all of your friends to come in and out of the door.
But I think there were things to learn from that.
Ways to live.
And yes, what bothered me about it,
and what I write about, is the last show.
They're all building their lives,
and they decide to move out to the suburbs.
One of them leaves the apartment that they were in
when they have their twin baby babies.
It's like, no, that's when you need your community the most.
And so one of my points is just,
we are so quick to abandon things
for a better job or for more money or for the better school or whatever. When this is
a gift, if you have this, I tell people you should decide where to live based on your
network of connections and relationships. You should, I know this is crazy to some people,
but you should move near your family if you can.
If they're not toxic and you're able to do that,
I would say take the Luster Paying job and be near family.
There was something I saw when I did the research of
history, Sadie, that troubled me about the choices we're making
and how we're living and I want
us to make better choices. I want us to choose community over nearly every
other thing because there's nothing that defines our lives more than the people
that are in them and the way we love God. Those are it. The two eternal things are
God and people that will go on to eternity. And so that should be a fair reason to choose a place to live.
It was why we moved to Dallas, we had family here,
and we knew that we could have deep friendships here.
And it's our hope that, you know, it's a joke with my kids.
I hope they move that close, they don't have to,
we don't put that pressure on them.
But we also are like, there's a favor that comes by being close to us. Like just because of the network that we
have and the people that know you and have no new for a long time. And so I
think there's a protection in that and there's a gift in that. And so I hope
people prioritize this in really radical ways after this book. I mean that
that's really what I was after was a different way to do life that we would
you know run into each other's different way to do life that we would, you know,
run into each other's houses with an announced and that we would choose to live in places where we're truly known.
And open up about the things we're scared to open up about.
But I really believe this is what we're craving more than anything else.
And when we think of the problems we see in the world, anxiety, loneliness, depression,
suicidal thoughts, all these things that we so obviously know is out there, there are real ways to combat it.
Just like you said, there is something healing that happens when we share our soul, when
we're known and seen.
And even if that person doesn't do anything but empathetically listen, there's something
unlocked and changed in us when we when we live this way.
And oh, we are craving it.
I hope it changes.
I hope it changes for people.
It's beautiful, Ginny.
It's so good.
I mean, just in my own life,
I can see areas of community I need to grow in
from what you've said today.
And I also see areas of community that I'm like, man,
like I've taken that advice, I've done that.
And even just Christian and I living where we live
in Louisiana, like we've had a lot of opportunities to live in some other really cool places with honestly some really cool jobs and
We've time after time when we get these offers come to each other. Okay, what do we want to do and
Family has been the top priority. It's been what we value the most and we just said like okay god
Like this is this is where we want to plant our family.
And we just trust that you're gonna do something with that.
And it has been the coolest thing
seeing what has happened just from being planted
near family.
And it is a super unassuming town.
It's a place where you would never think a ministry
would be able to grow out of,
but God's done what only he can.
He's not bound by,
you know, location or by the, you know, how many people are in your space, like he's actually
just able to do huge things because he's a huge God. And so we've been so blessed by that
community in our life and that being by family. And this book is just so powerful, so many
people are going to be impacted. Once again, you haven't bought find your people already please go buy find your people and just grow to
be a better person to live in community with other people because the world
needs it. Jenny thank you for your ministry thank you for your time I love
hanging with you girl and this is just awesome. Oh thanks for having me girl. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC